Like I said, YMMV.
Copperhead":3pm6e0yy said:
I know a guy who uses this system (with a certain modeller which shall remain unnamed) live for guitar with a band, when I'm working the sound crew and this group is scheduled we all cringe. Totally messes up the stage monitor mix, washes off the stage into the first 10 rows, just this weird plastic guitar tone, at times it sounds like a casio synth going through a digitech pedalboard with every modulation effect on. Bleh.....
This is how its supposed to work, washing in to the audience that's how it covers the small clubs without needing a FOH. I can see with an FOH how this could get messy fast, especially if he is the only one in the band using one! As to the plastic tone, I can tell you that isn't from the Bose probably more to do with the person or the tone shaping effects, or misuse of the equipment rather than the equipment. Its not difficult to make even a good rig sound like s**t. If he has an older unit, or does not have the T1 as I mentioned above, there is a good chance his modeler (or any modeler) will sound like crap. If you want to try one of these the right way: 1) make sure its the Model II 2) get the T1. I know a few guitarists that are using Blackstars, miked combos or other amps with Palmers, etc. into the L1 and are liking it. It works as Bose describes. Though, I think if I was playing a larger venue with a good FOH, I'd leave the L1 home.
IMO, mine sounds great with the Axe-Fx,
Vox ToneLab LE,
Zoom G2,
Tech 21 Liverpool and PSA 1.1 (and
my ADA MP-2). However, it wasn't a "connect, plug in, turn on, instant tone" - each required some tweaking to understand the interaction. I'm not the fastest tweaker, and I didn't have any tube amps to model or AB to dial in the sounds I want. But, I'm able to get tones that sound good to me.
blackba":3pm6e0yy said:
You know what they say about Bose. "No Highs, No Lows, that's Bose"
I have heard very positive and very negative reviews about their PA type systems. I think it just depends on what your instrumentation is and how big the room is. I am not a Bose fan, in general I find their stuff way overpriced for what it is. They do a great job of marketing and living off their name. Other than the old 901's I haven't really had a bose speaker or system that I was really impressed with.
I do own a set of Bose stereo speakers, but I have those in my workshop and paid $25 used for the pair. They sound pretty good.
The L1 definitely has a defined range, but it can get lows and highs (I've used my 4 string bass and keyboards (way down low, and way up high to verify this) but it isn't designed for these extremes. Also, it needs to be louder than bedroom levels to get the bass modules to kick in, at too low a volume or if you are too close you get the strong mids.
Now it can get loud too, not sure how loud as I'm using it in a small room with crappy acoustics, so I haven't had a chance to push the system. As a result, I don't know how it would compare to a traditional amp (bass or guitar) at loud volumes. I'm hoping to have a chance to crank it a bit more here, but that hasn't happened yet. My guess is this set-up will not be good if you need to move air, amp in the room, or if you use your Axe-Fx with a tube amp and guitar cabs, etc. If you use a modeler, or like / prefer use/ an Axe-Fx into FRFRs, then this system may be a viable option for you to consider. And yes, a set of active FRFRs and a sub could cost much less than an L1.
I thought about the price too. But if I was to buy the full guitar rig, bass rig and keyboard rig I wanted, I would have spent a great deal more money, and I would not have room to walk or play here in my home office/studio! In the end, it works for me, I can spend my money on signal processing and guitars instead of amps and cabs and have room to move around. The Axe-Fx Ultra is on the top of my GAS list, (still kicking myself for selling it), and the Tech 21 detour I've taken is working out great for me.