T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2000.1 | Define you needs first! | MFGMEM::DERRICO | | Fri Oct 19 1990 09:31 | 13 |
| First thing that I would think is important, is to define
your needs (or wants). It's like trying to do your homework
on a new car. Things like "what will I REALLY use it for?"
Do I want stereo channels? What is the minimum I can get by
with? Etc...
I play Bass, but I chose an amp and cab setup that gives me the
most flexibility. Things like the options : I wanted the ability
to go Bi-Amped, Mono/Stereo, Parametric EQ, Limiting, Aural-
enhancement, and different speaker combinations. I paid royally
for it but I got what wanted.
/John
|
2000.2 | flexibility has it's price | MILKWY::JACQUES | Yes, you do need a Boogie | Fri Oct 19 1990 09:45 | 59 |
| Joe, I personally do not need the programmability, in fact I find
that having to use midi to control a guitar amp is a disadvantage.
But the unit you mentioned, the Mesa Boogie studio preamp does not
have any programmability at all. It is totally an analog preamp,
not unlike the preamps in old Fender or Marshall amps. I own one of
these and I find the optional features found in this preamp are very
down to earth.
Let's talk specifics:
Front panel - The front panel has controls for the two channels.
It has gain and volume for the clean channel, Bass treble and mid eq
controls (shared by both channels), reverb, and gain and volume for
the lead channel. Mesa also included a few rocker switches for bright
and fat circuits. No black magic there. Theres nothing unusual about
the graphic EQ, either. The output levels controls are very handy. They
allow you to tweak the preamp gain and volumes to taste, without having
to adjust one channel to compensate for the other. They also allow
you to drive a power amp with one side, and drive the other side into
a recording mixer.
Rear panel - The rear panel has two sets of outputs, Main outputs
which are designed to drive a power amp, and recording outputs which
simulate the sound of a tube amp loaded by speakers. Also found on the
rear panel is the footswitch jacks. These are standard 1/4" jacks which
are designed to work with regular "short to ground" switches. They give
you the option of using separate switches for the reverb and eq, or a
dual switch with a stereo jack. There is also an efx loop with a switch
to select the drive level to match the loop to line level or instrument
level efx. The loop has stereo returns.
There is an input on the rear as well as front panel. There is also a
channel switch jack on both the front and back panel. This preamp does
not have 3 channels as you mentioned in .0. It has two channels. You
can get four differant tones out of it by kicking the EQ in and out,
but it really only has two channels. The clean channel really doesn't
crunch much either.
Granted, not everyone needs *ALL* of the functions of this preamp, but
many players want stereo, and without the speaker emulating outputs, it
wouldn't be much of a "recording preamp" now would it.
The Hughes and Kettner preamps may fit the bill for many players, but
they are missing many important features. They don't have efx loops,
reverb, and I don't even think they channel switch. I wanted to demo
them anyways, but could not find any dealers with the "Blues Master"
and "Crunch Master" in stock that I could demo. I can't comment on the
sound of any of these preamps as I haven't demoed them. If they sound
good, and fit the bill for you, then buy one.
I think I get the jist of your' note, but I think you should have used
differant examples to make your' point like the ADA MP1 preamp which has
128 patches controlled via midi. This is more in line with the "Rocket
Scientist" scenario you mentioned, although MP1 owners will argue that
it is very simple to use.
Mark
|
2000.3 | KISS | AQUA::ROST | She moves me, man | Fri Oct 19 1990 10:10 | 23 |
|
Like John in .1, I bought a fully featured bass amp last time I
upgraded. I wanted to assure myself of an amp that would carry me for
ten years or more. However, I find myself using very few of its myriad
of controls. The EQ stays flat unless, in a given room, the amp
sounds "boinky" (I'll cut at 800 Hz) or thin (I'll raise the bass a
notch to 1:00). That's it. I think it's good to have all the EQ
options, limiter, crossover, etc. in case I come up with a situation
that calls for it.
As far as guitar amps with controls getting out of hand, I look at it
this way: If the amp has a good basic tone, fine, a few controls will
do the trick. Old Fenders are a good case in point. You plug in, it
sounds nice, need some dirt, add a Tube Screamer and you're flying.
At home I may play around with all kinds of crazy processing on guitar
for taping and get some nice sounds, but it seems too fussy to try this
live. Maybe it's my bassist mentality and C&W background, which led to
an extreme KISS attitude. If I can't arrive at the gig and be ready to
play in five minutes, it's too complex...
Brian
|
2000.4 | | WELMTS::GREENB | Apache Twins: pubrock sex titans | Fri Oct 19 1990 11:16 | 5 |
| When playing bass, I have an old Marshall and Vox 2 x 15 that suit me
fine. For guitar I use an old Vox amp (like a smaller version of an
AC30). Control on both is pretty minimal, but the basic sounds suit me.
Bob
|
2000.5 | 6 of one, half dozen of the other | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Fri Oct 19 1990 11:29 | 23 |
|
Another thing to keep in mind....If you check the H&K adds, they
almost always show a guitarist sitting in front of a rack with 3
preamp modules in front of him. I guess they are advocating that
you buy more than one preamp and switch around to get the variety
of sounds. If you do this, you will end up spending just as much
money (if not more) than the price of a Mesa boogie studio. How
would you switch from one preamp to another ? The absence of a
reverb in these preamps dictates that you would have to use them
with a separate reverb unit, adding even more cost, and additional
wiring and rack space.
Keeping things simple definately has it's merits, but there are
certain minimal functions needed, and reverb is definately one of
them. Channel switching is another necessity IMHO. The H&K preamp
have neither.
I also have to wonder how road-worthy the H&K preamps are. I also
wonder if they are well suited to live situations, or if they are
really only useful in a studio environment.
Mark
|
2000.6 | | USRCV1::REAUME | BC,LP,KH,GSP21,SP-built to blast | Fri Oct 19 1990 13:12 | 15 |
| No doubt my KH amps have a lot of flexibility built into the
controls. Especially when coupled with the GSP-21 effects unit.
On a combo (or head) I prefer having seperate tone controls for each
channel as well as independant preamp and master levels. That way I can
always dial in the right amount of crunch and sizzle.
The one amp I kick myself for not buying when I had the chance was
VERY simple in its layout. Two channels, non-switching, just volume,
treble, and bass for each channel and reverb (7 knobs, that's all,
not even a master volume). I had a chance to pick it up for $400
and I regret not jumping on it. It was a rare VOX AC-40 tube amp
head made in England. It was a forty watt class A amp that just
sounded like a million bucks. Not only did it sound great, I'm sure
it's a collectors item as well.
