I generally prefer amp distortion. But as Dave says, I think it's very much personal preference, dependent on what works for you, and also on what type of music you play.
+1
I don't go for nearly as much drive nowadays as I know some of you guys do, but I'm definitely in the "I prefer the amp doing it on it's own" camp.
Interesting that Dave (Twinfan) seems to be heading that direction at the moment himself after much time with pedals. I'm sure he's not going to suddenly ditch the pedals, but it seems a good example of it being personal preference and that your preference might change with time and with what you're trying to achieve.
When I was younger and starting to gig, I was always trying to get x, y, or z happening, wondering which bit of kit I needed to acquire to get to where I thought I wanted my sound to go. Then when loads of gigs happened I found out that half the stuff I was trying to achieve was actually in how I used the kit I already had.
This was partly by default - we didn't have the time or money to invest in getting new stuff - you
have to perform with what's coming out of the speakers that night, so you get used to it and learn to make it work for you.
But it was also our sound engineer feeding me back with "why don't you learn how to use that bluddy amp properly!" Helpful bar-steward... but actually he did help, LOADS.
I'd say "but it sounds ok on stage, it's the sound I want, it's like Rory Gallagher, -ish" (this was Rory's early 80s "metal" sound). And he'd go "it might sound ok in your bedsit, but it sounds awful out front at a gig, you don't fit with the bass and drums, I have to keep turning you down, and you're the bluddy lead vox/git in a three-piece!! Have you actually
listened to Rory Gallagher's sound? A) You sound nothing like it, and B) you're not really playing that kind of music anyway..." etc, etc... :roll: He made me question why the knobs were there on the amp, and more importantly why I'd set them like I'd set them. Then he explained how the knobs worked, and after a while he was feeding me back with "great sound out front tonight..."
I think either way will work for you. Or, more importantly, you can
make either way work for you. One way might indeed be better for you in the long run, but you're only going to be able to find that out by trying stuff out.
It's not the route I'd try myself for what I'm trying to achieve at the moment, but I think the following is a really good suggestion:
As you've headed down this road, why not try the full pedal approach and see if you like it?
It will get you somewhere close, it takes advantage of some of the kit and experience you already have, and it gets you some more knowledge/experience of how kit behaves for you :D
One thing though - you're never really gonna be happy with your guitar sound from one day to the next, ever... none of us ever will be... and what's even funnier, all our guitar-tone-heroes, the sounds we're reaching for, they're not always happy with the sounds they're making either :lol: