My local Guitar Sinner had quite a few amps on hand, so I systematically played just about every one of them.
I started with all the Fenders. Hot Rod, Twin Reverb, Blackface, Tweed, Mustang and Champion. All had really great cleans - as one would expect - but none of them really grabbed me.
Played all the Katanas. Very good amp. Lot's of options. Too many knobs and such to suit me. Complicated IMHO.
Played the Mesa Badlander and a Rectoverb, plus a Fillmore 100. Both are great amps. Neither can be run without a Tube Screamer. On their own, very average. just amplification. No color. But, a great pedal platform.
Played Bogners and Orange. Several models of each. Seemed OK, but again, nothing I heard grabbled me.
Line 6. Lots of tones, really good punch from a 1x12 amp. Way too many switches and LED's to suit me. Kinda hard to get a tone out of without reading the manual.
Kemper display model. LOTS of tonal options. probably a great amp for a recording studio. Just didn't grab me. Good tone through the extension cabinet.
Peavey Vyper. Good amp. Lightweight. wasn't blown away by the gain structure. Seemed well built.
Vox AC15 & AC30. Never will understand the appeal of this amp. Basically, just another Fender. Average.
EVH 5150 III Head and EVH 2x12 cab. Really good overdrive structure. Great EQ response, but not tight enough to run without a Tube Screamer, IMHO. Brown Sound was really good. Very mild gain even cranked.
Friedman 112 Vintage 65 watt. Good overdrive structure. Familiar Marshall-esque EQ's. Sounded good. No complaints. Not enough gain on its own to be used without a pedal.
Hughes & Kettner GrandMeister Deluxe 40. This was the big surprise of the night. Really good gain production. Great EQ's and onboard FX like chorus and reverb. I'm just not good with these storable patch or I-pad controlled amps. But. This amp could seriously work without a pedalboard.
Blackstar Venue MkII Club 40 - Surprisingly good amp. Simple, front panel controls a plus. Needs a full pedalboard to really work for me. Blows the Vox AC15 and 30 away in every respect.
Played the Marshall Code 50. I got the best sound with this out of all the amps there. The amp's ability to emulate a speaker cab on the single 12" speaker really thumped. (wait before you jump to conclusions. I'm not advocating this amp, but using it as an means to quantify and observation)
TAKEAWAYS:
I absolutely love chorus and I use it all the time, both clean and dirty. I also like a warm reverb and a 75-100Ms delay. For whatever reason, the fact that this amp was really easy to dial up those tones appealed to me.
However....
I dislike digital amps. I don't like push-to-store-preset anything. I hate top control panel and top output jack amps. To me, it's just waiting for a spilled beer.
So, what, if anything, did I learn???
10 Things I discovered.
1. Plain Jane Amps, like the Mesa Fillmore, or the Blackstar HT Club 40, both do a great job at amplification. But, without my 34" pedalboard, I just can't get a sound that I like.
2. I love AC/DC, but I do not want such a dry tone for myself when I am playing.
3. To get a sound that is pleasing to my ears, I need to have a TS-9 for tightness and additional gain production.
4. Chorus is a HUGE part of my sound
5. I actually miss not having a noise gate
6. Stepping on a boost for solos (Boss GE7) is an integrated part of my sound.
7. I prefer a 2X12 to both a 4X12 and a 1X12
8. A Compressor is also something I miss when it is switched off. More of a note to note balance thing. I do not set them for sustain.
9. My Spray Can Yellow Stratocaster is better than any guitar I pulled down and played (and I demo'd amps with my YeloStrat)
10. My Ivanberg Modded Origin 50 Kills ALL of them for tone, gain production, gain texture and volume - when connected to my 34" pedalboard
So, what else did I learn???
When I hear a tone that I like, I instantly know it. I may HATE that it takes a 34" pedalboard to produce that sound, but I can't get away from those sonic things that grab me.
The 1995-1998 Marshall Valvestate Bi-Chorus Amps (8280 2x12 and 8200 Head) have the best chorus effect I have ever heard. They also have a really deep, 3 spring reverb.
These Valvestate amps also produce sufficient gain structure and tightness that they can be used without a Tube Screamer. (the 8280 and 8200 produce even more gain than my Ivanberg Origin 50)
So, my Ivanberg Origin 50 and 2x12 + 34" board is probably about as good a live tone as I am gonna get.
The Mesa Fillmore 50 works equally well once you add pedals and figure out the complex EQ arrangement.
My ideal "dream" rig would be a Marshall 8200 Bi-Chorus Head, thereby eliminating the Chorus, Tube Screamer and Reverb Pedal from my board - 7 FX instead of 10...maybe even drop down to a 24" board.