-john R
|
2000.7 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Reelect nobody! | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:03 | 15 |
| The most flexable amp I've ever owned in my rivera. The next best thing is
my testerossa preamp...in terms of flexability for performance either the
quattro or testerossa has it hands down on the rivera...in terms of flexability
for "tone" the rivera wins hands down.
What I feel I need for performance is the flexability to set up a minimum of
4 guitar sounds (pre effects), either of my kitties will do this, the rivera
won't.
I keep thinking I'm going to midi up and get real flexable but as I think on
my "programming" strategy for the controller and look at how I use my current
stomp switches I have some serious concerns on being able to maintain my
current level of flexability. Too many preamp options spoil the program soup...
dbii
|
2000.8 | "MIDI" .nes. "Toy_Caldwell" | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI rack puke | Fri Oct 19 1990 15:12 | 21 |
| To me (or IMHO), it is ESENTIAL to have EQ for as many channels as
your rig has...Well, I mean if you have a two channel rig, you should
have two EQ's. My Kitty M3 had one EQ for clean AND dirty. To me
that amp, while nice sounding, was not flexable at all.
MIDI allows me to have two OD levels, a master and a BUNCH of EQ
settings (up to 128). Simply verstile....Errr, versatile anyway.
...But I enjoy programming it; admittedly, it's not for everyone.
My one complaint about the MP1 is the high-tech "processed" sound.
It's impossible to get that raw-raunchy-clean sound you'd get from a
beat up old Marshall JTM45, Fender Twin - whatever. I guess it
depends on if you'd consider that important. When I play the blues, I
WANT that unrefined sound... When I play metal, I want pure clean
distortion.
Bottom line ? Will one amp do it all ? IMHO, nope.
When my sick Marshall is repaired, I'll be a VERY happy camper...
But I'll never get rid of my MP1 (he sez now, knowing the effects of
GTS).
|
2000.9 | The title of my reply | COOKIE::S_JENSEN | | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:30 | 16 |
| -.1 is close. A single amp can't and won't ever be able to do it. But, lots
of companies are going to try to convince you their new whoopie unit can give
you every sound imaginable ... I'm sure the new Boogie sounds great; I'm also
sure it has too many controls (I have a MKIII, which has too many controls).
What I'd really like is four or five amps designed specifically for one sound
each. They'd have the following controls: volume, bass, mid, treble, effects
loop. Then I'd have four or five switches at my feet. Press one and I get
the sound I want. Want more sounds; add more amps.
But, I'd could never affort it; so I use a multipurpose amp, which does a few
sounds pretty well. As for a big rack; I don't know, most of the ones I've
heard sound processed -- kind of like chicken parts. I suppose if you spent
*enough* money on your rack it wouldn't sound like guitarist-in-a-box.
steve
|
2000.10 | No Reason To Stop Trying For The Ultimate Amp | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:38 | 17 |
| Re: .8, .9
I dunno, saying one amp can't do it all is kind of defeatist.
Theoretically one amp *might* be able to do it all, but by whose
standards? That's the real problem. Some companies are definitely
attacking the problem, like Duncan with their interchangable tube
modules, or ADA with the MP-1, the idea being to attempt to offer a
"programmable" setup that can get any tone you might want.
Are we there yet? Of course not. But we're a hell of a lot closer than
twenty years ago. Besides, wouldn't you want to have an amp that does
it all? Multiple amp setups are no picnic.
Meanwhile, we bass players are having a grand old time. One amp has
done us just fine for a long, long time.
Brian
|
2000.11 | Ok, I'll keep looking | COOKIE::S_JENSEN | | Fri Oct 19 1990 17:55 | 15 |
| Ok, I won't be so defeatist. One amp might be able to do everything if it was
really 5 or 6 amps specifically designed for one really-good sound each... :)
Just kidding; you're probably right.
re: multiple amp setups. You are right; they are not a picnic.
>>Meanwhile, we bass players are having a grand old time. One amp has
>>done us just fine for a long, long time.
Yes and I, for one, am jealous of that fact :) ! I'd rather spend time playing
rather than trying to find a decent tone (oh, I know, that's part of the deal,
blah, blah...).
steve
|
2000.12 | food for thought | PNO::HEISER | flying in a blue world | Fri Oct 19 1990 18:23 | 8 |
| Devil's advocate: the select few that have found the tone to
complement their signature style only take advantage of a couple
sounds.
If you know the sound you want, you won't need an amp to copy everyone
on the radio.
Mike
|
2000.13 | I donno about that... | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Shread melodic | Fri Oct 19 1990 19:48 | 22 |
| re: Mr. Debil
Not to claim that I have a "signature style" or anything, but the
band I'm currently with plays all original music and I use 10 different
sounds from my MP-1 (one full bank) at different times in only about
7-8 songs.
Granted, I only use about 5-6 of them often (like I would use at least
one-two of that five in EVERY song) and two of those are just
variations on the same basic sound (clean, clean with chorus). I guess
if it came down to it, I'd say I use four basic amp sounds (not
counting efx):
1) warm and clean
2) crunch rhythm distortion
3) smoother kind of singing distortion
4) biting lead distortion with more gain and top end
I could get #1 and #2 from my Kitty Hawk M3 amp alone (I modeled my
MP-1 presets for them after it), but couldn't get 3 and 4.
Greg
|
2000.14 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Fri Oct 19 1990 22:10 | 16 |
|
;^)
See, with Greg beating his head against the wall trying to come up
with different sounds, I just sit back, use 3 presets on my dsp128+,
2 channels on my Boogie(most of the time, I just go clean or lead),
and use the EQ to boost my solo level.
Everytime Greg changes his sound, my rig sounds a little different.
It's that context thing, you know?
;^)
Seriously, I found the control on my Mesa MKIII to be VERY confusing
when I first brought it home. It certainly took me a while. Now I
find them to be very accomodating for the material we are doing.
J.
|
2000.15 | Devil's advocate's advocate. ];^> | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Fri Oct 19 1990 22:12 | 6 |
|
Oh, by the way, Mike... Listening to just one Satch CD will tell you
that he is indeed using all kinds of different effects, and few
different amps...
J.
|
2000.16 | My boat floats !! | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Fri Oct 19 1990 22:42 | 16 |
| I agree that no amp can produce every tone you could ever want,
perfectly. But there are many amps that provide 2-4 sounds that
are excellant and can be tailored to meet almost any type of
requirement.
The bottom line is that we could make a career out of trying to
pin down *that ultimate tone* or we could make a career out of
playing music. What's more important ?
