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Exclusive: Avid/Digidesign Eleven Rack Demo

Joe Coffey

Stand-alone Recording & Effects Processing System Ideal for Studio and Stage



Irwindale, CA (September 23, 2009) - Premier Guitar had the chance to get the music media's first look at a product that has the potential to change everything you know about recording/mixing with a DAW interface and your ability to play live with the same tones you record with. Here it is: Avid presents Digidesign's Eleven Rack.
Think of it as an interface on guitar-specific steroids. During a recent visit to Avid's studios in Irwindale, CA, we were treated to a demo/walkthrough that highlighted the Eleven Rack's ability to solve many problems that guitarists have been dealing with for years: latency, the ability to recreate DAW-tweaked tones live, reamping limitations due to an interfaces , guitar signal impedance limitations, and that overall nonrealistic feel that keeps many players from exploring the possibilities of plug-in technology.

The Eleven Rack is a rackmountable recording and signal processing system that does the DSP work for you so that your computer doesn't have to. That means that you can use the unit live onstage and recreate the exact tones you recorded with, without a computer attached to it. However, there are advantages to using Eleven Rack with a computer -- more on that in a bit. Eleven Rack has an LED screen on its front panel that allows you to do everything you're used to doing with the Eleven package of plug-in effects. Eleven involves a connoisseur's collection of vintage and modern amps, cabs and effects, while giving you far-reaching signal path and internal component tweaking ability.
One of the coolest things about Eleven Rack's eight simultaneous recording capable inputs is the True-Z auto-impedance matching input that recreates the electronic connection between your guitar and an amp or effect. This isn't done with digital processing, either—analog components are used to detect and adjust the input impedance from your guitar's pickups and adjust the signal for a proper match for the particular amp/effects you're using within Eleven. The result: you get the nuances you're used to—both in feel and sound. With the ability to record both dry and processed signals, your reamping options are endless—you can even reamp later without doing the cable patching tango.

The unit has stereo balanced XLR outs and dedicated 1/4" outs designed to connect with amps. There's a headphone out, AES/EBU, S/PDIF and MIDI connectivity, and a high speed USB 2.0 connection.

We were impressed with our demo and spent hours checking out various tones and experimenting with signal path variations, effects settings, and reamping possibilities. When hooked to a computer you can continue to use the unit's control panel or the computer itself to adjust your effects selection, signal chain order or other various settings. We had our video camera with us so we shot a quick walkthrough and demo'd a few tones, but were barely able to scratch the surface of what the Eleven Rack is capable of, so we recommend that you check out Digidesign's website for the full skinny and studio-quality audio of the Eleven Rack's tonal possibilities. Keep an eye out for our review, by the way--we'll be putting the Eleven Rack through its paces here at our own studios and reporting our findings soon.


Click to watch an exclusive video demo.

For more information:
digidesign.com

     

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Comments

(19 comments) display by
UsernameComment
Zafer
on 10/15/2010
I am looking for a case like the one in this video for my eleven rack. Does anybody know where can i find them ?
Zafer
on 10/15/2010
I am looking for the a case for my eleven rack. Does anybody know where can i find them ?
Kerry Maxwell
on 04/04/2010
Just once, I'd love to hear one of these demos that doesn't use generic wanker high-gain sounds. The deal breaker for these DSP units for me, is I can't get them to sound like a simple real tube amp. If I can plug a tele into this thing and get it to sound and respond like two clean Fender Deluxes in stereo, with a bit of delay, and some nice reverb, I'd seriously think about it.
Papafi
on 04/02/2010
It can be used as a stand alone unit. I used Eleven Rack not only with Pro Tools also FL studio 9 and it worked fine.

For me Pro Tools also works fine and soundin well.

Digidesign Eleven Rack is very good gear for many use, works fine home, also in live conserts.

Eleven Rack also is very rare this kind gear that sound like tubeamp, when turning guitar volume down the sound is cleaner, when turning guitar volume up sound comes more dirty (when using distortion/gain etc.). It´s way ahead comparing Line Pod´s and others like GT-8 and GT-10 I owned earlier, this unit is amasing dynamic and working/sounds like tube amps.

And the price is half comparing Axe Fx (Axe Fx is good gear too and sounds great).
Coreyserious
on 02/19/2010
By the way, it's probably been mentioned, but someone on the first page of comments said "It works as a stand alone unit, but you can't use the interface part and DSP's unless you use pro tools, i would bet."... Not true at all, there's a drivers disc that includes asio drivers for the 11r and it works with about anything where that is widely supported and you can get plugins for most programs that don't automatically support asio. I used it with tracktion my first day and the usb pops up as an input right then.
damian
on 11/17/2009
I heard that there is a slight delay when switching amp models, which would make it a bit of a drag when playing live if you want to go from Fender to Marshall on verse into chorus. Is this true?
Jeff
on 11/03/2009
"They're great sounding amp sims, but Pro Tools is just horrible. Would this device still work with something nice, like Reaper?"

It works as a stand alone unit, but you can't use the interface part and DSP's unless you use pro tools, i would bet. That said, pro tools is about the exact opposite as "horrible." Reaper? Give me a break.
James
on 10/19/2009
No hands on review or vids on youtube yet..
Nate
on 10/03/2009
No reviews anywhere online! I know it was just released but I would have thought there would have been something by now.
rick
on 09/29/2009
this sounds like the end all-be all interface



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