T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1874.1 | non-midi rack puke | MILKWY::JACQUES | If you don't stop, you'll go deaf | Tue Jun 19 1990 09:33 | 28 |
| Midi is an industry standard which was formed mainly for synthesizers
but has carried over to many facets of the musical instrument industry.
MIDI stands for "Musical Instrument Digital Interface" and it is sort
of like the comm line on a computer. It allows synthesizers to talk
to computers, drum machines, sequencers, etc. MIDI also includes the
standard by which information is tranmitted, not just the hardware.
MIDI is now included on all kinds of signal processors, like multi-efx,
equalizers, reverbs, midi-mixers, etc.
A Rack is basically a box with steel rails 19" apart, which electronic
equipment can be mounted in. Most of digitals large computers, disk
drives, etc. are housed in large steel 19" racks. Racks are also used
for P.A. systems, guitar efx, keyboard equipment, etc. They have been
around for years, but musicians have been using them more and more over
the last 10-15 years.
A midi-rack-puke is a musician hooked on racks and racks of midi-controlled
equipment. Many people in this conferance have bought just one rack-
mount processor, and within a very short time, they become hooked on
rack-mount equipment. I for one have a 14-space (24") rack full of
gear, plus a 3-space rack with a power amp, and I am shopping for new
racks for more gear. Perhaps "rack-mount-junky" is a better word. I've
just got to get my *fix*, and every trip to a music store sends me into
a cold sweat.
Hope this helps !!
Mark
|
1874.2 | I can play that song in 8 rack spaces... | WEFXEM::COTE | As seen on TV! | Tue Jun 19 1990 10:43 | 6 |
| Everyone knows that your musical prowess is directly related to the
number of rack spaces you can fill. More is better.
:^)
Edd
|
1874.3 | J.C. Cooperfield... | MFGMEM::DERRICO | | Tue Jun 19 1990 13:30 | 4 |
| Didn't 'Coop invent that term...? *8^)
Rude
|
1874.4 | burnin' the midnight oil | UPWARD::HEISER | Bach's Bourr�e | Wed Jun 20 1990 00:14 | 3 |
| His picture is in the dictionary next to the term!
Mike
|
1874.5 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Wed Jun 20 1990 00:26 | 3 |
| Yep, this phrase is definitely his ! 8^)
Scary
|
1874.6 | the tag | FREEBE::REAUME | WEEKENDworkweekWEEKENDworkweek... | Thu Jun 28 1990 10:44 | 7 |
| And a true M.R.P. is totally adamant about the advantages of
rack systems over stacks/combos. As a matter of fact he would
call them antiquated. Hmmmmmmm - yer right , that's J.C. for sure!
---/boom/---
(a somewhat milder M.R.P.)
|
1874.7 | | CSC32::H_SO | Pizza dude's got 30 seconds! | Sat Jun 30 1990 11:27 | 5 |
|
I agree. Looked like j.c.'s forehead is starting to resemble
somewhat like a rack space... ;)
J-Dot
|
1874.8 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI rack puke | Tue Jul 17 1990 17:06 | 7 |
| Far out ! My own topic !!
Thanks !
jc (Who wants to know whats wrong with my forehead, J-Dot !)
PS - See you Colorado Spring-ers tomorrow night !
|
1874.9 | new MRP trend | PNO::HEISER | news: 70 shopping days til no PNO | Fri Jan 18 1991 13:34 | 8 |
| It seems I see a lot of people going to separate dedicated effects
components lately. For example, separate units for each of the
following: chorus, reverb, delay, etc. Seems to me you'd get for
bang for the buck with a multieffect. So what are the reasons for such
a setup? Would this allow for greater signal integrity and/or
flexibility?
Mike
|
1874.10 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Jan 18 1991 13:49 | 8 |
| More lights.