I'm pretty fussy about tone, but apparently not quite as fussy as
some players. I bit the bullet and paid a high price for both my
Twin and my studio preamp. I am determined to make the most of out
them.
Mark
|
2000.17 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Racism sux! | Sat Oct 20 1990 15:45 | 5 |
| Well, as Mark J. may debate, the reason I LIKE the KH QT preamp, aside
from the sound, if the flexibility! I mean, it's flexible without
being overtly confusing control-wise.
Buck, who's scared to mess with a Msa MKIV!
|
2000.18 | No argument here | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Sat Oct 20 1990 21:45 | 17 |
| Buck, I won't debate you on the sound or flexibility of the Quattro.
I didn't recieve a manual with mine, yet I figured out how to use it
in about 5 minutes.
The only reason I traded mine in was because I couldn't do direct
recording off of it (to my satisfaction) and that was the major
justification for buying a preamp.
To be honest, though, all the horror stories about blown transformers
and other problems kind of scared me, and that was another reason not
to keep it.
Anyways, back to the base note. It would be nice if a simple box
like the H&K blues master could fit the bill, but I really believe
it would leave me wanting a lot more.
Mark
|
2000.19 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Racism sux! | Sun Oct 21 1990 10:31 | 5 |
| Ooops, sorry if I seemed to mis-quote you then, Mark. I thought moreso
(that the recording thing) that you somehow didn't really care for the
sound. I stand corrected! ;^)
B.
|
2000.20 | All I Want Is An Amp With 1 Big Knob Labeled "Loud" | NEMAIL::PAGEB | Sparkwood & 21 | Sun Oct 21 1990 21:12 | 37 |
|
As time goes on & I get older, I find myself going more & more
in the "less-is-more" vein; years ago, I looked at guitarists like
Adrian Belew and tried to work towards that direction; heavy into
technology to produce that kind of controlled yet manic sound.
In recent times, I've gone back to where I started-- B.B. King,
my first (and biggest) guitar hero.
With that in light, my ideal amp would be medium-sized (no
stacks!), all-tube, one treble, one midrange, one bass, and 2 volume
knobs. An old spring reverb would be nice, too. That's about it.
Granted, one amp will never do it all. Personally, my favorite
totally clean sound comes from a Roland Jazz Chorus; but it gets
the absolute worst distortion sound as far as I'm concerned. But
I'm just not really interested in having a bunch of amps. I prefer
to use a variety of guitars in order to get different sounds.
I do use effects, but I keep it at a minimum; I prefer "stomp-
boxes", although I do use a rack-mount delay. I've never heard any
kind of distortion unit, rack-mount or not, that could touch an
Ibenez Tube-Screamer. I've been using one for years.
Everybody has different preferences & different goals, and different
pieces of equipment will fit the needs of each particular player.
Ultimately, all that matters is the sound that comes out of the amp,
and whatever it takes to get that sound is okay by me... you've all
got my blessing. :-)
When A Guitar Plays The Blues,
Brad Page
|
2000.21 | Wow! | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:28 | 21 |
|
Well, seems we have covered all 4 quadrants with our opinions!
It was interesting to hear that one person _likes_ programming in up to
128 possibilities, while another would like to switch among different
amps...
But I heard a lot said for the simpler approach, and it seems that
at least 3 tone controls, besides a volume or two and some effect
capability (springs or loop), stand out as necessary for the
minimalist setup.
What do people think of the GT amp that's actually two seperate amps
in one chassis, that you can switch between? I take it you can even
"tube up" each side differently, yet, you're still limited to *this*
sound or *that* sound...not 5 or 6 differences.
I'm just AMAZED at what's out there, in looking through any of the
latest guitar rags. You can even get a device to drive your Fender
Twin's tube output section with the preamp of your choice!
Joe
|
2000.22 | GT is good stuff, but expensive. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:43 | 24 |
| Groove Tube preamps and amps are definately esoteric devices. They
are generally very unique, and aimed at a very limited market.
I believe the power amp is designed around the principle that "only
power-tube distortion will do....preamp distortion just doesn't
produce the sweet overdriven sound that works best for guitar".
Rather than switching preamp channels, this beast allows you to
switch power amp channels. An interesting concept, and I'm sure
it probably sounds great. I would expect a very high price tag
(like $1200.00 or more). This concept is the basis for their preamp
(which actually has a 30 watt power amp and speaker emmulator),
and their separate speaker emmulator box, which may be used with
any power amp. It's a tried and true concept, but expensive to
implement, and the user remains reliant on power tubes.
Keep in mind that this power amp probably does not do stereo. Then
again, I could be wrong about this.
I believe all Groove Tube preamps and amps are manufactured by the
same people who make "A.M.P". Brian Rost can attest to the quality
and reliability of AMP's products.
Mark
|
2000.23 | more than you wanted | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:49 | 68 |
| I've given a lot of consideration to going MIDI, especially since I'm
doing a MIDI-based group and could drive everything with my sequencer.
However, after having checked out a number of sophisticated rack-mount
fx units, I'm still not convinced they would give me the level of
"dynamic" control I want in a performing situation. By this I mean that
if I'm playing something and I decide in the middle of it that I want a
shade more treble, or a tweak more gain, etc, I want to be able to just
reach over and twist a knob. Some of the controllers come close to
this, but there's still a couple of steps between you and the sound you
want.
Since the debate was going on over one vs multiple sounds out of an
amp, I thought it might be interesting to list all of the sounds that I
currently use. My setup is:
A Gibson ES-345 (alternated with an acoustic) into
A Cry-Baby Wah-Wah pedal (used on only about two songs) into
A Nobell Sound Studio fx box (similar to a Rockman) into
A Seymour-Duncan 100W Combo Amp (2 channel, separate eq)
I have the S-D set up for mild crunch rhythm, and heavy crunch (and
slightly louder) for rhythm and lead. These are only two of the many
possible sounds I could get out of the S-D, but in combination with the
other things they suffice. The Nobell has a built-in compressor, delay,
chorus, overdrive and distrortion, as well as two distinctly different
"clean" settings. Here are the basic sounds I use (other combinations
are possible, and may be used sometimes):
1) Straight rhythm - Nobell Clean 1 into S-D rhythm channel.
2) Heavy (R&R) rhythm - Nobell Clean 1 into S-D lead channel.
Also serves for Blues leads.
3) Really heavy rhythm (like ZZ Top) - Nobell Overdrive into S-D rhythm
or lead channel.
4) Contemporary lead (lots of sustain) - Nobell Distortion into S-D
rhythm or lead channel.
5) Rhythm (Setup (1)) with chorus (I use chorus very rarely, and even
less often with lead).
