Speaking of the Mark Series amps, a new Mark VII arrived here yesterday. I figured I'd yak about it in case anyone's interested.
I'm not a metal player. But this amp is surprising me in good ways! It's not merely a high gain or metal amp (though it's that, too).
Mesa is missing a trick here by not demoing the Mark VII for lower gain players. I’m tempted to do a YouTube video to demonstrate how good it is at low gain settings! They’re marketing this thing as a very high gain amp in all the demos, which of course it can be.
But it is also one of the nicest clean-to-edge of breakup amps I’ve ever owned. It sounds great clean in all three channels. The Mark IIB mode in channel 3, with the gain control set to around 11:00 is one of the best clean/low-gain tones I’ve ever gotten out of an amp! And I've had some pretty sweet amps.
Blues or country players just have to use the gain controls and they can get GREAT tones of the Mark VII, and not only that, have several excellent options to achieve those tones. I’m dazzled by its versatility.
Of course, the higher gain tones work well for me as expected.
I had, and liked, a Mark V, but couldn't really use Channel 3 much, there was a bit too much gain for my taste. The Mark VII is simply easier for me to work with on all three channels. I guess we'll see how it responds in the heat of battle with ad agency folks breathing down my neck...I think it should do fine.
If I needed to travel for a session, it’s the amp I’d take along. Does everything well.
In terms of speaker cabs, it sounds killer through the C90s on my Lone Star combo, through the 4x10 Mesa cab with Creambacks, and unexpectedly, it’s also wonderful with the PRS pine Grissom ported 2x12 cab that has V30s.
It’s pretty good through the closed back cab PRS cab that’s similar to a closed back Recto cab, but the ported or open back cabs seem to be its sweet spot.
Granted, I'm on honeymoon with it, but I think it'll see a lot of use.