There are no more limitations," guitarist, musician, and electronics engineerDon Easttold Lifewire via email.

The H9 waslaunched in 2014and sold as a guitar multi-effects pedal.

This format has resilient switches that let you control it with your feet while playing.

The Eventide H90.

Eventide

This was helped by the full-stereo signal path, which wasn’t really necessary for guitars back then.

However, the H9 had a few shortcomings.

As mentioned, it could only run one effects “algorithm” at a time.

The Eventide H90 with an electric guitar.

Eventide

The other limitation was the H9’s interface.

The problem with that was that the app itself was capable but clunky.

Double Trouble

Eventide has fixed all of these problems with the H90.

There is a new app if you prefer that, but at first glance, it is equally opaque.

“It also gives more opportunities to the mixing engineer to be even more creative.

For instance, panning the different parallel signals can give the guitar a big sound on the soundstage.

I would love to experiment with that myself.”

The hardware has also been improved.

Finally, Eventide has left the amazing MIDI capabilities intact.

These effects build on Eventides forward-looking heritage.

You come for the weird, the new, and the sound-sculpting possibilities they afford.

As a guitarist, Im excited about this.