6) Acoustified electric - Setup (1) with tone switch on ES-345
moved over 2 notches - gives a lighter sound and saves me the trouble
of switching to acoustic.
7) any of the above with Wah-Wah.
8) Straight acoustic - Acoustic guitar into Nobell Clean 1 and S-D
rhythm (or bypass on the Nobell).
9) Electrified acoustic - Add chorus and/or delay to (8).
That comes to a total of about 10 distinct sounds that I use regularly.
I use the balance of the pickups on the Gibson and the tone controls to
fine-tune things during performances to get just the "right" tone for
any given song.
I second the emotion that no one amp can provide all possible sounds,
at least not optimally. I didn't say it wasn't *possible*, just that
nothing on the market satisfies this need. I also don't consider
practical to switch guitars all the time to get different sounds - I
have enough stuff to carry as it is. I've striven to use equipment that
has maximum flexibility in terms of the variety and quality of sounds I
can get with the least overhead.
- Ram
|
2000.24 | SWR not AMP | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Mon Oct 22 1990 16:12 | 13 |
| > I believe all Groove Tube preamps and amps are manufactured by the
> same people who make "A.M.P". Brian Rost can attest to the quality
> and reliability of AMP's products.
Actually, the GT stuff is made by SWR who were an offshoot of AMP (or
so says AMP, SWR definitely hit the market after AMP with a very
similar amp head).
Ask Rick Calcagni about SWR quality and reliability...like how he
smoked his first SWR head 8^) 8^) Well, anyone can get a lemon....
Brian
|
2000.25 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Wed Oct 24 1990 11:40 | 13 |
|
I don't know what to think about the wildly complex gear that
guitarists can choose from. I've heard lots of folks with racks full
of stuff who sound great, and others who sound only so-so.
I guess the ultimate for me would be an amp with all of the controls
except volume hidden behind a panel. That way, I could set 'em up once
and then get 'em out of the way.
I don't tend to change my sound lots, though.
Kevin
|
2000.26 | My 2 cents... | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Thu Oct 25 1990 06:33 | 21 |
| I think in the long run, folks will own single type amps for single
sounds. I will refuse to belive the "1 amp for 1000 sounds" idea.
Look at the Duncan Conv? There are more of them out for sale used then
you would belive. Just because folks could not run them.
I do belive it's better to work on personal playing then how many
sounds can my amp make. If your chops are together, you can plug
into anything. The xtras may help you refine them, but you need
them in the 1st place.
If you must switch (or even MIDI) 1000 sounds, then there are fine
units to do that. But, more and more folks are "amp-switching" then
"channel switching".
AND....there will someday be a glut of 1 space rack mount effects/
preamps/etcs up for sale someday. Cheap, because the "new kid on
the market" is out. Buy it then, much cheaper, and then try it out.
Jay Tashjian
|
2000.27 | How many ways do you sign your name? | BUSY::JACQUES_FIS | | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:17 | 33 |
| I absolutely agree. Most of the people that have influenced my
playing style have one or two signature sounds. A good example
is Larry Carlton. His guitar playing is immediately identifiable,
yet his playing is always fresh and exciting. Whether I'm listening
to a Steely, Donald Fagen, or Larry Carlton solo album, his playing
is recognizable. Somewhere along the line he switched to Valley
Art's "strat-type" guitars and Dumble amps, but he still sounds
like Larry Carlton.
I'm not interested in copying anyone's tone exactly, but I do strive
for the same level of quality in my tone. For example, Carlos Santana
has always had one of the best tones in the guitar world. I love the
way he makes his guitar sustain and feedback. I try to get a similar
effect at times, but I want it to sound like me, not Carlos.
For years I played through a silver-faced Twin which really only
produces one sound...clean. I was anxious to get a better amp that
could channel switch and provide both clean and distortion. Now that
I have my new "The Twin" I feel that I have the capability I need and
really don't need another amp.
I also have a Mesa Boogie studio preamp. I suppose if I were like a
lot of other people, I would buy a midi patch bay and set up my gear
so that I could switch between the preamp in the Twin and the Mesa
preamp, so that I could have more sounds available. I'm not interested
in doing this. Whether I'm using the Twin or the Mesa, I set up two
sounds and switch between them. That's enough for me.
I wouldn't mind owning a few more vintage amps for their collectable
value, like an AC30, a 4x10 Bassman, etc. But I wouldn't get them
because I need them, but because I simple like collectable stuff.
Mark
|
2000.28 | Control your amp's sound with guitar volume? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | This time forever! | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:36 | 17 |
|
Taking the term "control flexability" in a different way, how
does the Guitar community feel about the amount of control they
have, or would like to have, using the Volume Control On The Guitar
Only?
Letting the imagination run wild, say you could go from a JC
120 clean sound to a cranked Marshall 100W lead sound with a 1/4
turn on your volume control, (keeping the same overall volume level)
- would that be useful to you? Or do players unilaterally prefer foot
switches for sound changes?
I've seen a fella do something like that playing though a HiWatt
combo...all he did to go into this rippping lead was reach down and
turn his volume up about 1/4 turn.
Joe
|
2000.29 | | COOKIE::S_JENSEN | | Thu Oct 25 1990 11:42 | 19 |
| I could be wrong, but I think most guitarists have used their guitar volume
control to "back off" the gain and clean up the tone some. I've even seen
a few guys use the tone control to get different sounds during leads, etc.
Steve Morse uses both the guitar volume and tone controls with incredible
flexibility. And he can do it on the fly without so much as a pause between
notes....Makes me sick.
Personally, if I have to change things quickly while I'm playing, I'd rather
have everything on the floor in front of my feet. But, that's due mainly to
my lack of technique when it comes to diddling with those controls while I'm
playing. I might have a different opinion if I was better at it.
The other thing is that you can't get *drastic* changes in tone that way; at
least not with the current controls. I would think it impossible to go from
Fender-Twin-with-JBLs-clean to Mesa-Boogie-MKII-everything-on-10-dirty with
your volume control. But, I can do it by switching between the two amps.
steve
|
2000.30 | Guitar volume is nice | GOES11::G_HOUSE | But this amp goes to 11 | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:10 | 5 |
| Personally, I like being able to change the sound with the volume
control. Roll off the volume to clean things up, crank it up for more
distortion. Almost any tube amp will allow this.
Greg
|
2000.31 | the pinky that ate chicago | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:58 | 24 |
| Well, from what I have read, the Groove tube guitar preamp
allows you to do just that. It has "gain sensitive" inputs.
