The Neural DSP Quad Cortex is undeniably one of many most interesting guitar amp modelers on the planet. For a sure type of gigging musician who needs to reduce bulk and doesn’t require a lot in the best way of results, it may possibly fairly convincingly recreate any variety of amps, and has loads of choices for bread and butter results like delay, reverb and refrain. Plus, its Neural Seize function permits you to shortly and simply make bespoke presets primarily based by yourself gear, and even obtain captures from different customers.
When you’ve obtained a classic Huge Muff and a Marshall half stack that you simply love, however don’t wish to drag round for easy membership excursions, you possibly can create a mannequin of your particular Marshall and Huge Muff it with just some button presses on the Quad Cortex. There’s only one drawback: It’s $1,699.
The Nano Cortex is Neural DSP’s effort to deliver its distinctive seize talents and highly effective amp modeling to the lots. At $549 it’s nonetheless not low-cost. You do not get a display, or a number of the extra superior performance from the higher-end mannequin, however my expertise tells me it might be an unbelievable stage and studio companion.
No Screens
The obvious sacrifice made within the identify of dimension and cost-cutting is that lack of a touchscreen. The Quad Cortex is an absurdly complicated machine that will be impenetrable with out the touchscreen. The Nano Cortex strips down the function set down sufficient that navigating the pedal with just some knobs, buttons and footswitches is cheap.
The place the Quad Cortex offers you with over 90 amp fashions, over a thousand impulse responses and over 100 completely different results, the Nano sticks with the best hits from that large library. It ships with 25 amp fashions, 300 impulse responses (IRs) and single choices for refrain, delay, and reverb, primarily based on traditional pedals.
That’s nonetheless various potential mixtures to cope with, and doesn’t account for the flexibility to load customized captures and impulse responses that you simply’ve both created your self or downloaded from different Cortex customers. Navigating them could be a little complicated for the reason that solely indicators on the pedal are 5 LEDs over every footswitch and all of your captures and IRs are divided into color-coded banks. However when you’re primarily sticking to some core mixtures it’s not too unhealthy.
If you end up wanting to modify issues up quite a bit, there is a wonderful companion app. I’ve examined quite a lot of pedals with cell apps and so they’ve at all times been fairly unreliable. They’re usually buggy and the Bluetooth connections are finicky at greatest. I had no such points with the Cortex cell app. It linked shortly and reliably each time, and every thing labored precisely as anticipated.