Nothing with deep editing is incompatible with an absolutely anything goes environment whatsoever.DarkAxel wrote:It seems to be a set and forget type of thing where you just switch presets, but you can't really get down on your knees and find new stuff and reset shit for jams and momentary flashes of madness and creativity and experimentation
maybe i'm just skeptical, it's just that these prese- based delays that cen get really deep into tailoring the sound feel a bit non-compatible with bands that are not really "controlled enviroment"... makes sense?not necessarily a bad thing, but it's something that might not work for everyone
I'm always mystified why this is a common belief - is it really that hard to have, say a few (or a bunch) of presets that take you to the places you're likely to go, and know how to mod them on the fly?
Also lets you play 'dial a sound' and see what happens as well - could be something good, could be something bad, but you're in improvland now, baby.
I see tons more options here than In what I used for over a decade live in all improv-settings, I would have absolutely killed for something like this...
...if I didn't already have my Digi Timebender.
Which basically does almost everything here, and everything lauded as a cool new feature.
Stereo. Check.
Harmonizer, but more than just octave up. Check.
100% wet signal. Check.
Expression control. Check.
Ducking. Check.
Modulation. Check.
Etc.
Can't see myself being any more interested in this than I was at the first product announcement.
More likely to just buy another Timebender honestly - the freeze/hold on it is a godsend and how it morphs the signal with time changes varies on the mode you've chosen, so tape speedup/pitch changes are up to me.







