Hologram Electronics Debuts Chroma Console

Hologram Electronics has debuted the Chroma Console, a new multi-effect pedal that takes inspiration from the eccentricity, grit, and lively instability of beloved vintage recording technology, combines it with brand new sounds, and puts sonic experimentation at your fingertips. Exciting, no?

Hologram’s last effort, the Microcosm, gained our Gear Of The Year recognition three years ago, so we’re very interested to see what the Chroma Console can do in the hands of an electronic musician.

 

Hologram Chroma Console

Hologram Electronics Chroma Console Guitar Pedal Effects

Distrokid Coupon Code FutureMusic
The easiest way for electronic musicians to get their music onto Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Amazon Music, Tidal, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Pandora, Twitch & much more! Click the banner above or the Go Button to save 7% off of your signup!  GO!

It Took Jason Campbell and Ryan Schaefer Three Years To Develop The Chroma Console…

Rear view connections - Hologram Electronics Chroma Console

 

Hologram Chroma Console Effects:

  • Character » Drive, Sweeten, Fuzz, Howl, Swell
  • Movement » Doubler, Vibrato, Phaser, Tremolo, Pitch
  • Diffusion » Cascade, Reels, Space, Collage, Reverse
  • Texture » Filter, Squash, Cassette, Broken, Interference
Listen Now Ramleak Choose Love

Hologram Chroma Console Features:

  • Four Rearrange-able Effect Modules
  • Stereo Input/Output
  • Designed for both Instrument and Line Level sources
  • Input Level Calibration
  • Record knob movements with GESTURE
  • Sustain and loop audio with CAPTURE feature
  • Bypass Foot Switch Customization
  • Configurable Filter Effect (Tilt, Lowpass, or Highpass)
  • 80 User Presets
  • MIDI In/Out/Thru, clock synchronization
  • True Bypass Switching/Buffered Bypassed with trails
  • Tap Tempo, which can sync time-based effects as well as modulation effects

Experiment with different signal chains:

Re-order effects and experiment with different signal chains, such as process reverb through a fuzz, run a reverse delay into a pitch shifter, or drive the evocative, gritty sound of an aging cassette recorder into a stereo double-tracker. Record knob movements with Gesture, create ephemeral loops with Capture, and dial in the amount of randomness, chaos, or nostalgic warble that your composition requires with Drift. Lots of possibilities.

Hologram’s Chroma Console costs $399.

Author: FutureMusic

Share This Post On
-->
FutureMusic - Music Technology News and Gear Reviews