Guitarist

Digital Vintage

A special edition of the popular load box celebrates 15 years of Two Notes digital innovation

- Words Nick Guppy Photograph­y Phil Barker

While the digital revolution continues to advance, it’s also true that not every guitarist wants to give up their prized valve amp. Fortunatel­y, there are ways of giving even the most vintage and basic valve circuits a new digital lease – and a very effective method is to use a load box. One of the best out there is the well-known Captor X from French company Two Notes, whose DynIR system is practicall­y an industry standard. To celebrate its 15th anniversar­y, Two Notes recently released this special‑edition, the Captor X SE, which is even more tempting.

It certainly adds some vintage mojo to the standard model, with a brown enamel finish surroundin­g the metalwork and a warm amber grille light. On the front panel there’s a Volume control, a global Tone control and a control called Space, which widens the stereo sound field. These are joined by a headphones socket, a button switch to vary the input level and a rotary switch to choose between up to six onboard emulation presets.

On the rear panel, you’ll find speaker in and out jacks with a three-position level control switch and a stereo pair of balanced outputs on XLR, as well as a useful ground lift switch. Micro USB and 3.5mm MIDI jacks handle external editing and control.

The Captor X SE looks great in its limited-run colourway, but the eye-opener (or should that be ear?) is the superb quality of the DynIR presets, each one of which is equivalent to using 160,000 static IRs. The Torpedo Remote app is a delight to use, with beautiful rendering and visual editing of the Captor’s virtual cabs and studio-grade effects. The realism of the virtual environmen­ts is stunning, creating in seconds what used to take many hours of studio time.

If any further temptation were needed, the vintage-styled Captor X SE comes with an all-new Anniversar­y Edition set of 32 matching vintage cabinet models and 10 more once you register, along with 20 presets curated by top session player and influencer Pete Thorn.

Verdict

It may not be the cheapest load box available on the market, but when you add in the fabulous DynIR cabinet emulations and the stereo balanced outputs, this SE version is worth its weight in gold, adding digital flexibilit­y and profession­al-studio sound quality to any valve amp. If you need to give your amp a lift, especially if you’re after vintage cabinet tones, the Two Notes Captor X SE might have your name on it.

 ?? ?? 4. As with the regular Captor X, you can edit, save and load up to six of your favourite DynIR presets, available for recall either by MIDI or the front-panel Preset rotary selector switch 4
4. As with the regular Captor X, you can edit, save and load up to six of your favourite DynIR presets, available for recall either by MIDI or the front-panel Preset rotary selector switch 4
 ?? ?? 3. The Captor X SE’s XLR balanced outputs send studio-quality room emulations and effects to your console for live or studio use. There’s also a handy ground lift switch to remove the annoying hum caused by ground loops 3
3. The Captor X SE’s XLR balanced outputs send studio-quality room emulations and effects to your console for live or studio use. There’s also a handy ground lift switch to remove the annoying hum caused by ground loops 3

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