:)
Well, seriously, I dunno. Why have 4 boxes to do what *one* can do VERY
well ?
jc (WHo never noticed what Mike is pointing out)
|
1874.11 | | UPWARD::HEISER | news: 70 shopping days til no PNO | Fri Jan 18 1991 13:59 | 6 |
| > More lights.
There's gotta be more to it than that, although it's true! I've seen
some racks that look like Baghdad on Wednesday night.
Mike
|
1874.12 | | FSTVAX::GALLO | Spontaneous Harmony Singing | Fri Jan 18 1991 14:32 | 10 |
|
re: single FX units
I hope it's a trend, cuz MRPs will sell all of their
multiFX boxes real cheap and I'll buy 'em..
:-)
|
1874.13 | Looks cool when the lights are low | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Jan 18 1991 15:43 | 13 |
| I think it's wierd. I don't think I'd sell off my DSP128+ unless it
was to buy a TC2290 (for $2K + !!!)...Ergo, NEVER !
RE: Lights
The SP1000 has power LEDS on it to show how much your pumpin' out.
They look like two huge sine waves with three different colors. I try to
see how long I can keep them all lit ;) (125wpc) Nice light show.
Other than that I guess thats about it for me, 'cept for the level
indicators on the DSP, Mp1 and the wacko lights showing my noise gate
operating. The Kitty hawk doesn't have any lights, really.
|
1874.14 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Play deep... | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:02 | 6 |
|
Mike, I think it's just a matter of taste and what you like.
Personnally, I didn't anything out of my DSP except the reverb.
Another example is EJ, who I saw with a MXR (?) flanger rack mount
job. He probably is just knocked out by the sound thus nothing
else will do.
|
1874.15 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:26 | 7 |
| The SP has three led colors???
My oh my I've only seen two, no wonder I didn't think it was that loud, I must
not be driving it right!
dbii
|
1874.16 | Roland makes some great effects units | PNO::HEISER | news: 70 shopping days til no PNO | Fri Jan 18 1991 16:37 | 11 |
| Makes sense Pat. That's what I meant about signal integrity. Members
of the Brotherhood of Tone(tm) are true tone freaks. I can see getting
the best available for the most common effects to really enhance your
sound.
For example, the Boss CE300 for chorusing, Roland SDE3000 for delays,
and the Roland SRV2000 for reverbs (do you see a trend here? :-)). These
3 units are supposedly what everyone in LA are using. This trio is
starting to become fairly common around here too.
Mike
|
1874.17 | Confessions of a Rack Puke Wannabe | UPWARD::HEISER | Smaq Iraq | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:26 | 11 |
| I had a chance to play my Ibanez thru THE MAJOR MIDI RACK PUKE
(Coop's) for about an hour on Sunday night. I pretty much gave equal
time to the KH Quattro and the ADA MP1 (first time with both for me).
This setup SCREAMS! I lusted with envy the whole time I used it ;-)
I did notice that the Quattro sounded real similar to my M1, except for
the massive gain on the hot lead channel. Insane Gain for sure, but the
MP1 has some truly INSANE GAIN settings.
Rack-Puke-Wannabe (hold the MIDI please ;-))
|
1874.18 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Tue Feb 05 1991 13:08 | 1 |
| <blush>
|
1874.19 | the REAL paint peeler | PNO::HEISER | where roses grow | Wed Feb 13 1991 16:48 | 4 |
| Something new for the rack: Crown has a new Macro Reference series amp
out with really cool lights on the front ;-)
Mike
|
1874.20 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed Feb 13 1991 16:58 | 3 |
| Yeah, but how heavy is it ??
jc (The one and only)
|
1874.21 | | PNO::HEISER | where roses grow | Wed Feb 13 1991 17:45 | 1 |
| heavy enough to power your rack AND your house mains ;-)
|
1874.22 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed Feb 13 1991 18:04 | 3 |
| Oh boy, a rack mounted DC300A Ack!
jc
|
1874.23 | LOUD | PNO::HEISER | where roses grow | Wed Feb 13 1991 18:18 | 5 |
| no, no, no, no. The Macro series is much more powerfull (and more
pleasing to the eye ;-)) than the DC300A. Satriani had about 10 - 8
space racks full of them when he was here in Phoenix.
