They do seem to be the best of both worlds but it depends of course on what you are going to use it for. You do pay for their stuff being bombproof. At 84 lbs I'm at an age I just couldn't face carrying that up a flight of stairs every other week, at least with the amp head and separate 2x12 I get to do it in two journeys. :D
This Fuckin' Kid
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I did mention the Iconic because it’s cheaper and I hear good things. It’s not all tube. It has a solid state preamp and a tube power amp.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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I assume the Iconic is pretty good because Ed did sign off on it and James Brown designed it. I have some pedals James handmade and they are fabulous. He really can do a good job voicing solid state circuits. Mike Soldano told me he was having a real problem finding non-microphonic preamp tubes these days. That’s why he designed the new amps with DC heaters. The Iconic would eliminate the noisy tube problem by going with a solid state preamp.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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That’s what I like about my FUCHS amps. They have DC heaters in a Marshall style circuit and the amps are lighter. I have a nice Marshall small box Dave Friedman modded for me but I use my Train 45 most the time. It’s lighter, quieter and better touch response.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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If I was looking for something to get the classic VH sound with in the 5150 price range I would get a Friedman Runt 50. Those amps are built right. Better construction and components than a 5150. It does not do the really high gain. If you like rediculous amounts of gain with a decent crunch channel the 5150 is good.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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They do seem to be the best of both worlds but it depends of course on what you are going to use it for. You do pay for their stuff being bombproof. At 84 lbs I'm at an age I just couldn't face carrying that up a flight of stairs every other week, at least with the amp head and separate 2x12 I get to do it in two journeys. :DNo! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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The worst things to haul around are a Ampeg SVT head and the 8x10 cab.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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NITRO...
I like to keep some random gear in my studio for multiple purposes.
I have a pretty cool guitar amp even though I don't play guitar, really. I do have some cool pedals/gear for vocals. My studio actually has a nice vocal booth...I sometimes send the vocal mic (one of those big, bulky circular vocal mics) out from the booth to one of my vocal pedals or even into my amp, put some distortion and effects on it...and then send the amp signal out to the multi-track board.
If I wanted to put an EVH-gear amp in my studio (for one of the guitarists to use if they're doing a quick visit/quick overdub session...or even to get a loud, distorted, punchy vocal sound), is there a reasonably-priced Eddie-endorsed amp I could get for my recording studio? I'm not looking to spend a fortune, necessarily. Just a nice, all-purpose Eddie-endorsed amp.Roth Army Militia
Originally posted by WARF
Rikk - The new school of the Roth Army... this dude leads the pack... three words... The Sheep Pen... this dude opened alot of doors for people during this new era... he's the best of the new school.Comment
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Also, NITRO...
Believe it or not, I've only ever used my Leslie rotating-speaker for my Hammond B3 (sounds great). I've never actually bothered plugging a guitar into the Leslie (people think it's just a standard "plug your guitar in" set-up...but there are actually a few connections...you gotta fuck around).
Have you ever played around with a Leslie rotating speaker? If so, is it hard to get a nice sound for guitar with a real rotating speaker? (I know Clapton & George Harrison used to do that a lot back in the day...but I've just never fucked around with it. I know they have pedals which can simulate the sound really well...but it's just something I want to try myself.)Roth Army Militia
Originally posted by WARF
Rikk - The new school of the Roth Army... this dude leads the pack... three words... The Sheep Pen... this dude opened alot of doors for people during this new era... he's the best of the new school.Comment
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God, I’d love a Leslie pedal for the shear simplicity of it, but they just haven’t found the way to properly replicate the sound of a spinning speaker yet. The pedals I’ve heard usually sound too digital. I’m open to recommendations.
That sound on Badge that Clapton got (or was it Harrison?) sounds awesome, but I really dig the Leslie at the halfway point of No Matter What by Badfinger.Comment
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God, I’d love a Leslie pedal for the shear simplicity of it, but they just haven’t found the way to properly replicate the sound of a spinning speaker yet. The pedals I’ve heard usually sound too digital. I’m open to recommendations.
That sound on Badge that Clapton got (or was it Harrison?) sounds awesome, but I really dig the Leslie at the halfway point of No Matter What by Badfinger.
I really should post a picture or two of the studio. It's fucking awesome. I basically spent 20 years dreaming it up.
One of these days, I'll try and plug a guitar through the Leslie...but it's not as straightforward as some people think.
And...YES! That is Clapton playing the riff on the middle eight of BADGE. Harrison plays on BADGE too...he wrote the simpler music for the first half of the song. But Clapton plays that amazing, ringing riff in the middle part. (It was all he had for the song, so Harrison wrote the first part and they were off!)
Harrison plays a lot of Leslie guitar in later Beatles stuff (like in LET IT BE...and in a couple of tracks on ABBEY ROAD)...and I believe he also dug it out for stuff on ALL THINGS MUST PASS.
Clapton also plays Leslie'd guitar on the Cream track DOING THAT SCRAPYARD (also on their GOODBYE album) and other tracks after...I think he uses it on the BLIND FAITH album, but I'd have to check.
It's just a killer sound that ended up really in fashion around 1969/1970.Roth Army Militia
Originally posted by WARF
Rikk - The new school of the Roth Army... this dude leads the pack... three words... The Sheep Pen... this dude opened alot of doors for people during this new era... he's the best of the new school.Comment
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Also, NITRO...
Believe it or not, I've only ever used my Leslie rotating-speaker for my Hammond B3 (sounds great). I've never actually bothered plugging a guitar into the Leslie (people think it's just a standard "plug your guitar in" set-up...but there are actually a few connections...you gotta fuck around).
Have you ever played around with a Leslie rotating speaker? If so, is it hard to get a nice sound for guitar with a real rotating speaker? (I know Clapton & George Harrison used to do that a lot back in the day...but I've just never fucked around with it. I know they have pedals which can simulate the sound really well...but it's just something I want to try myself.)No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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For studio use I would look into the EVH 15 watt LBX head.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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We have a Bossendorfer grand piano in the living room. It’s a heavy beast to move. Lots of iron in that thing.No! You can't have the keys to the wine cellar!Comment
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