Line 6 DM4 DistortionModeller Effects PedalPublished in SOS February 2001 Reviews : Effects
Following in the footsteps of the Line 6 DL4 Delay and MM4 Modulation boxes (reviewed in SOS March 2000) comes the DM4, a heavy-duty floor unit in gleaming gold, which is capable of digitally modelling 16 different types of distortion pedal. Like the other boxes in the series, the effects are selected and controlled from the front-panel knobs, and four footswitches provide easy storage and recall of four user patches. Because many of the original pedals had only two or three controls, Line 6 have provided additional tone control whenever any of the DM4's front-panel knobs are otherwise unassigned. The DM4 can be run from a wall-wart PSU, or from batteries.
Accurate Emulation It's surprising how different the various distortion boxes can sound, but I can attest, having used some of the originals, that the emulations come very close. The range of pedals modelled runs right the way from warm and woolly to sharp and abrasive, so most options are covered. Most of the basic overdrive emulations were quite usable, though I couldn't get enough overdrive out of the Maestro-inspired Buzz Saw to recreate that well-worn 'Satisfaction' riff using my Strat the downside of remaining authentic to the gain range of the original. Once you get away from the basic overdrives, things get wierder. Jet Fuzz, for example, combines overdrive with flanging to produce that very dated whooshing-jet effect. Weirder still are the two octave-fuzz effects, one of which produces a sub-octave and the other of which adds a tone an octave above the original prior to fuzzing the result this Tychobrahe Octavia-based model is particularly realistic in the way it chokes the sound after the signal level drops below a certain point. Cost Effective Whatever your taste, there ought to be something here for you though they haven't emulated every fuzz box ever made, the models chosen cover the available tonal range pretty well and the few oddball inclusions add to the interest. Obviously, if you're after a particular sound, you have to remember to use the right amp or amp model with the DM4 for example, for the Hendrix sound, your best bet would be a Marshall stack. With the DM4 costing around the same as two or three separate analogue overdrive boxes, and having the benefit of being programmable, this is a pretty cost-effective way to achieve a variety of overdrive flavours.
Published in SOS February 2001 | Saturday 4th July 2009 July 2009
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