Mike
|
1874.24 | | UPWARD::SANDERSB | I install with ease | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:44 | 30 |
|
MT-600 - approx. 270 watts per channel stereo, 600 mono.
MT-1200 - approx. 500 watts per channel stereo, 1200 mono.
MT-2400 - approx. 550 watts per channel stereo, 2000 mono.
MT-10000 - approx. 9,000 watts mono only into 1 ohm.
The MT-600, MT-1200, MT-2400 are 2RU tall, but have to be bolted
to a back rack, as they are 16" deep. They weigh in around 50
lbs., approx.
The MT-10000 weighs in at 95 lbs and is around 7RU tall. It needs
three pahse power.
All the MacroTech units have optional plugin modules for things
like crossovers, balanced lines, IQ-2000 computer control, etc.
The IQ-2000 software runs on Mac's or IBM compatibles and
allows one to control up to 2000 amplifiers.
There is also the Micro Tech series, which is the same, without
the plugin module capability.
And there is the Macro Reference - 5 RU tall, 750 watts per
channel stereo, 1500 watts mono, dual velocity feedback loop,
the logos and indicators are all lit electroluminisently, with
signal present, OEDP, and other light up indicators. It also
accepts the plugin modules and a special D/Aplugin is being
developed to enable one to run a digital mixer directly in.
Bob
|
1874.25 | I don't care HOW nice the lights are if it doesn't sound good | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I claim, therefore I am! | Thu Feb 14 1991 12:57 | 14 |
| re: Crown Macro Reference series amps
I would think these would suck for use with a guitar rig. With a
stereo or PA rig, you want the sound preserved as closely as can be to
the original sound, but with a guitar rig, you want the power amp to
color the sound. That's why companies like TubeWorks go way out of
their way to design solid state power amps that attempt to color your
sound the way a dirty sounding tube amp does.
I used a really clean SS power amp with my rack rig for awhile and
hated the sound. Now I use it to power monitors and such.
JMO,
Greg
|
1874.26 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Thu Feb 14 1991 13:11 | 6 |
| I gotta have that 10000 doo-hickey !!
I'd need a fork truck to move my rack, and a speaker system similar
to the one in "Back To The Future" but WOW ! Thats a HEAP of power!
;)
|
1874.27 | it's gonna be loud! | PNO::HEISER | where roses grow | Thu Feb 14 1991 13:13 | 4 |
| I'd be interested in hearing how it sounds, while letting the preamp do
the coloring/distorting.
Mike
|
1874.28 | | FREEBE::REAUME | A **** General KH MRP | Fri Feb 15 1991 10:12 | 19 |
|
I would say - leave the P.A. power amps for the P.A.
If there wasn't a reason for all the new power amps geared
to guitar rigs we wouldn't have seen so many new ones added to the
market recently. I'll take a *heavy* sound over a HEAVY amp!
Guitar Power Amps:
MosValve - looks like the prime choice for solid-state
Metaltronix - nice but o.o.p. (out of production)
Hughes & Kettner - mono half rack size, have to check it out.
Hafler - new product from established power amp manufacturer.
Marshall - Tube and Mosfet, probably sounds great, not cheap!
Peavey - the perennial price buster, tube mono/stereo and s.s.
...see specific manufacturer notes for particulars.
-B()()M-
|
1874.29 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Fri Feb 15 1991 12:24 | 5 |
| re :- 1 you forgot semour duncan
they're now making preamp/amp combo's and they soudn like they're probably hot!
dbii
|
1874.30 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Fri Feb 15 1991 15:26 | 4 |
| FYI - I tried the S-D preamp/amp rack stuff. - YuckOOOOOOO !!!