When using the GT preamp, the volume control on your guitar
essentially becomes a distortion control. The output of the
preamp remains constant regardless of the amount of "amplitude"
the input sees. This has advantages and disadvantages. Keep
in mind it was designed specifically for the recording studio
environment, where a recording engineer has control over the
sound both at mastering and mix-down. This preamp doesn't allow
you to channel switch, but the gain-sensitive inputs make channel
switching a moot point anyways. The biggest drawback to this
preamp is the price (~$1000.00) which puts it out of many people's
reach.
Another device that I have seen advertized (but it doesn't appear
to have caught on) is called the "datacaster". This is a rotary
switch which replaces one of the pots on your guitar. It allows
you to select several differant "patches" via midi. This could be
driven into one of the midi-controlled preamps like the ADA MP1
or GP8, or it could be driven into a midi-patchbay controlling an
analog tube preamp.
Mark
|
2000.32 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | All 4 1, and 1 4 all together | Thu Oct 25 1990 13:05 | 5 |
| I tried the GT preamp and hated it!
How can I say this nicely...it sounded like a Boogie, only worse!
Wait, that didn'tcome out right, do you know what I mean?
|
2000.33 | separate eq | STAR::TPROULX | | Thu Oct 25 1990 14:11 | 12 |
| One feature I wish more amps would include is a separate
eq for each channel. It's the only gripe I have with the
new Marshalls.
Often I find that tone settings which sound good on the
clean channel don't sound good on the distortion channel.
Sometimes this doesn't matter, since I use different pickups
for clean and distorted work. I assume the new Boogies have
separate tone controls for each channel (hence the multitude
of knobs).
-Tom
|
2000.34 | Mark IV eq. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Thu Oct 25 1990 14:37 | 13 |
| Yes and no..... Some of the eq knobs are shared by two channels.
This is true with the mid-range controls on the two eq sections.
IMHO Mesa boogie should have provided completely independant eq's
for each channel on the Mark IV. Especially when you consider the
price and the number of knobs this beast already has.
Regarding the GT preamp. I think it's a case of "you either love
it or you hate it". When I considered the price and the features
it has/doesn't have, I concluded that it definately was not for me,
and I never even demoed it.
Mark
|
2000.35 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Thu Oct 25 1990 18:10 | 5 |
| RE: .33
Amen brother. Thats exactly why I bailed my kittyhawk...
jc (Who has to be flexable)
|
2000.36 | | CSC32::H_SO | Hyundai insider: I drive a Chevy | Thu Oct 25 1990 20:18 | 10 |
|
What really kills me is that the tone I like for tinkering by myself
will not have definition with the full band behind me.
As far as flexibility goes, I'd like being able to go from that
Metallica crunch to that country twang and everything in between with
my Boogie. IMO, there's nothing more flexible than a Mesa...
J. (Who also wants to be flexible without going to a full MIDI rack)
|
2000.37 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Reelect nobody! | Fri Oct 26 1990 10:24 | 4 |
| re: .36 Isn;t that the truth. I set up my testerossa in the studio and
then spent and hour backing the mid and the gain off at rehersal...
dbi
|
2000.38 | Feedback please? | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Mon Oct 29 1990 03:25 | 16 |
| While everyone is talking knobs, knobs, & more knobs, let's try the
other end of the rainbow....
What would you want on a single channel amplifiers for controls?
Let there be no more then '7', including the master Vol output.
Can man live with just 7 controls? 6 & MV?
Judging from what we see coming our way, companies think we need alot
of toys. "My amp's got more knobs then your's does..na..na"
I would like some feedback in this matter, and thank you in advance.
Jay
|
2000.39 | Less is MORE! | ICS::BUCKLEY | Noone's home in my house of pain | Mon Oct 29 1990 08:48 | 14 |
| RE: Jay's single amp channel design...I could live with the following
design:
CONTROLS: Preamp Gain Master Bass Low mid High Mid Bright
COMMENTS: Fender Boogie 120hz 700hz 3K 8K
style style
I lived for quite a long time using a 12wt Marshall transistor head
plugged into a power amp for volume, and was very happy with that. You
had to tweek controls constantly, but I loved the range of sounds from
it! For those not in the know, they are GAIN MASTER BASS MID TREB.
B.
|
2000.40 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Reelect nobody! | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:12 | 5 |
| I couldn't live with it. I find two channel amps to be the minimum
required and 3-4 much more preferable, independant tones for each are
preferred
dbii
|
2000.41 | but.. | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Tue Oct 30 1990 04:35 | 11 |
| I did mean to explain, this could be part of a 2-channel amp, but could
we keep to 7 controls, say per channel.
Remember: The toy with the most 'candy' spends the most time in the
shop!
I did get a chance to peek into a few new Boogies, and must admit the
QC is higher then normal. Good job M/B!
Jay
|
2000.42 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Night of the Living Duff! | Tue Oct 30 1990 08:36 | 5 |
| -1
I'll still liove with a single channel amp design.
Buck, who's been playing single channel Marshalls for 15 years now.
|
2000.43 | Full circle. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Tue Oct 30 1990 09:54 | 12 |
| Yeah but Buck, it wasn't that long ago that you were using a rack
that contained 3 preamps. I seem to recall you were using an ADA MP1,
a Lee Jackson/Metaltronix, and a KH Quattro in one rack. I guess you
got carried away by all the technology and finally came back down to
earth.
I take the middle road these days. I played through a silver-face twin
for too long with only one tone. These days I insist on having two tones
with channel switching. More presets would be nice, but that's not a
necessity for me.
Mark
|
2000.44 | | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:24 | 6 |
| Actually on a Boogie Mark III or II, if you take off the presence
control and the reverb, you meet the 6 + Master criterion.
Hmmmmmm..., not bad,
Will
|
2000.45 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Night of the Living Duff! | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:33 | 6 |
| -2
Actually, it was a MP-1, Quadraverb, and an SP-1000 combo. LESS IS
MORE!!
Buck, much happier with fewer options.
|
2000.46 | Little boogie is a lotta amp | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Tue Oct 30 1990 13:38 | 41 |
| I checked out a Mesa Boogie Mark IV last Friday at Daddy's. I was
amazed at how small it was...One of the smallest Boogie combos I've
seen. I had the misconception that the Mark IV had 4 channels that
could be pre-set, but I found out it only has three. From that
standpoint, it isn't much differant than the Mark III, except for
more EQ and bells/whistles.
The things I thought were advantageous:
The foot switch had just about any function you could want. For
example the auto EQ function is incorporated into the footswitch.
You can kick it into straight lead, or lead with eq by hitting one
of two foot switches.
The footswitch has "ears" sticking out each side (like rack ears),
and it screws right to the rear panel for transporation.
separate "presence" controls for each channel.
