Gainfreak":211soteb said:
One of the hardest things for any guitarist IMHO is getting a tone that works for them. Even in this day and age I have guitar playing friends who are clueless when it comes to getting a good sound lol.
If you found a combination that works for you then I see no need to buy an AXE-FX. You would be buying it just for the sake of getting something new.
On another note the AXE-FX is not going to be for everyone and as with any piece of gear, you really need to know what to expect from it and what you want to use it for.
I bought an axe-fx because I joined a new coverband that will be covering stuff from Boston to Led Zep and I needed a way to change up the sounds depending on what tunes/band we are playing. The Axe-fx KILLS for this.
I also needed a rig that was portable because the band Im now in will have fly out gigs. Its easier for me to fly out a 4 space rig and guitars instead of a tube amp and a switching rack system.
I've tried the line 6 stuff and other digital modeling and the tone and feel is not there and It is there with the Axe-FX. The line 6 stuff also sounds compressed and processed no matter how much you tweak the presets and forget about rolling off your volume knob.
You've heard it from countless people who have played the Axe-FX in the right context that the feel is there and it is.....and if it isn't, you can make it feel and respond the way you want to which to my knowledge you cant do with any other .
This is just my opinion on the subject but i feel like it's a complete waste of time trying to get a bunch of different tones even if you're in a cover band. One reason i feel that way is because the guy who i saw that did covers better than anyone, Kenny Dubman, could get tones from Pantera to Metallica to EVH to SRV and Hendrix , all with his Les Paul, a parts superstrat, and Marshall halfstack and some pedals.
I think it's important to not play a U2 tune with a metal tone but as long as you can get in the ballpark it's good enough. One main reason is that, well, when you're playing cover songs nobody really gives a shit in the bar crowd anyway. Generally, as long as you don't butcher the songs people know then they could care less. And 99% of the people in the crowd never pay attention to guitar tone.
I feel that chasing all the different tones as songs you cover might be something of a personal challenge. But when i was doing a hectic cover band schedule, chasing tones is the last frigging thing i worried about. The important stuff i worred about was, I wanted my stuff to work after the roadie set up everything, i wanted my free beers

, i wanted my set list, and i had to try to stay sober enough to know who i was sleeping with that night

All in that order.