If you are looking to enhance the sound or your gear, either new or old, the $750 Heat comes equipped with eight analog distortion circuits (Clean Boost, Saturation, Enhancement, Mid Drive, Rough Crunch, Classic Distortion, Round Fuzz and High Gain) that can be tweaked to your liking. It also has a stereo EQ, multi-mode filter, LFO and assignable envelope. During my time using the device at SXSW, the plethora of features and adjustments resulted in sounds that were full and warm, even with the gain turned all the way up.

Additionally, it lends itself to quick knob twists via the onboard controls and fine-tuning of parameters with the Heat's display. That tiny window into wave forms also serves as the navigation for the up-to-128 presets that can be added to the device. That's probably more than enough ready-to-go processors for even the most prolific artist.

The Heat supports 1/4" stereo audio in and out and has two control ports for pedal manipulation of features like gain and LFO so your feet can get in on the action. Plus, it hooks up to your favorite music application as a VST/AU effect plugin, which is great for at-home musicians.

Whether you're recording at home or performing in front of an audience then, if you're looking for a fuller sound and you have $750 burning a hole in your pocket, the Elektron Analog Heat is worth checking out.

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