Re: stomp box vs multi
I have a general rule of thumb that anything that takes a lot of tweaking to get a good sound is most likely a POS. That goes for pedals, rack gear, multi fx, and software. Conversely, if you plug it in and find yourself instantly inspired, and as you make adjustments it just gets better, then there's a good chance it's a winner.
I used to do reviews for a music magazine, and they would send me all of the various multi fx units from Boss/Roland, Yamaha, Digitech, Zoom etc, all the usual suspects. These things would arrive and I would familiarize myself with their interfaces, listen to the presets and think, yeah ok, this is why there haven't been too many Japanese guitar legends. They would have the ubiquitous "can of bees" overdrive sounds and the washed out "if we slap enough reverb, chorus and delay on at the same time, can you still tell that I can't really play?" multi fx patches. So I would get to work from scratch and start building patches. After a couple of hours of tweaking, I would start thinking "yeah, maybe this thing is ok, maybe I can get something out of this." Then I would tweak some more, get it sounding better, and start thinking "Wow, maybe I can replace my analog pedals with this one unit."
Then I would perform what I call the "acid test." I would unplug from the unit, and plug straight into a tube amp, or into a couple of analog pedals. Then, without fail, my next thought would be "Oh well, that's three hours of my life I can't get back. What was I thinking?" What happens is that your ears become accustomed to the substandard tones coming out of these things, and you start to become convinced that they are much better than they really are.
The most fundamental problem is that generally, the cheap AD/DA converters in multi effects units distort and destroy the nuance of the dynamics being sent from the guitar. That equates to diminishing the integral tone of the instrument into an approximation, and then reconstructing it in crappy fashion, ready to be amplified. So now we have amplified crap. That's what I hear when I listen to multi fx units. Sure, they can perform tricks and offer one step versatility that is difficult to achieve with analog pedals, but at the expense of tone. For some, that is an exchange that they are prepared to make, because their trippy effects are actually the center of their performance. But if the center of your performance is your guitar playing, and what you really need is a good selection of great sounds, then the analog pedal route is the way to do it.
I know the "purists" will say, "no man, pedals suck, I just go straight into the amp," but most of these purists are unheard of and only play for the birds in the trees outside their house. They can afford to be "purists" because they are not relying on their diversity of sounds to make a living, or at least, work with others in a band environment, playing a variety of songs and styles which require more than one sound. Amongst professionals, you will find the vast majority using analog pedals. Amongst the absolute legends of guitar, you will find the vast majority using analog pedals. This is not by accident. This is not coincidence. This is because good analog pedals sound better than any multi fx unit.
Cheers..................................wahwah