Hi
I'm new in the forum. I found this discussion interesting since I've been (and I'm still) in doubt between a Mark combo and a triaxis setup.
Premises: I'm not a pro, I re-take playing after a loooooong break, I do not play metal in whatever form but I use mostly clean for comping (funk, jazz) and soloing (metheny like) and/or smooth saturated (holdsowrth like).... so somebody could wonder "why mesa?" well ... I love the tone anyway.
I recognize the needs of
ando
Therein lies the key. If you play professionally, regardless of how many people are in attendance, you can't stop playing and flip switches. If you play professionally, you have to keep playing and stay in performance mode. Leaning over and tweaking knobs and switches is unprofessional and poor stagecraft. Pros need to stay involved in their music and their audience. If you fail to do this, you will lose them. It's too introverted and self-obsessed.
So, if you need a variety of tones as a playing professional, the Triaxis is vastly superior. If you want to record, or you only use a few sounds at a time in gigs, the Mark V would suit and have a few more variations available.
Even without being a pro I need to use more than 3 sounds (or different "colors") during my playing (in the song or between songs) So triaxis seemed the right choice... as a matter of fact I bump into a nice MarkIV for a very reasonable price, I could try it ...and then was mine. (where I live there are not many shop where to try without problem many high end gears).
So how I'm compromising? I use a generic setup for the Mark (which reflects my preferences in terms of tones and colors for the clean, crunch and lead), then I differentiate the colors through the digtal fx in the loop (eq, echos, choruses etc) and store how many patches I want. So I have at my footswitch from the sparkling funky cleans, wha's, until the darkest jazz tone, up to light saturated or high saturated ones... (of course I could go up to infinite possibilities)
Cons:
- I'm coloring the tone with the fx and take less advantage of the 1'000'0000 possible permutation&combination of knobs in the pre stage.
- I must remember the knob setups for which I created the patches.
Pros:
- I have still all the 1'000'0000 possible permutation&combination of knobs in the pre stage.
- I can modify on the fly whatever parameter in the pre-stage (with knobs or GEQ) if I feel I need (even a pro during a gig needs to tweak the sound sometime, because the environmental conditions are not the same of the reharsal room)... sliding a GEQ is much easier than reprogramming a midi patch...
So all in all (as everybody says) I don't think there is a definitive objective answer on which solution is better.
But I'm curious to hear how my Steinberger would sound through a triaxis and compare with my MarkIV.
Bye
Fab