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Originally Posted by jazzkritter
Kustoms were noisy (mostly just hiss) but otherwise decent general purpose amps.
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08-06-2022 10:35 AM
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Disregarding things like maintenance considerations, truth is, for traditional clean jazz sounds, you can get by with almost any amp if you have headroom, a good ear, a good speaker and cab, and really understand how to take advantage of each amp’s particular EQ interaction, gain staging, etc. I often record myself several times a week, and unless I label my recordings, I have a hard time distinguishing which amp I used, and often even which guitar I used.
I’ve owned several quality and often recommended (for jazz) solid state amps: two Yamaha G50/100 mk2, L5 and L3 Lab Series, Pearce G2R, Polytone, Henriksen, and several Quilters, most recently and currently Superblock US (which is a stupid great jazz amp). My favorites were the Lab Series L5, Yamaha G50, and Quilter Superblock US.
The surprise pisser of all the amps above was the Polytone Baby Taurus (or whatever it’s called). Couldn’t make that little thing sound like anything other than a midrangey nasal box. Quilter Superblock US through a Toob Metro 6.5” sounds way better to my ear.
And having said all that, and to get even further into cork-sniffing territory, all but one of the above solid state amps have moved on. In my experience, the “best”, most inspirational, most balanced “in the room” jazz sounds are coming from clean or slightly pushed tube amps through large cabs loaded with 15” speakers. Cab and speaker should be a part of the conversation regardless of whether an amp is tube, solid state, or modeling. In the end, it’s a bit of fun and a bit of obsession.
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I liked carrying my SR into wedding gigs. Intense feeling of superiority.
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Originally Posted by jazzmanstever
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Originally Posted by Woody Sound
Opening up the back of your cab will solve this problem but create others. We've discussed Thiele-Small parameters and cabinet design many times on JGO over the last year - they're still the general basis for design of guitar cabs, This summary from Premier Guitar (identical to many others easily found on the web) sums it up:So if your driver has a Qts of about 0.7, you may get away with opening up the back - but you may also find that it sounds worse. The most serious danger of msimatching driver Q with enclosure design is that at high volume levels you can trigger a resonance in the driver that results in oscillation and damage to the speaker itself. It's rare, but it happens.
"A Qts of 0.4 or below indicates a speaker well-suited to a vented enclosure. A Qts between 0.4 and 0.7 indicates suitability for a sealed enclosure. A Qts of 0.7 or above indicates suitability for free-air, semiopen back or infinite baffle applications. However, there are certainly exceptions and you should consider all the parameters."
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Originally Posted by Woody Sound
I have not tried them. They claim to disperse the sound. If you end up trying them please let me know how well they work.
I have some thoughts about these issue that I have brought up in a separate thread.
Amp beaming and sound diffusors
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I've been really enjoying the Tonemaster Deluxe Reverb sold my ac10c1, Origin 20 n a few other amps when I got it been perfect for my home playing I think the video of Kirk Fletcher really shows it off well on YouTube on the Fender channel.
Didn't Wes end up playing solid state and BB king did as well from memorythere's a few ep boost pedals that can be added to the Tonemaster to warm it up as well.
Hope this helpsI stuck loads of clips of my beginner noodling at home volume on my instagram and there's some older clips of the ac10c1 an Marshall origin at the same volume. Lucyplaythatbluesguitar
The watt setting on the back has been super handy for being able to wind the volume up to simulate it on full tilt for some of the Peter green Danny kirwan fleetwood mac era stuff. I'd love one of the twin ones one day but heard they are a bit to loud compared to the Deluxe TM.
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Over the years I've owned several tube amps.
My 64 Reverberocket, purchased new. Probably my favorite. But, nowadays, it distorts chords a little bit in a way I don't like. Maybe it's the speaker, but more likely, the replacement tubes don't sound like the originals. Or, I don't remember things accurately, which is cerainly possible.
A Twin Reverb with JBLs. Might as well have weighed two tons. Very unpleasant to move. Also, very bright sounding pick attack, because of those JBLs I think.
Mesa Boogie Mark III. Dialed in properly, it sounded like a chorus of angels. But, if you needed a smidge more treble or something, be prepared to move every dial on the amp. Couldn't even use it in rehearsal because my bassist complained about the fan noise. And the fan was working like new. I had head and cab, because the combo unit felt like it was cabled to the center of the earth. Unpleasant to move.
Nowadays I've been both rehearsing and gigging with two amps, both SS. The Little Jazz and an original Roland Jazz Chorus 55. The JC55 is a little icy sounding, but not too bad. My main guitar (Comins GCS-1) is a little on the dark side, so maybe it's a good fit.
One of the best guitar sounds I ever heard was a Fender D'aquisto archtop into a Twin. But, another one of the greatest sounds I ever heard was an AER Compact 60 supported by some additional gear that I don't remember specifically.Last edited by rpjazzguitar; 08-06-2022 at 07:00 PM.