A few things that I thought were dis-advantageous:
The reverb knob is rear-panel mounted. This is only a minor nit, and
many Boogie combos have this same design. Reverb is generally a set-
it-and-forget-it function anyways.
The knob for manually channel-switching is rear-panel mounted. In my
mind, this is a major dis-advantage. Chances are, if the channel switch
knob is in-accessible, it will probably never be used.
The foot-switch jack is a DIN connector, as apposed to 1/4" phone
jacks. This may be a very reliable way of designing it, but it does
not lend itself to interfacing with midi-patchbays, or other external
control devices.
I didn't bother to demo this amp, since I am not in the mood for a new
amp anyways. My guess is it sounds as good as any other Boogie, and
allows more flexibility so that you can set up 3 distinct sounds
eq'ed exactly the way you want them.
Mark
|
2000.47 | Boogie vs. the "Twin" | DUGGAN::SAKELARIS | | Tue Oct 30 1990 14:13 | 20 |
| re -1
Well how about the major disadvantage of cost. Boogies have always been
a high cost amp but I think flexibility be damned for the price you
pay. If I need "flexability" like that I'll take my Fender the Twin any
day, and do what you did by getting a Mesa preamp with the difference
in $$. And, I'd probably still have enough to order a three topping pizza
with extra cheese (four toppings might be pushing it).
Which brings me to my question for you Mark - Seeing as how you
have the "Twin", and the Mesa preamp, how does your "Twin" compare in
sound to the Mesa? This is presuming that you can make a side by side
comprison - ie that you have a different power amp for the Mesa as
opposed to just running it into the power amp of the "Twin". My feeling
is that the "Twin" although expensive, but not as much as the Boogie,
is a better buy. I contend that if for no other reason (but not
exclusively), you get more for your $$$ by virtue of 2-12's instead
of a single.
"sakman"
|
2000.48 | A-B tests | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vote Yes on 3 | Tue Oct 30 1990 14:32 | 23 |
| Well, if I tried to compare the Mesa preamp with "The twin" and used
a differant power amp and differant speakers, I don't think the test
would be very fair or accurate.
I have used the Mesa Boogie studio preamp into the power amp of the
Twin (effect return jack), and I find the tone is very similar. Pretty
much any tone I can get out of the Twin, I can get out of the Mesa and
vice-versa.
I also play the Mesa Boogie preamp through my stereo PA system. Bear
in mind that the tone is bound to be differant for several reasons.
I generally use the recording outputs when I do this (since this
duplicates the sound of a mic'ed up amp). The sound is being produced
by a solid-state power amp, and a pair of horn-loaded Klipsch stage
monitors. I can pretty much tweak this setup to get any tone I want,
but the warmth of the Twin reverb power amp, and the Emminence speakers
cannot be matched for "warmth". Another trick I have been using is to
drive the stereo outputs through my PA, and connect the monitor send
to the power amp input of the Twin. This gives me the stereo efx
through the PA, and the warm mono signal through the Twin. This works
surprisingly well, and is very full-sounding.
Mark
|
2000.49 | Use what ya got .... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Joke 'em if they can't take a ... | Tue Oct 30 1990 23:28 | 15 |
| I think the flexability you need depends on the type of music you play.
When I was doing metal, 3 tones was plenty - clean with chorus, crunch
rhythm, and high gain lead. When I played country, it was still
basically 3 tones - clean with chorus, clean lead, and a dirty rhythm
which could also be used as a lead patch. But the music my band is
doing now (classic rock, southern rock, blues) requires a few more
tones. I use 16 patches on a GP-8. And that's so I can copy some of
the tones used on those cover songs, you know little signature sounds.
But, if I didn't have the GP-8 I'm sure I could get by with a lot less.
The other guitar player in the band uses a Fender Super Reverb (I
think, 60W into 4x10's) and a Chandler Tube Driver with a Les Paul. He
uses 3 settings and has a killer tone. It's all in what you get used
to.
Scary
|
2000.50 | What ya want to use...?? | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Fri Nov 02 1990 03:11 | 28 |
| I think 3 or 4 tones are enough too. At least at a footswitch's
control. But does this mean folks want to go completely MIDI?
I mean, I just can't picture alot of folks playing thru gear controled
by some Macintosh. I may be wrong.
IF that's the case...alot of players I know better get their computer
'chops' down too. Alot of them can't handle Bass-Mid-Treble.
And remember, the more 'patched' in/out busses, the more a
"solid-state" sound. After awhile, you might as well play thru a
Zoom walkman-type unit.
Defeats the "tube lovers" concept, huh?
What happened to the days of a player just pluging in to almost
anything? Is it because music styles have grown beyond that?
OR..does the guitar/bass player of today need the 'candy' keyboard
players wanted? A box for everything, and everything (pluged) in
it's box?
Remember, you say it here first....years from now, there will be a huge
used glut of these '19" boxes' selling cheap by players who either
wants the newest 'candy', or layed back and bought a Twin with EV's.
Jay Tashjian
|
2000.51 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | Reelect nobody! | Fri Nov 02 1990 08:57 | 20 |
| My four sounds are tube sounds...
Each channel should have the following controls, even the clean channel
Volume
Master Volume
Bass
Mid
Treble
Bright
and a presence control is nice too! (that's 7 per channel)
I hate sharing tone controls between channels. A la boogie etc. You can
always get one good sound and one lame one your pick clean or dirty but
never both
I love my kittie it's the closest thing to this
dbii
|
2000.52 | The Toys Drive The Styles | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Fri Nov 02 1990 09:39 | 35 |
| Re: .50
I think that's what happened is that *styles* grew to accommodate the
*gear*. Fuzz, wah-wah, envelope filters, chorus, phasers, flangers, etc.
have all had their day in the sun where *someone* used one on a record
and soon everyone wanted to have one.
Now that the technology makes it possible to have multi-FX avaialble
super cheap, players are flocking to them and using them, to some
extent with the same lack of taste that they showed with every *other*
effect fad.
Other than the use of chorus with jazz players, most guys playing jazz
and blues have stuck with the "gimme a guitar and a Twin" attitude
throughout all these FX fads.
To me, the big win with digital FX is that good, quiet reverbs and
delays are now available super cheap...heck, Sam Ash is selling Boss
stomp reverbs for $75. It used to cost *ten times that* to buy a
decent spring unit 15 years ago....not to mention what Echoplexes sold
for, compared to a digital delay stomp box of today.
