I find myself stuck in this cycle of trying to overcome limitations of my nice but relatively small amp collection, convincing myself whatever I choose out of that will do the job, play a gig, notice nothing but limitations, search for amp to add that'll overcome those limitations, waffle about spending money, convince myself that what I have will do the job, rinse repeat. I've been socking some $ away and if I can survive a summer slowdown in gigs without incurring any major unexpected expenses, I might be able to invest in a new amp. As the title implies, I really am starting to shy away from the pedal platform thing...I definitely come from that school of thought that prefers amp distortion, but for practical reasons have been living in the stacking drives into a clean amp world, unsatisfied, for a long time. Here's what I've got:
- Fender 1968 Custom Deluxe Reverb - this is what I've been using mainly lately, because I've been playing guitar for an indie rock band and need the chimey cleans and a nice clean platform to run delays and reverbs and stuff into. I can usually get this at max to 3 which isn't really waking the amp up at all, and balancing making give me overdrive/distortion sounds I'm happy with is always a challenge. Despite the fact that almost every Deluxe Reverb I've ever played sounds kind of harsh and tinny standing next to it, thru a mic they sound pretty nice and it's easy to carry around, so those are the plusses.
- Victory Sheriff 44 (NOT the new and improved ones that came out recently) - I love the way this amp sounds, particularly channel one, but it lacks a true clean tone and the effects loop totally sucks due to it being post-phase inverter master volume. I've been able to get around the clean channel thing by just rolling my volume back some with some of the more rock-leaning bands I play in, but it's tough dialing in the beautiful delays and reverbs that I really love having with it. I also love recording with this guy, where those things are less of an issue. Form factor is also nice and I've never found it lacking for power or volume, plus I find the master volume to work really well as far as tube amps go.
- Mesa Dual Rectifier 3 channel - the first nice amp I ever bought, 21 years ago. I spent a ton of time getting to know this amp, spending countless hours in my old band's rehearsal space experimenting, dialing it in and really learning every idiosyncracy, and we played a LOT of gigs together across the spectrum. While I don't think they're as much of a one-trick pony as some people make them out to be, my tastes have kind of drifted away from the Mesa sound and I did put a lot of effort into trying to eliminate that gritty high end fizz that they seem to have. It's big and a lot to lug around, and while I don't think I'll ever get rid of it, it's just not as practical as the other two (plus the effects loop is also kind of bad/picky).