Bow-wow !
|
1874.31 | woof | CAVLRY::BUCK | Coaster Nut! | Fri Feb 15 1991 15:32 | 1 |
|
|
1874.32 | | FREEBE::REAUME | A **** General KH MRP | Mon Feb 18 1991 10:23 | 12 |
|
A friend of mine had the SD convertible amp. It didn't go woof---
---it went poof. As in ultra-unreliable.
I don't like the arrangement of the SD preamp. One set of tone
controls! YUCK! On top of that Coop sez "Woof!".
King Tone should be dethroned!
-B()()M-
|
1874.33 | | PNO::HEISER | where roses grow | Mon Feb 18 1991 11:25 | 4 |
| My teacher has an SD combo. It's been in the shop more often than not.
Good thing he has his Boogies for gigs.
Mike
|
1874.34 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Mon Feb 18 1991 12:09 | 6 |
| The SD convertable was a great idea, and a very good sounding amp that had
reliability problems. I was sort of hoping (but not that seriuosly since I'm
a kitty/midi rack puke) that the preamp/amp combo was nice. I hear good things
about the 80/40 amps bnut haven't seen one yet..
dbii
|
1874.35 | FWIW | HAVASU::HEISER | when the reign comes down | Mon Jul 22 1991 12:00 | 1 |
| The new Musician's Friend has a MIDI primer for guitarists in it.
|
1874.36 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Mon Jul 22 1991 14:37 | 13 |
| I gotta say this:
I saw a local metal band this weekend. The guitarist had a *25* space rack
and a pair of marshall 4x12's. I thought I was bad - this rack was
JAMMED with stuff (only saw it from a distance - don't know what was
in it)...
My point:
It was WAY overkill ! The guy had NOTHING but problems with it thru their set.
Is MIDI Rack Pukeness so much of a disease that people can't show ANY control ?
jc (Who's 8 space rack has three open slots)
|
1874.37 | Less IS more! | CAVLRY::BUCK | c'mon baby lets go for a ride | Mon Jul 22 1991 14:46 | 1 |
| I rest my case!
|
1874.38 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Mon Jul 22 1991 14:48 | 8 |
| bah,
If you set up a midi rack correctly you should have little to no problems.
I've been running mine for months now with NO glitches at all...and getting
constant raves about my tone...
But truely, technology isn't for everyone...
dbii
|
1874.39 | Rack envy | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Mon Jul 22 1991 19:21 | 21 |
| re: .36
This is a perfect example of "rack envy" (similar to "penis envy", but
in a slightly more musical context.
;^)
FWIW, the guy with the 24 slot rack said he didn't have any trouble
with the rack, it was just his wireless screwing up (and guitars going
out of tune and him having "guitar techs" that didn't retune them for
him).
It's not all the way full, there are about four empty slots in it, but
he's got one of those rack drawer things in there to put cables and
stuff in. The heart of it is a Mesa/Boogie head rack mounted in the
bottom. I've noticed that a lot with people that like big racks, seems
like the Boogies react better (ie don't lose a lot of their tone) with
a lot of effects then some other types of amps.
Greg
|
1874.40 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Tue Jul 23 1991 20:12 | 6 |
| I didn't envy him. I felt bad, cuz he's gotta lug that monster around,
and I bet his tone isn't much better than anyone elses...
Now I *AM* envious of Steve Vais rack... :)
jc
|
1874.41 | but I wouldn't want to carry it! | FREEBE::REAUME | C.I. CYCLONE X UNLIMITED | Wed Jul 24 1991 18:14 | 7 |
|
I'm envious of anyone with a rack bigger than mine!!!!
Ya got a measuring stick Coop?
