Home › Forums › Help/Technical Questions › Which EHX Chorus to go with and what is the difference ?
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May 31, 2009 at 1:11 am #78328InvaderCCMember
Well i bought the Nano muff to go along with my Soul Preacher,1974 vintage Small stone Phaser and Big muff PI.And just to say it the Soul Preacher is fantastic…So here is my question …What chorus should i go with ..The nano Chorus is alright and does have good tone but i’m unsure of this unit because of it limited features..Next is the Small Stone Chorus that i think is one of the best chorus on the market..But i feel the same way about the poly Chorus and the Stereo electric mistress .Could you all tell me which one you use and why and type music you play to give me a better idea which one to go with..I have played all 4 and just can’t decide…As of now i’m using a vintage Pearl Chorus that has good tone but not like the EHX line up…
May 31, 2009 at 5:22 am #97197nneekolasParticipantThere is a lot of personality generalizations I could suggest of the many EHX Choruses. Here’s my quick opinions/characterizations, but trust your own opinions over mine. I’m primarily a bass player.
Small Clone – A famous anecdote is that the United States space program spent millions of dollars developing a pen that could be used to write upside-down while in space. The Russians used a pencil. The Small Clone is the Soviet pencil– a brilliantly simple tool. It’s a very lush, juicy chorus effect. It’s more juicy with the color-switch down, and more “intense” with it up. It does a great vibrato with the rate knob maxed out and the color knob down. For “over the top” settings, you can get a kind of underwater effect.
Stereo Polychorus – I think the Polychorus should have always remained the “Echo Flanger.” It’s a much better description of what the pedal does. It’s a very bright flange/chorus thats built around this echo, faux-reverb kind of sound. Unlike the Small Clone, the Polychorus can’t do lush, juicy chorus. It accels at a very bright, chiming, kind of chorus. It stands out in a mix. The Flanger setting is very good. It’s a pedal that does have a learning curve, the knobs are very interactive. You’ll be tired of the “sea-sick” swirling it does when you’re figuring out how to shape the effect, but it’s worth it to learn. The “echo” aspects of it are what make it so unique, and it does a pretty awesome reverb-imitation on certain settings. It’s an awesome pedal, I use it and love it, but you have to decide if you want a chorus that is for texture, noise, and ambiance or one that is simply used to color a guitar signal.
Stereo Electric Mistress – The biggest difference between this and the aforementioned pedals, is the Stereo Electric Mistress is a digital effect. It does sound very good, but analog-purists always chafe at how clean and crisp digital effects sound. Personally, its up to you. It cuts through a mix very nicely, sounds good with distortion. Being able to dial in the chorus along with the flanger is a cool trick. I liked it on bass, very rich sounding.
I have played all three and own the first two. The Polychorus is on my board right now, and it’s my go-to effect when I want some modulation and textures, even if they aren’t always traditional. Your mileage may vary! Good luck!
May 31, 2009 at 7:53 pm #97208devnulljpParticipantI’m sure that’s just a typo, but one thing to note: the Small Stone is a phaser (and my fave), the Small Clone is the chorus.
I lived through the 80s when everything got drowned in chorus so can’t really stand it, but of the ones you mentioned I don’t think you can go wrong with the Small Clone…unless you really need stereo (in which case nothing beats the old Boss DC-2 in stereo: depth but no wobble).May 31, 2009 at 9:34 pm #97211BlueSteelParticipantThe Small Clone is probably the best chorus you can get. I’ve played a few boss chorus pedals, but nothing compares to the Small Clone.
May 31, 2009 at 9:51 pm #97213Fender&EHX4everModeratorThere are lots of EHX pedals that have chorus. The ones with an * are the ones I use. Out of all of them, I tend to use the Stereo PolyChorus, the Original Electric Mistrss, and the Deluxe Electric Mistress the most.
XO Clone Theory
XO Stereo Electric Mistress
*XO Stereo Memory Man with Hazarai
XO Deluxe Memory ManNon-XO or vintage:
* Original Electric Mistress
* Deluxe Electric Mistress
Clone Theory
Echo-Flanger
* PolyFlange
PolyChorus
* Stereo PolyChorus
Small Clone
* Stereo Memory Man
* Deluxe Memory Man
* 16 Second Digital Delay
*H.O.G.
P.O.G.May 31, 2009 at 9:59 pm #97214devnulljpParticipantQuote:The Small Clone is probably the best chorus you can get. I’ve played a few boss chorus pedals, but nothing compares to the Small Clone.Vintage Small Clone is at least equal to the CE-1 if you ask me, but I agree it wipes the floor with all the Boss CE-x produced afterwards. You have to hear the DC-2 in stereo though. (I’ve got an old DC-2 and also one of the first run of John Fromel’s Lush/Seraph clones, which is better again).
Chorus got horribly overused in the 80s and it still makes me cringe a bit…but of the ones listed, I don’t think you can go wrong with a Small Clone if you’re after classic chorus sounds.May 31, 2009 at 10:44 pm #97216Ned FlandersModeratorThe small clone is the best IMO, its lush as.
December 9, 2009 at 1:06 am #105032petejtMemberI personally prefer the Deluxe Electric Mistress as a chorus pedal, it’s well lush!
December 9, 2009 at 4:18 pm #105071julianModeratorsmall clone does chorus
polychorus does flange, chorus, slapback, and filter matrix (frozen flange)
clone theory does chorus and vibrato (original clone theory also had flange)I’ve only owned the new Clone Theory. It’s very bright, it has a bit of a volume boost, but it is very pretty in a Cocteau Twins sort of way. Personally I like it on bass. On guitar I think it does a nice rotary sound, and it can also make some sea-sick sounds with the depth cranked
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