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1176-Influenced Comp + 1073-Inspired Pre = Spank, Sparkle & Growl

1176-Influenced Comp + 1073-Inspired Pre = Spank, Sparkle & Growl

The PG Vertex Nyle review.


Recorded with Fender Telecaster, blackface Fender Vibrolux, Boss DD-5 recorded via Shure SM57 and Apogee Duet.
No effect followed by preamp only with all knobs at 12:30, compressor only with all controls at 12:30, preamp and comp together at same settings, and lastly preamp and comp together with low preamp volume, compression volume at 2 o'clock, ratio and sustain at maximum.
Ā 

Ratings

Pros:
Wet/dry control.

Cons:
Some noise at moderate compressor volumes.

Street:
$249

Vertex Nyle
vertexeffects.com


Tones:


Ease of Use:


Build/Design:


Value:
Ā 

The democratization of high-quality recording technology (and the attendant demystification of recording studio practices) has far-reaching effects on art, music, and culture in general. Itā€™s probably also informed stompbox design, manifesting itself in the trend toward emulating outboard studio gear in pedals. Take the Vertex Nyle. Itā€™s one of several pedals that use the legendary Universal Audio 1176 compressor as inspiration. Ambitiously, itā€™s also designed to replicate the function of a Neve 1073 preamp.

Thatā€™s a big ask from a pedal, to say the least. And it begs an obvious question: Is it possible to approximate the sound sculpting power of two legendary outboard processers worth thousands of dollars in a $249 analog stompbox? The realistic answer, as anyone who has spent time with the real deal (or chased an inexpensive substitute) can attest, is ā€œyeah, kinda.ā€ Yet, in aping the compression and preamp characteristics of the 1176/1073 formula, the Nyle achieves many cool compression and preamp colors that add punch, snap, definition, dynamic control, and rich low-gain distortion to your signal.

Sauce Studies
If youā€™ve spent time around an engineer, a studio, or used one of the better virtual studio environments like Universal Audioā€™s Apollo system, youā€™re probably aware of the reverence for the UA 1176 and Neve 1073. In general, the FET-based 1176 compressor is valued for fast attack and release and the ability to impart a just-right heat and controlled excitability to a signal. But itā€™s equally loved for its ability to add color and cohesiveness while doing very little compression work at allā€”excelling in both subtle and extreme applications. The Neve 1073ā€™s particular magic, meanwhile, could be considered the audio equivalent of butter added to finish a sauceā€”a flavorful fattening agent that ties loosely aggregated ingredients into a delicious whole.

While both the 1176 and 1073 are elegantly simple (The former has input and output level controls, attack and release knobs, and four compression ratio presets. The latter a simple 5-knob array of EQ and boost/cut controls.), distilling the full functionality of each in a single pedal would be space-intensive. Vertex cleverly consolidated these functions into a 6-knob, 2-toggle set up. On the compression side, there is an output level control, a sustain knob (which stands in for the compression ratio), and a useful but curiously named ratio control that actually regulates wet/dry blend. Thereā€™s also a 3-position toggle that selects fast, slow, and neutral attack times. The preamp section reduces the Neveā€™s 5-knob control set to a master volume control, a single EQ knob, a gain knob, and a 3-way treble toggle that works with the EQ knob to help reproduce the 1073ā€™s formidable EQ capabilities. The preamp and compressor can be used together or independently via the two footswitches.

The Nyle is a great vehicle for exploring creative compression tones.

Like amp-in-a-box pedals, stompboxes that mimic studio compressors and preamps use small-form pedal components to replicate large-form circuit topologies. With an inverted circuit board that conceals its parts, itā€™s hard to know precisely whatā€™s standing in for the real thing. But the pedal is sturdy and the controls are quite intuitive, even though the tight, clustered knobs and the tiny pink-on-purple descriptions make early explorations tricky.

Spank ā€˜nā€™ Growl
When you think about ā€œfunā€ pedals, compressors and preamps probably donā€™t top your list. But the Nyle is a kick to use. And once you get a feel for the functionality, itā€™s easy to arrive at the sound and dynamic response that you want. Just like itā€™s inspirations, the Nyle rewards familiarity with compression, preamp, and EQ conceptsā€”particularly with respect to how those elements work interactively. If youā€™re experienced, you might fast gravitate toward a few favorite settings and deviate from them infrequently, but the Nyle is a great vehicle for exploring creative compression tones, too.

I tended toward a few favorite, excellent core sounds. The first, which you can hear in the audio clip, is an even but slightly mid-forward and growling low-gain distortion that gives little amps a tromp lā€™oreille muscularity in a mix. The otherā€”which approximates the Nile Rodgers and Prince tones that inspired the pedalā€™s look and nameā€”is a super-squashed comp voice derived from fully wet compression settings, low gain from the preamp, and trebly EQ settings from both compressor and preamp. Itā€™s easy to imagine building a whole album around these two contrasting, addictive, and engaging tones. But there are many in-between shades to discover via the flexible interactive control set.

The Verdict
At just about any setting, the Nyle adds the warming, cohesive qualities of high-quality studio compression and preamp coloration (which might just lead you to use a lot less of both in a studio). In live settings, itā€™s a killer tool for adding a touch of refined control-room magic. But in any context, the Nyle is, like its inspirations, a versatile special sauce that animates and energizes dinky, lifeless tones. Once youā€™ve mastered its performance envelope and uncovered its pleasing intricacies, the Nyle might replace a few lesser pedals, making the $249 price tag a much more palatable, and fair, investment.


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