B-} X 100 -B()()M-
|
1874.42 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Thu Jul 25 1991 19:40 | 3 |
| This thing was on wheels - definately wouldn't wanna hump that thing around.
jc (Who has the rack now needs 6 more 4x12's... ;)
|
1874.43 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Need a hot tune and a cold one | Fri Jul 26 1991 10:38 | 4 |
|
Did it have a tow bar and licence plate too?
|
1874.44 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Jul 26 1991 13:30 | 14 |
| I got a WICKED nice complement the other day -
I was gigging with my rack, and had my Marshall sitting on my 4x12 (switched
off)... Guy from a well known local band came up to me between sets and
sez "Man, thats the BEST sounding Marshall I've ever heard - did you have it
modified ??"
Wagagaga - I said "No, thats my rack"
He's got two marshalls - a JCM900 and a wicked old MArshall plexi.
Made my day.
cj
|
1874.45 | ;-) | HAVASU::HEISER | read my mips, know new vaxes | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:15 | 1 |
| get outta here! you made that up!
|
1874.46 | BS | CAVLRY::BUCK | tear down the walls | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:22 | 6 |
| -2
Yeah, get real! If I had a 900 and a plexi, I wouldn't even NOTICE
other people's sound out of having such a big head about mine!
;^)
|
1874.47 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Here's a quarter ... | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:34 | 3 |
| Lights facinate children ... 8^)
Scary
|
1874.48 | rapidly regressing | FREEBE::REAUME | C.I. CYCLONE X UNLIMITED | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:36 | 7 |
|
..Goo Goo, Gaa Gaa
-LEDboom-
|
1874.49 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:39 | 8 |
|
Of course, if this guy didn't notice that your Marshall wasn't even
turned on how swift can he be?
8-)
Kevin
|
1874.50 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Here's a quarter ... | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:39 | 6 |
| Touche' ... 8^)
Does Fisher-Price make rack gear ? Does Health-Tex make stage-wear ?
Do elephants really come in quarts ? 8^)
Scary
|
1874.51 | Snotty Marshall abusers...
| KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:57 | 8 |
| Hey Kev,
How many Marashalls have you seen with burnt out lights in their switches.
Two of the 800's I'd had had burnt lights in 'em. :)
Hey the lights be cool, but the Midi Rack Puke WAILS again !
jc (I said OPINIONATED ! It works for me !)
|
1874.52 | onesies, twosies | FREEBE::REAUME | C.I. CYCLONE X UNLIMITED | Fri Jul 26 1991 14:58 | 8 |
|
FWIW ... I've got at least 72 LED's/lamps in my KH/RI/SP MIDI rack!
I'll count 'em all for sure if you want. Hey Coop - I'll match you
unless you still got that Hush unit with all the LED's in it!
-B()()M-
|
1874.53 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | tear down the walls | Fri Jul 26 1991 15:05 | 7 |
| The hush unit is a big LED addition to any rack. They move, even!
;)
Scary, you're killin me!!
Buck, who may go down to check out Kev Mcdonough tonight...anyone else
wanna go?
|
1874.54 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Jul 26 1991 20:13 | 5 |
| I gopt some major hush-lights, but the biggies are my PL-Plus, SP1000
(with Sinwave-lights). Boom has the coolest light show though - that DT-1
has the most bitchin' lights since the storbotuner ! :)
jc
|
1874.55 | Brandishing my handy can of RID-O-RACK! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Sat Jul 27 1991 19:40 | 11 |
| >How many Marashalls have you seen with burnt out lights in their switches.
>Two of the 800's I'd had had burnt lights in 'em. :)
Of all the Marshalls I've seen, I only remember one in which the switch
light didn't work, a 12 year old JMP 50wt MV head I looked into buying.
The light in the 800 you sold me wasn't burnt out, it was WIRED WRONG!
Works fine now that the amps all fixed up...