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This is a guess, but based on what i knew from Tal back then when travel to the gig was involved the guys would have in their contracts ‘the club shall provide a TR (whatev) or equivalent yada yada’ so i think up to easy portable days they relied on the back line. Wes did Magnatone ads IIRC? So they may have drop shipped?
However i bet Mr King had a couple of road apes tugging that Lab 5 around for him! Endorsement + use = $$$
?
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Originally Posted by st.bede
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Comparing, say, a Polytone to a Twin Reverb and saying tubes sound better doesn't make much sense. The biggest difference between any "jazz amp" and a tube Fender amp is not topology (tubes vs ss) but tone stack (scooped fender vs flat baxandall) and cab (bass speaker in a small ported closed cab vs guitar speakers in a big open back cab).
I once plugged a Fender Jazzmaster Ultralight head (solid stat circuit that "mimics" a Fender scooped tone stack) trough a big 2x12 Dr Z cab with Jensen Speakers and was surprised how close it sounded to a Twin. Played trough a Barber Barb EQ (solid state pedal that can recriate a Fender preamp in blackface mode with the mids at 0) with an IR of a Twin Reverb trough a PA many times, and, again, hard to tell the difference to a miced Twin. It's there, but small.
Haven't tried the new Fender Tone Master but i bet they sound very close to the originals. Again, same tone stack and same cab, only topology changes (solid state digital vs tubes). I bet the same is true for same of the new Quilters with a Fender "voice" and an open-back cab with a Jensen Tornado.
The main problem for solid state amps is still speakers - you need an high power amp for solid sate to sound good and most good guitar speakers for cleans don't handle high watts, because tube amps are usually not very powerful. I guess these new Jensen neo speakers handle more than their rated 100w and they sound much better than the typical Eminence Beta.
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[QUOTE=jorgemg1984;1215017]Comparing, say, a Polytone to a Twin Reverb and saying tubes sound better doesn't make much sense. The biggest difference between any "jazz amp" and a tube Fender amp is not topology (tubes vs ss) but tone stack (scooped fender vs flat baxandall) and cab (bass speaker in a small ported closed cab vs guitar speakers in a big open back cab).
As an owner of an original 1965 Twin Reverb, an Ampeg Gemini II, and a Polytone Mini Brute IV, I completely disagree with this. The tube amps are richer and respond differently. I do not recall any tube amp manufacturer marketing their amps as "sounds just like solid state." The Polytone is lightweight, so I used it as a backup to throw in my car for gigs.
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@Bebop Tom: I don't think he meant to say that there is no difference between the two types of amps, just that the difference comes from the "tone stack" (maybe a simple explanation of what it means might be necessary) and the type of cab used.
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If you're still after the tone of a tube in a light weight package, maybe something like this would work:
Chumpola Combo Amp | Luxe-Tone Amplifiers
Package is supposed to weigh in at 6 pounds. At $800, it's not cheap but custom. Sound is anyone's guess. I look at it every now and then and wonder "what if?"
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Exactly. You're comparing things that can't be compared. There are much bigger differences betwen your polytone and your fender than "tubes vs ss", which is a simplification of the question. Your Ampeg, on the other hand, shares a similiar tone stack with the Polytone - but, still, completelty different cabs.
I'm not saying tubes and solid state sound the same, I'm saying most of the times people are comparing things that can't be compared. The fair way to do the comparison would be getting a Fender preamp pedal, (like the Barb Eq, but there are others), a good spring reverb pedal, a neutral "jazz amp" head and a big 2x12 cab with Jensens. Then play it side by side with a Twin. They would sound different still, I guess, but much less than people expect.
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I think the difference between tube and ss, are mostly heard in the edge of breakup sound. Not so much in the cleans or heavy distortion. I think in the cleans, and heavy distortion, the other factors make the differences.
I can not remember how much the tonemaster gets the edge of breakup sound nailed, except that it works well enough for me. When doing that with a twin (or deluxe) it is a pretty loud sound. In that way, even if the TM is not perfect, it is better because, how often am I really able to use an amp at its’ glorious sound... not too often.
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Remember these badass Acoustic amps? Both bass and guitar. And dig the white platform shoes.
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Originally Posted by JWMandy
Most of the weight other than the cabinet is metal - transformers, speaker, chassis and hardware. Only the transformers weigh enough to save much, and iron is power and tone in a tube amp. So how could it weigh 6 pounds?
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Originally Posted by nevershouldhavesoldit
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There is no doubt my bfsr sounds better than my Polytone, but if you use an eq pedal with a poly, you can get a very familiar fender’y sound, as well as a huge volume boost if you want it.
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BTW, I relayed your question to Luxe-Tone. Maybe we'll hear back?
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Originally Posted by JWMandy
$8500 - 2010 Moffa Maestro Virtuoso Archtop Black...
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