Tim O'Sullivan
Well-known member
I use a Roland Microcube at home. Its amazing!
Tim O'Sullivan said:I use a Roland Microcube at home. Its amazing!
Tim O'Sullivan said:I use a Roland Microcube at home. Its amazing!
GuitarHack said:I regret that it took two decades of playing guitar (on and off) to realize that 120W, or 60W, or even 50W, is way beyond what's needed, especially in this era of inexpensive, readily available PA systems....I am happy as a pig in s**t with my 5W combos for home use and band practice, and my 18W head for gigs, or my 38W head for BIG gigs.
candid_x said:A strong solid state amp (like the Roland amps) can “cut through” the mix easier than a basic tube amp. High gain tube amps are designed with less harmonic content in order to achieve this effect. However, there’s more to great tone than just cutting through the mix. The key, imo, is to match the amp to the style of music you’re playing. I’ve never met a solid state amp that could produce great blues tone, for example, and a Deluxe Reverb isn’t likely to be found in a nu-metal band.
slukather said:Yet another kid who think Mesa and PRS go hand in hand, I'm sick of kids who don't know any better, l guess that doesn't make me any better, l feel for the "mesa" propaganda.
Scott.
robelinda2 said:yeah i priced a lone star here in Oz, a bit out of my league, would have to not buy a EBMM guitar for 6 months, forget that!!!!
slukather said:Oh for sure, l couldn't agree with you more, he plays more melodic rock type stuff, and has no need for a Mesa, (either do i for that matter), and the Roland amp is perfect for him, you can switch between dirty and clean, and thats all he needs, l don't really need to say it again, but I think l'd prefer this Roland over my Mesa (they are the most overpriced overrated peices of junk l've ever played).
I actually saw aband the other week, the dude was playing a Mesa, and he cut through the band really well, but in order to do that, he was the most thinnist sound l've ever heard, it actually hurt..
Scott.
candid_x said:Ice pick in the ear, anyone?![]()
I've a jam friend who plays a Mesa/PRS combo. Pretty decent player but 'his sound' is flat and lifeless. The fact that his amp packs 4x6L6's in the power section (100 watts) doesn't help, as we don't jam at especially loud volumes, plus he uses his clean channel 80% of the time; not Mesa's strong suit.
Only Mesa I've ever owned was a little Subway Rocket. Very neat little class A amp, but typically Mesa focused in dark midrange territory, and no great cleans to speak of.
A Comment on using 5-18 watt EL84 amps: I agree that you can get power tube breakup/low headroom out of small amps without shattering apartment windows, but the little guys can't match the tone - especially the bottom end - of a decent 50 watt 6L6 or EL34 amp, even at moderate volumes. It's just not there in a 5-18 watt amp. But midrange solos can sound super from them!
candid_x said:Ice pick in the ear, anyone?![]()
I've a jam friend who plays a Mesa/PRS combo. Pretty decent player but 'his sound' is flat and lifeless. The fact that his amp packs 4x6L6's in the power section (100 watts) doesn't help, as we don't jam at especially loud volumes, plus he uses his clean channel 80% of the time; not Mesa's strong suit.
Only Mesa I've ever owned was a little Subway Rocket. Very neat little class A amp, but typically Mesa focused in dark midrange territory, and no great cleans to speak of.
A Comment on using 5-18 watt EL84 amps: I agree that you can get power tube breakup/low headroom out of small amps without shattering apartment windows, but the little guys can't match the tone - especially the bottom end - of a decent 50 watt 6L6 or EL34 amp, even at moderate volumes. It's just not there in a 5-18 watt amp. But midrange solos can sound super from them!
GuitarHack said:Agreed on the bottom end, and it's all about tradeoffs. The type of music I've been playing lately, I've moved away from the chugga-chugga of a closed back hi-wattage rig (though I still like that sound), and more toward fitting into the mix. As alluded to above, you may sound awesome by yourself, but your sound can get lost in the mix. So, I've found a balance between a tone I love and letting the bass player and drummer own the low end. Sometimes the best sounding lead tone in the mix can sound a little trebly by itself, IMO.
That said, I get the best sound out of my 5-watters when they are on the floor; a lot of folks put them on a table or on an amp stand, and you lose bass then. But, I can also run my 5-watters through a 212 or 410 cab, and that sounds real professional. I also occasionally (just for fun at home) run my Peavey Classic 30 12 combo into my 5150 412 slant cab...hang on, baby, that is a heckuva ride.
beej said:My last plug for Guytron ... new 20W combo ... it's on my Christmas list ...
http://www.guytron.com/
beej said:My last plug for Guytron ... new 20W combo ... it's on my Christmas list ...
http://www.guytron.com/