Fun way to kill some time...
I started with all the Fenders. Hot Rod, Twin Reverb, Blackface, Tweed, Mustang and Champion. All had really great cleans - as one would expect - but none of them really grabbed me.
Played all the Katanas. Very good amp. Lot's of options. Too many knobs and such to suit me. Complicated IMHO.
Played the Mesa Badlander and a Rectoverb, plus a Fillmore 100. Both are great amps. Neither can be run without a Tube Screamer. On their own, very average. just amplification. No color. But, a great pedal platform.
Played Bogners and Orange. Several models of each. Seemed OK, but again, nothing I heard grabbled me.
Line 6. Lots of tones, really good punch from a 1x12 amp. Way too many switches and LED's to suit me. Kinda hard to get a tone out of without reading the manual.
Kemper display model. LOTS of tonal options. probably a great amp for a recording studio. Just didn't grab me. Good tone through the extension cabinet.
Peavey Vyper. Good amp. Lightweight. wasn't blown away by the gain structure. Seemed well built.
Vox AC15 & AC30. Never will understand the appeal of this amp. Basically, just another Fender. Average.
EVH 5150 III Head and EVH 2x12 cab. Really good overdrive structure. Great EQ response, but not tight enough to run without a Tube Screamer, IMHO. Brown Sound was really good. Very mild gain even cranked.
Friedman 112 Vintage 65 watt. Good overdrive structure. Familiar Marshall-esque EQ's. Sounded good. No complaints. Not enough gain on its own to be used without a pedal.
Hughes & Kettner GrandMeister Deluxe 40. This was the big surprise of the night. Really good gain production. Great EQ's and onboard FX like chorus and reverb. I'm just not good with these storable patch or I-pad controlled amps. But. This amp could seriously work without a pedalboard.
Blackstar Venue MkII Club 40 - Surprisingly good amp. Simple, front panel controls a plus. Needs a full pedalboard to really work for me. Blows the Vox AC15 and 30 away in every respect.
Played the Marshall Code 50. I got the best sound with this out of all the amps there. The amp's ability to emulate a speaker cab on the single 12" speaker really thumped. (wait before you jump to conclusions. I'm not advocating this amp, but using it as an means to quantify and observation)
TAKEAWAYS:
I absolutely love chorus and I use it all the time, both clean and dirty. I also like a warm reverb and a 75-100Ms delay. For whatever reason, the fact that this amp was really easy to dial up those tones appealed to me.
However....
I dislike digital amps. I don't like push-to-store-preset anything. I hate top control panel and top output jack amps. To me, it's just waiting for a spilled beer.
So, what, if anything, did I learn???
10 Things I discovered.
1. Plain Jane Amps, like the Mesa Fillmore, or the Blackstar HT Club 40, both do a great job at amplification. But, without my 34" pedalboard, I just can't get a sound that I like.
2. I love AC/DC, but I do not want such a dry tone for myself when I am playing.
3. To get a sound that is pleasing to my ears, I need to have a TS-9 for tightness and additional gain production.
4. Chorus is a HUGE part of my sound
5. I actually miss not having a noise gate
6. Stepping on a boost for solos (Boss GE7) is an integrated part of my sound.
7. I prefer a 2X12 to both a 4X12 and a 1X12
8. A Compressor is also something I miss when it is switched off. More of a note to note balance thing. I do not set them for sustain.
9. My Spray Can Yellow Stratocaster is better than any guitar I pulled down and played (and I demo'd amps with my YeloStrat)
10. My Ivanberg Modded Origin 50 Kills ALL of them for tone, gain production, gain texture and volume - when connected to my 34" pedalboard
So, what else did I learn???
When I hear a tone that I like, I instantly know it. I may HATE that it takes a 34" pedalboard to produce that sound, but I can't get away from those sonic things that grab me.
The 1995-1998 Marshall Valvestate Bi-Chorus Amps (8280 2x12 and 8200 Head) have the best chorus effect I have ever heard. They also have a really deep, 3 spring reverb.
These Valvestate amps also produce sufficient gain structure and tightness that they can be used without a Tube Screamer. (the 8280 and 8200 produce even more gain than my Ivanberg Origin 50)
So, my Ivanberg Origin 50 and 2x12 + 34" board is probably about as good a live tone as I am gonna get.
The Mesa Fillmore 50 works equally well once you add pedals and figure out the complex EQ arrangement.
My ideal "dream" rig would be a Marshall 8200 Bi-Chorus Head, thereby eliminating the Chorus, Tube Screamer and Reverb Pedal from my board - 7 FX instead of 10...maybe even drop down to a 24" board.
Fun way to kill some time...
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