Greg
|
1874.56 | ...midi rack puke and the final frontier... | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | UNIX is cool... | Mon Jul 29 1991 15:01 | 4 |
| ...speaking of midi I'll be exploring the wonderful world of using a volume
pedal as a midi controller beginning tonight....
dbii
|
1874.57 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Mon Jul 29 1991 15:17 | 13 |
| Prepare for blown minds -
Tom (the other guitarist in HardBall) will probably buy my Mp1
and SP1000 (he's sick of his Marshall). With the bucks I'm thinking
I'm gonna have a custom rack built with a 2550 and 4500 Marshall mounted
in it, a Furman PL PLus, a DSP128+, Audio Technica wireless, MIDI octopus,
and a Rocktron Hush IICX. All this into a pair of 4x12's - stereo.
What do we think ?? Could htis be way cool ??
Naturally, I'll keep my MIDI controller. :^)
jc (Ready for a change)
|
1874.58 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | tear down the walls | Mon Jul 29 1991 15:24 | 1 |
| How much does he want for the Marshall??
|
1874.59 | | KDX200::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Mon Jul 29 1991 17:09 | 4 |
| I think he wants to keep it. But he'd probably sell it for $500.
He thinks it's collectable cuz it's a JMP.
jc
|
1874.60 | pricey! | CAVLRY::BUCK | tear down the walls | Mon Jul 29 1991 17:30 | 6 |
| >I think he wants to keep it. But he'd probably sell it for $500.
>He thinks it's collectable cuz it's a JMP.
He thinks wrong?! $500 for a USED 50wt JMP might be a bahgin in
Colorado, but it's financial sodomy in Massachusettes! Tell him
it's worth $350 in mint cond.
|
1874.61 | Bend Over To Insert Money | RGB::ROST | If you don't C#, you might Bb | Mon Jul 29 1991 17:33 | 4 |
| "Financial Sodomy"...great, that's just the name I need for my new
band....
Brian
|
1874.62 | How much in American money? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | I wanna be sedated! | Mon Jul 29 1991 18:43 | 13 |
| Five bills? No way!
There's nothing collectable about a JMP. I know a guy here in the
Springs that had one in MINT condition that had been professionally
modded even, with EL34 conversion, new tubes, AND an Anvil flight case
(!), and he couldn't draw ANY interest in the thing at $350-$400.
Tom's isn't even close to the condition this one was in and doesn't sound
as good, I suspect it might sell in the $250-$300 range. Not much
market for single channel amps that don't do "high gain" these days
unless they're vintage, and there's nothing vintage about 1980.
Greg
|
1874.63 | I know I am dumb so no jibes please! | NEEPS::IRVINE | Pass the hair clippers... its Summer | Tue Jun 08 1993 08:43 | 9 |
| IGNORANCE IS NO EXCUSE - Just call me stupid!
My co-guitarist has been messing about with his ME5 and a Korg M1. But
the question I need answered is:
Can you use a guitar trough the ME5 to trigger the M1, and if so
how?
Bob
|
1874.64 | | TECRUS::ROST | I need air freshener under the drums | Tue Jun 08 1993 08:54 | 5 |
| Re: .63
The answer is: Nope.
Brian
|
1874.65 | reviving the great debate | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Mar 26 1996 12:23 | 4 |
| So has rack technology evolved to a point where you can safely replace
most amps or is a combo/head rig still the way to go?
Mike
|
1874.66 | One man's opinion. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Tue Mar 26 1996 13:25 | 21 |
| Loaded question! Very subjective.
My opinion is that the conventional combo or head/speaker is still
the most popular type rig sold.
There are still pockets of people using racks full of gear but it
is more the exception than the rule. I would say if you are
determined to put together a rack and get good sound, it is certainly
possible to do, but you have to be real selective on gear, and the
preamp and power amp should by all means be all-tube.
I have a rack at home with a Mesa Boogie preamp and a few other
goodies. I also have a Fender Deluxe reverb. I can tell you that
the rack mostly collects dust. The deluxe reverb get's the most
use by far.
Mark
Mark
|
1874.67 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | General MIDI | Tue Mar 26 1996 14:03 | 11 |
| I guess I'm ready to say that MRP is now a very viable way to go
for home recording.
