
Meris to launch Enzo X synth pedal
The new Enzo X greatly expands on its predecessor, the Enzo, combining five different synth modes with a collection of onboard reverb, delay and modulation effects.
The new Enzo X greatly expands on its predecessor, the Enzo, combining five different synth modes with a collection of onboard reverb, delay and modulation effects.
Although, at heart, this is ‘just’ a stereo reverb pedal, it’s capable of some very unusual sonic treatments...
Meris' new LVX is a stereo delay pedal capable of processing either instrument or line level sources.
Hedra offers auto–harmony, pitch detuning, pitch glide and various other less obvious but highly usable functions.
Offering polyphonic pitch tracking without needing a special pickup, this versatile pedal lets guitarists enter the world of synthesis.
Meris’s recent repackaging of their Mercury7 500-series unit into a reverb pedal has brought with it stereo operation at both instrument and line levels and a very welcome drop in price.
The Ottobit Jr adds stereo operation, a six-step sequencer, a synth-like resonant low-pass ladder filter, triggered stutter effects, 16 preset memory slots and MIDI I/O to the mono original’s variable sample rate and bit-crushing abilities.
The humble digital delay pedal has evolved into something we could once only dream of...
With such brilliant software reverbs now available, does this new hardware unit warrant a place in the space race?