Line 6 Helix Stadium

Yes, I liked the SLO100 video quite a bit. And it features Paul Hindmarsh playing something Van Halen-ish and rolling his volume knob back for a a good bit of it.

Just went back to that vid, and that's more like it. The way they dialed the SLO for that video is a better 'brown' by far than the one in the Lettieri vid. It has the sharpness and note separation where the more recent one was too flubby, with the pick attack getting drowned. All just my take, of course.
 
Watched the lettieri video and honeslty everything sounded good or really good.
The high gain tones might not have been brutal but I liked the raw nature of every one of them.
The rawness is the part that gives me a lot of hope for the high gain stuff. That shined through even in the tones I wasn’t into.

The reason being?
Basically the more traditional players who might stay in the clean to EOB tonal areas have historically been less apt to use modeling. Or that’s the story, anyway.

The theory seems to be L6 is bending over backwards to try to win them over. Not sure if I buy it.
 
I think it sounds excellent all through. Some of the high gain sounds need to be dialed in more.

But honestly, everyone sounds the same these days, so I think the way they had it sounded great as well.

What sold me was the first few seconds of the Mark Lettieri video - that Marshall sounded SO good with that cleanish tone!
 
It's a conspiracy to observe a statistical pattern?

You don’t have a large enough sample size to draw any meaningful statistical conclusions, so yes it is either a conspiracy theory or some other relatively unfounded theory.

Anyway, how many of you guys still believe you can properly evaluate tone capabilities from a YouTube video? You aren’t going to know what the device can do for you until you have it in your hands and try to dial it in with your gear. There are too many variables with someone else’s demo, and that’s before YouTube throws their AI smearing/“optimization” on the video and then their lossy compression.
 
You don’t have a large enough sample size to draw any meaningful statistical conclusions, so yes it is either a conspiracy theory or some other relatively unfounded theory.

Anyway, how many of you guys still believe you can properly evaluate tone capabilities from a YouTube video? You aren’t going to know what the device can do for you until you have it in your hands and try to dial it in with your gear. There are too many variables with someone else’s demo, and that’s before YouTube throws their AI smearing/“optimization” on the video and then their lossy compression.

I can get a very good sense for both tone and feel (if the player is a dynamic player and not just slamming the guitar) from a youtube video. I've watched enough videos and very often what I see and hear corroborates with my own personal experience.

Yes, all the 'lossy compression' comments were valid once but now at 4K, it's more than enough for me to get a decent assessment.
 
Yes, all the 'lossy compression' comments were valid once but now at 4K, it's more than enough for me to get a decent assessment.

It’s actually gotten significantly worse in the last few months. Google is using AI behind the scenes to smooth out the videos. Visually, you can spot the fakeness in many places, so who knows what is happening to the audio. One thing for sure, 4k doesn’t mean anything as far as authenticity to the original source after It’s been compressed, modified, and then upsampled.
 
You don’t have a large enough sample size to draw any meaningful statistical conclusions, so yes it is either a conspiracy theory or some other relatively unfounded theory.

Anyway, how many of you guys still believe you can properly evaluate tone capabilities from a YouTube video? You aren’t going to know what the device can do for you until you have it in your hands and try to dial it in with your gear. There are too many variables with someone else’s demo, and that’s before YouTube throws their AI smearing/“optimization” on the video and then their lossy compression.

I will add another perspective:

My day job is running content marketing for a pretty large enterprise. That means content strategy, a very deliberately planned calendar, and videos on multiple channels.

If we were launching a brand new flagship product, and there was a particular capability that we highlighted in a spotlight video, but we didn't put that video out in 2 months of weekly promotional drops touching on pretty much every other aspect of the flagship product- sometimes more than once -... my VP would be like "What gives?".

And she wouldn't accept "Oh, no particular reason. We'll get to it eventually." as an explanation.

I have no reason to believe that Line 6's marketing department is any less deliberate or strategic. I don't believe it's simply a coincidence that they haven't released a video showcase modern high-gain Agoura sounds in 13 promo videos with sound clips (+2 partner marketing showcases released yesterday).
 
Maybe not 'modern high gain', but the video stated an intent to build a 'brown' tone, with Mark playing very creditable interpretations of Eddie's licks. IMO, the tone wasn't there. Maybe Ben doesn't do 'brown'.
Yeah, that was a miss. Too much bass knob, too much normal drive. Wrong mic. This isn’t a hard tone to get, even on today’s Helix.
 
Yeah, that was a miss. Too much bass knob, too much normal drive. Wrong mic. This isn’t a hard tone to get, even on today’s Helix.
Yes, they were taking the wrong approach on the amp block and it was too warm and laid back. They should have started with the bright channel only and everything except maybe presence dimed and gone from there. When Mark wanted a bit more push, they resorted to adding a boost instead of trying to make the amp more aggressive. Otherwise, it was a pretty good tone even if it wasn't nailing the brown sound.

As for the high gain stuff, I'm not familiar with Mark, but it seemed like that's not really his main thing and he was just testing it for fun. I'm not a high gain player either but use it once and a while to mess around with, so I can relate. Jon Symons uses the Helix all the time on his channel and gets great high gain sounds, so I'm not really worried about it.
 
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