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I'm on the Tonemaster Deluxe Reverb band-wagon. It's knocked my Quilter off the perch for being my main gigging amp. I play in a quartet with a quiet drummer - the 5 watt setting is perfect. I can turn it up until it just starts to compress a bit. I also updated the firmware to 'bypass' the bright cap on the vibrato channel. This makes it even better.
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05-30-2021 07:57 PM
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Welcome to the growing club of happy TMMDR players
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thoughts on my new Fender Tonemaster Deluxe Reverb after the gig yesterday -
Really enjoyed playing through it at a noisy live venue with my 6-piece band.
I had the output attenuation set about halfway up, plugged into output 2 of the reverb side, reverb and tremolo engaged on the foot switch, volume on 5, reverb, tremolo, intensity and speed all at ~2.
Saxes played counter-melodies and guide tones behind my solos, while the bass player played through a new and much louder amp and the drummer was in a brick corner that projected him very well, yet with all of that going on, my lines sounded fuller and more authoritative / less tentative than through my Fender Acoustic 200.
The difference in bass backbone really stands out on this amp - there is so much of it you can almost feel it when playing lines on the lower strings. While comping, it sounds like there is much better string definition, i am guessing in part due to the sparkle from the Jensen speaker.
Only other observation is that on some tunes i use an Ibanez Tube Screamer pedal (for some of the blues tunes we do) and I was able to get as much controllable sustain feedback as I wanted...couldn’t get that very easily out of my old amp.
So, at this point, she is a keeper.
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Originally Posted by wanderingwolf1958
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For those who have jumped into the Tonemaster pool, I’m getting the impression that the Deluxe has a bit more headroom than its tube counterpart, is that true? I have a Vintage Sound 1x12 that started as the 22 watt version, but that was not enough headroom for me, even with 6L6’s, so I had Rick transform it into the 35 watt jazz configuration, then when it needed a repair, I had him bump it to 40 watt with a bigger transformer.
For most of what I do (or envision doing, as playing opportunities return) a 40 watt tube head fits the sweet spot for me for archtop headroom and pedalboard use for other styles, but the standard output of a Deluxe is not nearly enough for me and there is nothing worse than trying to get your sound at a gig and not having enough gas to stay clean.
I have a Twin that began life as an early 70’s Dual Showman and it’s lovely, but overkill, and of course, a good workout and reminder of proper body mechanics.
So, Is the Tonemaster Deluxe powerful enough to warrant skipping the Twin version for moderately loud gigs?
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Originally Posted by yebdox
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Originally Posted by yebdox
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Originally Posted by entresz
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Originally Posted by entresz
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Originally Posted by yebdox
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I love this amp so much!
I love how simple it is to record something with a good sound without all the problems related with miking.
And I also love how it sounds in live situations with my two beautiful guitars!
I would like to share with you one little live video recorded with an iPhone and another one recorded directly into my focusrite (with some reverb and a little echo added with my DAW).
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Thanks for sharing. I was here to check out opinion on the TM amps but stayed to enjoy your playing. Great rework of Days of Wine with some great chord choices.
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Originally Posted by Danm777
Questions for you Barry Harris disciples /...
Today, 07:49 AM in Improvisation