okay, this is my second try at a huge story, first one lost...*$%
What I was trying to say is:
the workaround your suggesting is one I use myself. However, there's a catch. A composition without effects is not just the same composition as with effects but a completely different song. Does this sound contradictory to you? Let me explicate what I mean:
if you records trax without FX, you'll have to remix them completely once you've got all the digital data. Why is this? Well the stereo image as well as the volumes are completely garbled after the addition of FX.
for instance: take the compression effect (this also applies to dist, overdrive, enhancer, etc). you form a general idea of the combined sounds of a song on the bald, performance mode version of it right? then you apply the effect on a channel and the compression strengthens the soft notes.
consequently the balance with your other instruments is altered. this goes for the stereo image as well because you placed them in a stereo panorama on the basis of the NOFX (nice band) sound.
Let's presume the power of your composition comes partly from the fact that theres a strong bassline pumping from your right speaker. if you use the enhancer effect on this bassline, there a lot more trebly info coming from the right, completely ruining the entire idea of your composition, but still you need the enhancer to get a more realistic sound (or just a sound you like more) from the bass. now you have to completely reconsider you original idea of the composition. you've made choices earlier in the process, and now you have to make them all over again. This sometimes even results in wrong choice of instrument.
The problem lies in the fact that you cannot alter the wavefiles in just the manner that you please (as you'd do when editing a patch).
Think this is nonsens? tell me why you think so.
the bottom line is:
If you care about sound, and I guess we all do. you want to be able to immediatly get the general idea of the composition and tweak that. because the jv/xp's have limited use of efx you cannot. this means you have to tweak the sound of your song, mix it, record it into wave, listen to it, retweak the sound of your song (sometimes this means going a step back), once you're satisfied with the sound of the individual recorded trax, mix again, decide if the overall sound of the combined trax is what you expected it to be and then finally master it.
Now some of you might not find this a problem and usually I do not mind all that much but if I'm seriously making music and I'm struggling to get a certain sound, this is just an extra barrier on the road to it.
so another question:
does anyone has an alternative workaround for this problem? Any ideas how to overcome these problems.