Does it have an Octave effect built into the app? Because that’s the only effect I don’t see available that I would love to have for bass. The old school Roland bass Cube amps used to have the Octave effect right on the physical dial.
It all seems nice. Mine is on order with the' "up-sale" pedal and cord for the looper. (Should not be an option, but I get the, money versus no money thing). I'm hoping to get it soon, as everything from Roland is on backorder? CIAO-4-NOW
Thanks for your great review. From your vid, now I get it that this boss ampli has also got an effect-related functionality. Does it mean that is it just similar to having a NUX for bass and an ampli already included inside of it? Thank you. 🙏
You'd need something much more powerful to overcome the volume of drums and guitars in a jam session. The only way this amp would be appropriate for a jam session is if you ran the output from the amp into a PA system or in-ear monitoring system.
But nobody would use the amp in that way. If you're recording with this amp, you'd use the DI. If you were practicing silently, you'd use the headphone outs which is a duplicate of the DI output. If you want to hear how the amp sounds in a room, it's almost impossible to capture an honest representation of that. How it sounds mic'd up in Danny's basement has zero relevance to how it might sound in your room at home. What mics were used? At what distance? At what angle? Position and proximity of the mic can greatly influence the low end and overall tone. Getting a DI signal is the best "even playing field" way to demo how this amp sounds.
@@longandmcquade Well, I respectfully disagree. Professional review would include DI'ed and Mic'ed up signals just to give some representation of what to expect of those speakers, they are there for a reason and a big part of what the product has to offer. And in terms of what mics were used and at what distance is irrelevant, in this day and age - even a phone mic would pick up a great deal of what those speakers have to offer, given you are listening back on decent set of headphones. Good thing other folks properly reviewed this unit so I could make a decision to purchase it. But hey, I appreciate your opinion : )
It is not. I have this in my living room so I can grab a bass and exercise. It barely keeps up with the sound of my tv at speaking volume. I do like the built in fx, but it isn’t useful to me. I want my bass to sound good at moderate volume. You have to max this out to hear it, and it is flubby, flappy, and hollow. Gonna replace mine.
I haven't seen any bass player using this amplifier doing Slap yet.
Does it have an Octave effect built into the app? Because that’s the only effect I don’t see available that I would love to have for bass. The old school Roland bass Cube amps used to have the Octave effect right on the physical dial.
It all seems nice. Mine is on order with the' "up-sale" pedal and cord for the looper. (Should not be an option, but I get the, money versus no money thing). I'm hoping to get it soon, as everything from Roland is on backorder?
CIAO-4-NOW
Great Review
Thanks for your great review. From your vid, now I get it that this boss ampli has also got an effect-related functionality. Does it mean that is it just similar to having a NUX for bass and an ampli already included inside of it? Thank you. 🙏
Just got mine in everything turns on but can't get any sound out help please
Batteries
@@nelson8086 😆Nailed it
Is this a good amp for jam sessions?
You'd need something much more powerful to overcome the volume of drums and guitars in a jam session. The only way this amp would be appropriate for a jam session is if you ran the output from the amp into a PA system or in-ear monitoring system.
Hi👍. What model of pedal is used for the looper?... 🤔
No separate looper pedal, the Dual Cube LX has an onboard looper and 27 rhythm patterns are built in!
Gotta demo direct 5 inch cones miced up... DI is not fair haha.
But nobody would use the amp in that way. If you're recording with this amp, you'd use the DI. If you were practicing silently, you'd use the headphone outs which is a duplicate of the DI output. If you want to hear how the amp sounds in a room, it's almost impossible to capture an honest representation of that. How it sounds mic'd up in Danny's basement has zero relevance to how it might sound in your room at home. What mics were used? At what distance? At what angle? Position and proximity of the mic can greatly influence the low end and overall tone. Getting a DI signal is the best "even playing field" way to demo how this amp sounds.
@@longandmcquade Well, I respectfully disagree. Professional review would include DI'ed and Mic'ed up signals just to give some representation of what to expect of those speakers, they are there for a reason and a big part of what the product has to offer. And in terms of what mics were used and at what distance is irrelevant, in this day and age - even a phone mic would pick up a great deal of what those speakers have to offer, given you are listening back on decent set of headphones. Good thing other folks properly reviewed this unit so I could make a decision to purchase it.
But hey, I appreciate your opinion : )
Makes Sense..("ROCK"=Amature?)
Any demo of an amp that doesn't mic the speakers is a total waste of everyone's time
10 Watts?? wtf!! With the Money they Charge??
Is it not worthy? Please make it clearer to me. Thanks. 🙏
It is not. I have this in my living room so I can grab a bass and exercise. It barely keeps up with the sound of my tv at speaking volume. I do like the built in fx, but it isn’t useful to me. I want my bass to sound good at moderate volume. You have to max this out to hear it, and it is flubby, flappy, and hollow. Gonna replace mine.
@@number179what is the best amp for practice in your opinion
It’s your room that sounds like shit not the amp I think they are great in a well treated room