Here you go.
Thank you, SG John!!!!
Here you go.
Of late, I've played through some very expensive tube amps. Some are studio owned and others are privately owned. This morning it was a colleague's Overdrive Special. It sounded OK, but it just didn't blow me away. The price tag certainly gives you bragging rights, but as far as it really delivering uncommon tones, even clean, it just wasn't super remarkable.
Hmmm...
Swing by my shop in Long Beach and plug in to my Carol-Ann Satin...
The Fender in the shot is an amp that came with Mrs. IbLive when we got married. Same vintage as the Traynor. Early 70s. Cute little 5 watter with a singe 8inch.
I think your point has merit, but its a bit of a blanket statement and I never look that lightly into anything.
What serves your needs and is met with satisfaction from your listeners is a function of what you like to play and they like to hear. It may also be, to some extent, a matter of you being more inspired by the sound your rig makes, which translates to your playing.
True. You play for a living. But, when pondering this, it occurred to me that others do, as well. There are other famous artists of sufficient means and status to sample every amp you've tried...and come away with a different opinion. And, you know what? That's okay!
In the end, some need or want a lot of features. Others don't. For me, I insist on a two-channel amp with an effects loop. That's all I really need for features. Though, I would also prefer a separate EQ for each channel. I don't want built in effects; I want to select my own. The rest comes down to the sound. But that's just me. I know what works for me and it's fine if it isn't what someone else needs or wants.
You've embarked on your own tonal journey and arrived at a different location than some others.
Glad to hear (pun intended) that my American friends are digging a Canadian Made amp. Traynors are very good!I have a 20w Traynor I paid $250 for in 1974. It still works. It’s louder than I can play it. It sounds pretty great to me. Best part. I didn’t drop 4 figures on it.
Perhaps I did paint with a broad brush, to a point. But, I'm not looking at it quite so lightly as you may suppose.
The choice in music gear really comes down to what any individual likes and prefers. There is no "best" in any of this. There is only "best" for a particular individual's taste. What serves your needs and is met with satisfaction from your listeners is a function of what you like to play and they like to hear. It may also be, to some extent, a matter of you being more inspired by the sound your rig makes, which translates to your playing.
True. You play for a living. But, when pondering this, it occurred to me that others do, as well. There are other famous artists of sufficient means and status to sample every amp you've tried...and come away with a different opinion. And, you know what? That's okay! Others choose the other stuff because it produces the sounds they like. Bonamassa is famous for his preference toward vintage gear - Fenders...Marshalls...what have you. It works for him. It works for his sound. Brian Setzer uses almost exclusively Fender amps with a very few well-selected effects. Eric Johnson uses mostly vintage Marshalls and Fenders, but has also used HiWatt and Dumble. On the other hand, George Thorogood is not known for being too particular about amps. He's far more particular about using a Gibson ES-125TDC with dog-ear P-90s. Again...it all comes down to preference.
Now, have all these artists or others actually sampled other amps? I don't know. My point is, any one of these or a myriad of other players in any genre have the resources and ability to choose pretty much whatever they want. But, for whatever reason they play what they play and their audiences like the sound.
In the end, some need or want a lot of features. Others don't. For me, I insist on a two-channel amp with an effects loop. That's all I really need for features. Though, I would also prefer a separate EQ for each channel. I don't want built in effects; I want to select my own. The rest comes down to the sound. But that's just me. I know what works for me and it's fine if it isn't what someone else needs or wants.
You've embarked on your own tonal journey and arrived at a different location than some others. That's okay. You really don't need to justify your decision. If some of the ribbing you've gotten from some of us (me included) has made you feel a little defensive, then you have my apology. I certainly don't want to make you feel uncomfortable. If it makes you feel any better...I've gigged with a Line 6 before, too. But, mine wasn't even an amp. It's just the, now obsolete, Pod X3 Live...run straight to the PA and not using any cabinet or amp!
I was also going to say I also heard good things about this amp. Oh and it is Solid State too.
Roland JC120. Supposed to be loud and also have incredible cleans. But since Robert is aiming for good amp for metal, I would guess it might not fit the bill.
But then again, maybe with pedals and his ear/guitars it might. Here is the JC 40 version
Glad to hear (pun intended) that my American friends are digging a Canadian Made amp. Traynors are very good!
I likely will be re-stating a point I made in other similar topics of why one aspect in the musical equation solves the problem while other answers don't do it for you yet there seems to be different answers that are the right answer for others.
That brings me to that subjective nature of music. The metal head won't necessarily enjoy Joni Mitchell or Sonny and Cher or even classical music. But if you stretch a genre far enough, one can see how valuable a good background in classical music could be for the heavy metal and shredder type players. So, to do my best to wrap up my thoughts on this, I will boil it down to just like my job of being a carpenter or how a famous sculptor might go about their business. There are many many good tools we have to make a cabinet, install windows, chop down a tree, carve a rock, cast a statue in bronze etc. It should be obvious that in all of these to the lay person it should be obvious that one would presume a simple hammer would be necessary. Yet, I would venture to say there are many variations of hammer. My framing hammer would not be a good tool for an artisan for striking gouges and chisels for highly decorative trim type cabinetry, and similarly would not be the same type a sculptor would use for his work. So, basically one must choose the tool ( amps in this case) that best fits the use they intend it for and how it works best for the person using it. It boils down to the job at hand and what each person decides will do that job best given their parameters and tastes.