It makes practise fun and provides decent direct bass and guitar recording with magically wide effects where wanted for less than the cost of some amp modelling plug ins.
Id core beam review.
Playback of your mp3s through the id.
The beam is similar in most ways to the rest of the id core range.
It s a 20 watt desktop combo with 12 amp voices plus a decent palette of digital effects.
And there is a line input for piping in music from an external.
The id core beam cropped up a few times during searches but as soon as i saw bluetooth as part of the selling proposition i discounted it as a gimmick.
I gave the id core beam a spin with acoustic electric and bass guitars and the amp mustered up an impressive amount of volume.
On one final search the blackstar came up again from the defunct maplin at 120 so i took a closer look and checked out some online reviews.
Overall then the id core beam is a lot of fun and sounds pretty good.
It s a more compact entry in the id core line 291 x 169 x 166mm as opposed to the stereo 10 s 340 x 265 x 185mm packing the same principle electric models and adding bluetooth for wireless music playback.
It has a stereo pair of three inch speakers plus a headphone socket that doubles as a speaker emulated recording output.
Blackstar s new id core stereo 20 combo aims to exceed the expectations of a typical practice amp.
20 watt super wide stereo bluetooth connectivity styled for use in the home 6 electric guitar voices 2 bass voices 2 acoustic guitar voices 2 acoustic.
Core beam will outclass the sonic performance of the most well respected mp3 docks and with super wide stereo the sound will fill the room specifications.
It can also feed a pa for larger gigs and doubles as a great bluetooth music player.
The beam concept is simple.