The next trend is going to be more FX in the amps themselves. Peavey
has already marketed amps with digital FX on board and tried to sell an
amp a few years ago that had 10 (!!!) preset channels that could be
controlled by MIDI. I think this will be a big deal in low end amps
(you know, stuff in the $200-300 range, 20-50 watt combos). Already
lots of these babies come with stereo amplification and chorus on
board.
What I wanna know is when am I gonna be able to get a new amp with
tremelo? I can't do those Neil Young covers without it 8^) 8^)
Brian
|
2000.53 | How about a real EQ section rather then 'tone' controls? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | But this amp goes to 11 | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:14 | 11 |
| Actually, after thinking about it I think what I'd rather see then
three or four tone controls per channel would be something like a 5-7
band graphic EQ per channel. That would give more flexability all the
way around. Then with a gain control that would be all I'd need.
An amp with two to three channels set up this way would be great.
I've been wondering why amp manufacturers aren't using graphic EQs in
place of the standard bass/mid/treble controls for awhile now.
Greg
|
2000.54 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Midnite Dynamite! | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:18 | 14 |
| >I've been wondering why amp manufacturers aren't using graphic EQs in
>place of the standard bass/mid/treble controls for awhile now.
Carvin tried this on their Guitar/Bass heads in the late 70s/early 80s.
Needless to say it didn't float too well in the marketplace!!
Then there were the old Acoustic heads that had graphic EQs on them
as well as the passive tone controls...they were equally bogus
sounding!
I think noone got it right til Boogie came along!
Of course pre-gain EQ and post-gain EQ are two totally different
ballparks!
|
2000.55 | Straight Poop: | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Sat Nov 03 1990 01:27 | 29 |
| Yes, styles changed the effect business. I too say lots of *big*
players suck without their boxes. But in the hands of a good player,
the boxes are tools that help the players grow. Seems everything
comes/goes around.
Graphic EQ's made with I.C.'s (like the Carvin) never got accepted
by the public....to "PA" sounding, and they do not interface well
with tubes. The Boogie uses hand picked transistors, hench they
do the job differently, and sound better. Vox did a Graphic EQ
using tubes that is a killer! Needs rare center-tap pots though.
(if you need a schematic, e-mail me).
As for Trem/Vib units, no one did/does it better then the VOX AC-30
which is one reason why it's still made, despite QC problems.
Maybe someone should build a tube EQ/Trem/Vib unit?
As for reverb units, new ones are cheaper, quiter and better sounding,
but the old spring units still sound the best, unless you got $$$$$$$
for digital units.
Nothing is perfect, I'm afraid.
Jay Tashjian
PS: the Vox AC-30 is still the ONLY unit with TRUE Vib/Trem. E-mail
me for a schematic, and see how it's done.
|
2000.56 | I'll Take A Parametric, Please | AQUA::ROST | Neil Young and Jaco in Zydeco Hell | Mon Nov 05 1990 08:27 | 11 |
| Personally, I'd rather see parametric EQ. Being able to choose the
center frequency (and in true parametrics the "width" or Q of the EQ)
is much more useful than the fixed bands of a graphic IMHO. The best
of both worlds can be found on amps like the SWR and AMP bass heads,
which give you 6 bands of EQ, two shelving for the low and high ends,
and four semi-parametric bands to cover the middle.
Some older tube heads had semi-parametric EQ, remember the midrange
select switch on Ampegs or the "range expanders" on Traynor heads?
Brian
|
2000.57 | Old Programbles.. | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Tue Nov 06 1990 02:06 | 24 |
| yes. those Traynors had nice tone circuits. Shame they could not hold
up for long.
I dug out a old catalog on a Orange OMEC (Orange musicial & electronics
corp) (The same UK folks who made Orange amps) programable Solid state
head, which never made it over here. 4 presetable channels, 806,737
combinations per channel (so they said) using 12 push button controls.
It was, as most UK solid state units, built poorly. I did have the
chance to fix one and play thru it. Not bad, but limited because of
the fact most sounds were repeated in real use. Still, folks wanted
these things even in 1978.
Then there was the Delta tube amp, with switches labeled "GIBSON,
FENDER, MARSHALL, TELE, DELTA" and they made the amp sound JUST
like those units. A Great unit, if you ever find one. Built by
ex-Acoustic Employees, and current Schecter owner.
Nothing new under the sun, I guess...
Jay.
|
2000.58 | New preamp from Groove Tubes | GOES11::G_HOUSE | But this amp goes to 11 | Tue Nov 06 1990 13:58 | 10 |
| Anyone seen the new GT preamp? It's got three seperate channels titled
"Clean", "Mean", and "Scream". The ad claims that the clean channel
sounds like a Fender, the Mean like a Marshall, and the Scream like
something hot-rodded a lot.
Sounds interesting, but I suspect that it's probably grossly overpriced
like the rest of GTs stuff seems to be. Anyone tried one or seen a
price on it?
Greg
|
2000.59 | GT preamp... | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Wed Nov 07 1990 03:07 | 10 |
| I've seen one. It is ok, a bit overpriced.
It tries for that vintage look, and fails. It's not too bad sounding
but the clean sound is almost too clean, the scream too much gain.
GT electronics do not sell too well, because of the $$$ and the smaller
discount offered to dealers.
Jay.
|
2000.60 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | maybe we can learn to love | Wed Nov 07 1990 08:21 | 5 |
| Hey Jay,
What are your impressions of the M1000?
Buck, very curious to know!
|
2000.61 | Four Components: | HPSRAD::JWILLIAMS | | Thu Nov 29 1990 11:54 | 13 |
| My perfect rig would have four components:
1) Speaker System
2) Power Amplifier with EQ.
3) Signal Processor
4) Foot Controller
The speaker system is self explanatory. The Power Amp has an EQ to compensate
for whatever room you're playing in. The Processor is programmed and once set
never has to be tweaked. The foot controller changes patches. There is no big
reason why these can't be integrated in a single enclosure ( except the
controller, of course ).
John.
|
2000.62 | M1000 | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Fri Nov 30 1990 04:16 | 9 |
| The M1000 is a nice sounding unit, but very poorly made, and ugly as
sin. EVERY store I have seen them in says..."sounds great, can't
give it away....". A real shame, because it's a good design, and
very playable. I've fixed about 4 of them. ALL were built with
cheapparts, and poor workmanship.
Jay
|
2000.63 | | GSRC::COOPER | MIDI Rack Puke | Fri Nov 30 1990 10:56 | 9 |
| Jay,
How do you feel about KittyHawk construction ?
The M3 I had had lousey welding in the chassis, but seemed rugged.