I've been pretty impressed with some of the things I've heard recorded
with the GSP-2102 (you should hear this Steve Howe-esque guitar tone
that some friends of mine got on this Internet Gentle Giant tribute
thing that's being done).
But interestingly enough, I think the GSP-2102 sounds better on tape
(going direct) than it does live. I'd still rather have an amp/cab
for live stuff but I'm sold on it for recording on a budget.
|
1874.68 | What do they say? "Your mileage may vary" | BSS::MANTHEI | My wife is jealous of MS.DOS | Tue Mar 26 1996 14:11 | 22 |
| I'm happy with my rack setup.
It may be that I could have gotten a better sound by running the
standard head / spkr deal, but I was tired of carrying around all the
extras to make that work.
I got tired of plugging in effects, then using duct tape to attach the
tuner so I could see it, etc. Now everything is racked and
pre-plugged in. Wireless, tuner, digital delay, and compressor....
I don't think I had to give up any "tone" to do this type of setup. In
fact, most of the people I play with say it's the best electric sound
they've heard. (apologies to Coop) Of course, it didn't happen by
accident. I didn't buy a all-in-one effects/preamp/widget converter.
:-) (do widgets really need converting?)
I picked out each piece for a specific need/purpose and used studio
quality parts (no stomp boxes or 20 year old Big Muff pedals)
Like the message before this.... THis is my subjective and loaded
opinion.
Mike
|
1874.69 | | NOKNOK::ABATELLI | In Pipeline Heaven | Wed Mar 27 1996 07:15 | 20 |
| RE: .65
>> So has rack technology evolved to a point where you can safely
>> replace most amps or is a combo/head rig still the way to go?
I personally don't think so. From what I've seen with other
musicians, bands I've seen I'd say that the 1996 trend is to
go with amps and (believe it or not) stomp boxes! I feel that
rack technology may have made great strides in the replacement
theory, but the public may not be ready for that yet. Hey, watch
MTV on some of the live concerts and what do you see? Heads and
cabinets are still there. Rack "efx" are the way to go for
most, but rack preamps and pwr amps with guitarist aren't there
yet IMO. At least from what I've seen... ofcourse this could all
change next month.
;^)
Rock on,
Fred
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1874.70 | Hand picked for tone! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Mar 27 1996 08:37 | 28 |
| I believe that the technology is there, but the market is flooded with
mostly mediocre stuff. To get great guitar sound from a rack, you
really have to use eseteric gear. IMHO the only "great" sounding guitar
preamps are all-tube and are made by companies such as Mesa Boogie,
Demeter, Groove Tubes, Marshall, and H&K. The same thing goes for
power amps.
I find with racks it's so tempting to add in layered effects processors
that do 10 things at a time, that a lot of people end up masking
whatever tone their equipment can produce. I also believe that the
power amp has to be sized according to the venue. A 100 wpc power amp
will only sound good when it's used in a large room and it's cranked.
For playing in a small rehearsal space or in a studio, you really need
a very small, low powered amp.
The system is not complete without the "right" speakers. You really
have to be using cabs that are specifically designed for electric
guitar such as Marshall 4x12's or smaller cabs but they must have
the right drivers. IMHO efficient loudspeakers (ie: EVM's JBL's)
should not be used for electric guitar. Electric guitar sounds best
cranked through either a Jensen, Celestion or Emminence speaker.
IMHO the worst-case scenario is where someone is using solid state
preamps/power amps with some kind of compressor, a multi-efx box,
and a Thiele ported speaker enclosure with EVM's.
Mark
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1874.71 | No differece | BSS::MANTHEI | My wife is jealous of MS.DOS | Wed Mar 27 1996 09:16 | 16 |
| The discussion of going with tubes in your rack gear is obvious. To
quote Mr. Scott: "You cannot change the laws of physics". :-)
If you woudn't be caught dead with a solid state amp, don't expect a
SS rack unit to please you. In the same way, nobody buys an all-
tube head with a built in compressor/flange/gadget....
