Coming back home (or coming full circle)

My first “real” amp was a JCM800. I went through a myriad of amps including Mesa Boogies. These days, I’m strictly a modeler user, but always seem to gravitate towards the Marshall models. I guess I’m a Marshall guy, and thank God the Fractal ecosystem has plenty of them to choose from.

I can't escape that either. Plexi up to Modded 800 is my tonal wheelhouse with a Les Paul
and/or a SuperStrat. That said, I have a lot of love for 60's Fender tones with a Strat ( thank you SRV!). :chef
 
100% agree with you. A couple things I’ll add:

Every guitar and amp is capable of a broad range of tones. A Tele + AC30 doesn’t just equal one single sound.

For sure! :beer

Within reason, though. :idk

If we have limitations we have no choice but to work within them. I suspect
most of us, you included, would prefer more options, though.

I think some working musicians have it harder than session guys, because the
range of tones needed to cover all the material is far more diverse than one more
Country/Americana Album being recorded in Nashville.

Sometimes you can't bring every tool you would like to. Or need to use a screwdriver
as a chisel.... and have to call it "good enough." :unsure:
 
For sure! :beer

Within reason, though. :idk

If we have limitations we have no choice but to work within them. I suspect
most of us, you included, would prefer more options, though.

I think some working musicians have it harder than session guys, because the
range of tones needed to cover all the material is far more diverse than one more
Country/Americana Album being recorded in Nashville.

Sometimes you can't bring every tool you would like to. Or need to use a screwdriver
as a chisel.... and have to call it "good enough." :unsure:

Yep, 1000%!

I’ve had to turn gigs down before because I didn’t have the right gear and it sucks.
One time I got a call to do some prog metal gigs and I wanted to take it so bad, but the only amp I had at the time was a tweed Fender and I didn’t have the funds to buy what I would need to cover prog metal.

I’ve also had to do things like cover a Bon Jovi song with an AC15 and a Rat because it’s all I had :LOL:

You just have to cover as many bases as possible. One really good piece of advice I was once given: any time a gig calls for something you don’t have, find someone to borrow from, and then use the money from the gig to buy your own.
 
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I’ve migrated home a couple times. The first an awesome college roommate worked at GC and snagged an American Highway tele that came in used. $250 with the fender hard case. That immediately reminded me of my first name brand guitar, a Korean Squier II tele I got when I was 12 or 13. I still keep a collection of 60s spec teles around as counterpoint to the Gibson spec stuff I usually use.

The other was the beloved revision G Dual Rectifier. It was my first tube amp and it took me years to save for it as a teen. Kept it forever but came on hard times finishing school into the 2008 financial crisis and off it went for a car down payment when I finally found a job.

My OG one:

recto front.jpeg


The one I grabbed in recent years:
IMG_1094.jpeg
 
Yep, 1000%!

I’ve had to turn gigs down before because I didn’t have the right gear and it sucks.
One time I got a call to do some prog metal gigs and I wanted to take it so bad, but the only amp I had at the time was a tweed Fender and I didn’t have the funds to buy what I would need to cover prog metal.

I’ve also had to do things like cover a Bon Jovi song with an AC15 and a Rat because it’s all I had :LOL:

You just have to cover as many bases as possible. One really good piece of advice I was once given: any time a gig calls for something you don’t have, find someone to borrow from, and then use the money from the gig to buy your own.

Oh man..... what would you have chosen for a Prog Metal Gig, Met? :idk
 
What was the first “really good” amp you remember using?

When I was 18, I literally scraped together all I could, worked during school holidays, begged my dad for the remaining amount of cash, then went and bought a Fender 1994 ("Evil") Twin Amp.

Back then, I was totally overwhelmed by the control layout and the immense weight, but something did flick a switch in my brain.

Fortunately, I still have this beast. About 5 years in, the notorious "perks" that are responsible for its "Evil" moniker came into play. PCB failure, snap crackle & pop, all the (intermittent) bells and whistles.

It just sat there, broken and sad, for a long time, until I got it fixed by a brilliant tech a few years ago.

Now that I'm grown-up and know my way around amps, I fell back in love with it. Not my go-to kind of sound, but I still enjoy it very much every now and then.

EDIT: Apart from that, my first times with a LAB L5 and Ampeg VT-22 were also enlightening.
 
my first tube amp was a laney aor100 full of telefunkens... that thing was magic... but i managed to light up the grid resistors, and repaired it sounded like hammered dook... so i offed it and bought a used el84 mesa 50 cal. i LOVED that amp as a clean platform for over a decade... it had the magic midrange, fo sho, and started a long love affair with 84s- and while not necessarily a vox guy, i did love what i managed to pull off with those bottles in all my amps until i joined a band where i needed more volume and eq flexibility.. so i got a mark ii. not oddly... i gravitated to similar tones... and managed em.. but yeah... mids way up for me. sounds too kanky reedy any other way- especially if you ride your volume knob!
 
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