The circuitry seemed pretty hacked too. At first I attributed that
to being a "Josh Special", but even my Quattro preamp seems pretty
hacked too (ergo, rugged but fugly).
jc
|
2000.64 | | JUPITR::TASHJIAN | | Sat Dec 01 1990 01:18 | 6 |
| That's what killed the KH in real life, as many of the specials
sold by the LP group were re-hacked. A shame, let's hope the new ones
are made better. I have schematics, if you need them.
Jay
|
2000.65 | oops , this isn't 1103! | FREEBE::REAUME | Me, my geetar, and MD 20/20 | Sat Dec 01 1990 10:21 | 15 |
| I agree with Jay. You can attribute part of the KH/LPMG split
to a percussion company (Latin Percussion) trying to expand into
amps too quick. They desperately needed a tube expert on board
to get these imported KH's up to snuff. I really don't think
they were even close to having their sh*t together in the technical
department. Keep in mind LPMG had mucho orders for the Quattro,
but were forcing dealers to take the slow moving heads and combos
it they wanted ANY preamps. The only KH head/combo that really sold
well was the M1. The M3 was listed at too high a price for an amp
with limited flexibility, the M1 wasn't that much more $, but offered
a lot more versatility.
Versatility = MP-1 / but QT's and TR's come darn close (especially
if your effects have a 7 band graphic like the GSP-21! B-}. )
-kaBOOM-
|
2000.66 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Mon Mar 25 1991 13:25 | 28 |
|
After playing with the Marshall JCM 900 for a while, I've come to
respect the amp a lot. It's only got two channels, and the eq is
shared, but I'm able to get switchable clean and lead sounds that I
really like. A good crunch rythm sound is the lead channel with the
guitar volume backed off.
Of course, there are limits to this setup. I don't always get the
"exact" sound for every song; there are lots of compromises. A little
too dirty here, too clean there, etc. But then, it does keep things
real simple on stage and I like that a lot. With me, if I have lots of
switches available, I feel like I paid for 'em so I might as well use
'em. Ditto on effects. With this amp, I feel like I have to do the
best I can with what I've got and not worry about the hardware.
It does give me an excuse with the band, though. I say stuff like
"Can't sound like the solo on the record 'cuz he has a rack full of
stuff to get that sound."
Then again, I'm not able to say stuff like "I would have nailed that
solo if my mumbledyfratz had been working right."
8-)
Kevin
|
2000.67 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | The rabbit in red, danananananana, the rabbit in red | Mon Mar 25 1991 13:40 | 7 |
| I know how ya fdeel Kev, I played with this band this past weekend and
I was FAR too dirty.
But I LOVED it!
;^)
|
2000.68 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:18 | 5 |
| No such thing as too dirty, IMHO. ;) ;)
Ever play the Eagles with your gain on 20 ??
Wagagagagagagagagaaaa...
|
2000.69 | Fender Endorses Multiple Amps, News At 11 | TECRUS::ROST | That O.J., what a cut up! | Mon Jul 11 1994 14:15 | 19 |
| Revisiting this one a bit...
In the latest Fender Frontline rag, they have a column about going
without racks that instead pushes the multi-amp approach, get a
Twin for clean, Bassman for crunch and Deluxe for shred, etc.
This would be pretty ho-hum since it's a real old hat idea but to see
Fender pushing it now that the pendulum is swinging towards the retro
gear (not to mention that Fender sells no rack FX) is interesting.
Anyway, it seems players still want to have lots of tones on tap, but
are somewhat leary of the rack units filling the bill. Or at least
that's the new party line...five years ago the racks were ready to rule
the world.
So what's the next trend going to be? 8^)
Brian
|
2000.70 | | MPGS::MARKEY | Object Disoriented | Mon Jul 11 1994 14:52 | 33 |
| The biggest issue here is live performance; using a completely
different amp for different sounds might be practical in a studio
setting, but can get a tad cumbersome at gigs.
Seems to me that most of the variation in sounds could be attributed to
the preamp, and to some extent the cabinet (in particular, whether it
is a closed or open-backed design). So, if one is looking for the
ultimate in flexibility from a guitar rig, it might be worth having two
or more preamps that can be selected from an AB switch, all feeding a
common power amp. As for the cabinets, in most live situations the cab
is close-miced and therefore the close/open back issue is moot.
As for effects, it depends on what type of effect you are referring to.
I would suspect most peopole continue to prefer the flexibility of
external effects (either rack or stomp-boxes) for such things as chorus
and reverb; as opposed to using what the amp provides built-in. If you
are talking about "distortion" effects, that's another story, as the
preamp plays into this to a large extent.
I can't get all the sounds I need in my bass rig out of any single
preamp, so I select between three: ADA, Trace Elliot and a GK 800. The
preamp outputs are routed through a MIDI mixer which "mutes" the
preamps not in use at any given time. It's all controlled by a MIDI
footswitch. The output from the mixer then drives the power amp section
of the GK800, which feeds SWR 4X10 and 1X18 cabs. I also use a balanced
line-level output from the mixer to feed the FOH mix. Outboard effects
are connected to effects loops on the mixer, and are also under MIDI
control from the footswitch.
So, for me the answer is still the rack... it just depends on what
you put *in* the rack.
Brian
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2000.71 | | STAR::KMCDONOUGH | SET KIDS/NOSICK | Thu Mar 06 1997 10:48 | 7 |
|
Years later, less is still more! Reissue amps rule the scene, racks
are in hiding! Amazing turn of events from when .0 was written.
Kevin
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2000.72 | | BUSY::SLAB | Don't drink the (toilet) water | Thu Mar 06 1997 11:31 | 5 |
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This note's title has been misspelled for 6 1/2 years now.
Just thought you'd like to know. 8^)
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2000.73 | | WEDOIT::ABATELLI | | Thu Mar 06 1997 11:33 | 11 |
| re: .71
Everything goes in cycles Kevin. In a few years everybody will want
to fill up a 12 space rack again.
Hey, loads of blinking LED's are cool looking right? ;^)
Fred (who gigs in a 10 piece band with a miked 40 watt Vibroverb reissue
and is more than loud enough)
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2000.74 | | DABEAN::REAUME | http://www.dreamscape.com/johnrea | Fri Mar 07 1997 16:19 | 10 |
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...in a few years? I think one of the best things that's happened to
rack gear the last few years is that after trying to offer a
smorgasbord of effects, the emphasis is on quality. I am way down in
the number of spaces, but the tone has improved considerably.
FWIW - I think the new Rocktron and Marshall rack gear is the best
stuff for guitar. The new Digiteh 2112 looks interesting, but I'm still
evasive after my GSP-2101 (and GSP-21) days.
Then again I do just plug into the VOX AC30 or REXX combo as well.
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