Basically, what you buy when you get good quality rack gear is the same
stuff as in the separate head - only the wood cabinet is removed and
19" rack ears are added... The only reason it might not be the
same as the head/cabinet would be the fault of the manufacturer.
If they *aren't* using the same quality gear in a rack mount, complain
to the mfgr. (or take the box off yourself and add the rackears...)
Mike -who has done just that more than once...
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1874.72 | | KDX200::COOPER | Heh heh - Not likely pal | Wed Mar 27 1996 10:14 | 13 |
| I have to agree that the rack solution isn't for everyone... And if
you want a rack to even come CLOSE to a tube amp, then you've got to
spend some dough on the components (i.e., tube amps and preamps ain't
cheap). I will say tho that PV has some NICE power amps; Classic
50/50, 60/60 and 120/120. I used a 60/60 for a weekend and was floored
at the sound I got (compared to my SP1000 Metaltronix amp). I ran
right off and ordered my Marshall 9200.
One thing thats nice about racks is the portability thing...But when
you slap a 60lb all-tube amp in a rack, then it's not too portable any
more. My rack weighs 85lbs. :-( 'course, all tube, shreds humans at
60 paces, and is still plug-n-play...
|
1874.73 | Peavey is a contender! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Mar 27 1996 11:35 | 18 |
| I forgot to mention Peavey. I've tried the 50/50 and it sounds great
with the right preamp. I believe the 50/50 is the only one with
a resonance control. The 60/60 and 120/120 are older units.
Mesa Boogie recently introduced a new very small tube power
amp which provides 20 wpc. It uses EL84 power tubes. It seems
like a nice idea and perfectly sized for a small rig with a couple
of 1x12 speaker cabs. It is rather pricey though (as you would
expect from MB) in the $499 range.
I can't help but wonder if a Peavey 120/120 would be suitable for
a small PA system, for someone that wanted tube-tone for their
vocals, acoustic, etc.
I would imagine you could probably find a great deal on used Peavey
power amps. Although these are great amps, they never really made
much of a mark on the market.
Mark
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1874.74 | pig pile on Hartley! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Wed Mar 27 1996 11:39 | 9 |
| I forgot to mention one thing. I would never place a power amp
(especially a tube power amp) in a rack with other gear as the
weight gets out of control fast. I would mount the power amp in
a separate rack all by itself with a little extra room to breath.
I believe the Peavey 50/50 power amp weighs about 35 pounds. Not
exactly a featherweight, but manageable.
Mark
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1874.75 | never intended for solid state to be mentioned, except for FX | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Wed Mar 27 1996 14:03 | 2 |
| I thought tubes-only was implied by now. I think most of us in here
know that's the new natural law.
|
1874.76 | Whatever works and makes you happy! | NOKNOK::ABATELLI | In Pipeline Heaven | Fri Mar 29 1996 05:55 | 13 |
| RE: 1874.70
I agree and disagree... my opinion is whatever works for the
individual. It could be the vintage purist at heart (which is fine)
looking for a specific tone, or it's that 13 year old thrash metalhead
that's looking for a completely different sound. Experience is key in
my opinion and we all change our tone at one time or another.
Whatever makes us happy right?
Fred (who loves his Peavey MX hybrid EVM loaded combo and his
Fender Vibroverb)
|
1874.77 | food for thought | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Apr 04 1996 15:51 | 10 |
| > One thing thats nice about racks is the portability thing...But when
> you slap a 60lb all-tube amp in a rack, then it's not too portable any
> more. My rack weighs 85lbs. :-( 'course, all tube, shreds humans at
> 60 paces, and is still plug-n-play...
Hi Jeff! I was thinking about this today. For your 85 lbs., you get a
lot more versatility than a Kitty Hawk M1 or Fender Twin, both of which
are heavier.
Mike
|