Topic: Solid State Experience

I've played tube amps for the last 6 years and last night I was stuck playing a Flextone II line 6 amp.  The amp had tons of tones and sounded great, but I am a volume knob freak on guitar and flat out was the only thing I could get that poor little amp to do.  It was so frustrating trying to get the amp to play soft while not playing leads and then when I wanted leads it was fine.  I promise you next time I play at somebodys house It will be with a Tube amp.  Does anybody else have an experience like that?

Re: Solid State Experience

I can relate to that. Some years back I was playing in a tribute act and was using a great marshall plexi.
About two days before a large outdoor show the marshall went belly up and even though I got the amp to a good service tech quickly he said it wouldn't be ready for the weekend because he needed time to go over it properly and since the problem was intermittent he didn't want to do a quick solution and then have it happen again.

Instead of just using another marshall head I decided to go with a line 6 head because I was told it was very powerful, could get the plexi sound and wasn't bothered by issues that tube amps were.
Against my better judgement I went along with it, being strapped for time, and we had to leave that evening to do some travelling to the next out of town gig.
Once we got there I was able to spend some time with it and got a resonable setup that sounded pretty good.
Once onstage though everything went out the window.
Like you the guitar's volume knob didn't react the same way it did on the marshall and once I started pushing the amp it got very muddy and lost in the mix, and this head was supposed to be a 350 watt head, or so I was told.
Also I couldn't use my pedals because the head just didn't didn't react well with any of them.
Since then I have no problem with SS amps for practicing at home but for live gigs I'll stick with tubes.

Re: Solid State Experience

yeah but you know I've had ss fenders and marshalls that never let me down quite like this line 6 did.  I've even played peavey amps that had more touch then that line 6.  I think its just the average customer for line 6 just doesn't use their tone and volume knobs or something.  There is no way a bussiness like that could get such a good rep with guitar player unless they are cattering to the needs of the masses which would be 3 heavy chords strummed really flippin' fast.   I thought the amp sounded great as long as I didn't mess with the controls on the guitar.  I could use the foot pedal to make the volume go down but it didn't back off the distortion.  I'll stick with tubes for the rest of my life now.

Re: Solid State Experience

I played a gig last night in a small venue, had a Fender hot rod deluxe, which was at the other side of the stage though, but luckily after messing about with an MG Marshall I convinced the guy to give me the Fender. Sounded like my guitar was farting more than anything, hate solid states with a passion!

The Fender was good, though a little lacking in high end, strangely, just couldn't get anything near my marshall at all.
The sound guy told us we weren't allowed our marshalls as they'd be "too loud", yet, we were struggling to be heard over the drummer as it was. I think I'll be avoiding that venue from now on.

Re: Solid State Experience

"Too loud"...what a tool!  Does he realize there is something called a VOLUME KNOB.  It's funny you mention that though because I have heard a lot of venues give people s**t about bringing a Marshall head regardless of wattage.  I guess we have Pete and Jimi to thank for that!

'67 and '74 Fender Twin Reverbs, '74 Marshall 1987 lead mkII, Metro Superlead 100. Pedals from TC Electronic, Ibanez, Dunlop, BK Butler, Electro-Harmonix, Fulltone, Maestro/Gibson, Loopmaster switching, VoodooLab, Boss. Gibson and Fender guitars, Dimarzio pickups.

Re: Solid State Experience

Not allowing Marshalls???  I'll just show up with a old 100 watter fender with 4 10's see how they like those apples!

Re: Solid State Experience

AD3THREE wrote:

Not allowing Marshalls???  I'll just show up with a old 100 watter fender with 4 10's see how they like those apples!

lol lol lol lol lol lol lol lol

'67 and '74 Fender Twin Reverbs, '74 Marshall 1987 lead mkII, Metro Superlead 100. Pedals from TC Electronic, Ibanez, Dunlop, BK Butler, Electro-Harmonix, Fulltone, Maestro/Gibson, Loopmaster switching, VoodooLab, Boss. Gibson and Fender guitars, Dimarzio pickups.

Re: Solid State Experience

That's really funny. I had a little discussion with a soundguy recently about this issue too.
It was a gig that we organized. So we hired the soundcrew too. At the soundcheck he complaint
I was too loud even I baffled the amp. He said he can't "allow" me to play that loud and suggested
me to use the clean channel.... Ermm....what?? lol I said to him 'just step aside from the mixing desk please!'
At this time this poor guy hasn't realized the we always bring our own soundguy. Our soundguy is really, really good.

Since this incident we have a kind of running gag.
Whenever somebody is too loud we say "Just switch to clean channel, you are to loud!" tongue

Alex

...it's a musical journey
www.u2-experience.de

Re: Solid State Experience

Stratovari wrote:

That's really funny. I had a little discussion with a soundguy recently about this issue too.
It was a gig that we organized. So we hired the soundcrew too. At the soundcheck he complaint
I was too loud even I baffled the amp. He said he can't "allow" me to play that loud and suggested
me to use the clean channel.... Ermm....what?? lol I said to him 'just step aside from the mixing desk please!'
At this time this poor guy hasn't realized the we always bring our own soundguy. Our soundguy is really, really good.

Since this incident we have a kind of running gag.
Whenever somebody is too loud we say "Just switch to clean channel, you are to loud!" tongue

Alex

Haha. How do you explain for someone who thinks you can just "switch to clean channel" that you can't...

Re: Solid State Experience

I have never understood the universal mission of every soundguy to get a guitar player to turn down.  Lets face it the guitar is THE sound of rock and roll.  We get to do what we want.  I personally take being told to turn down as an insult.  I'd wager that soundmen don't tell the famous guys to turn down because they'd be told where to go!  As long as you are not being offensively oblivious to the volume I say crank 'em up!

'67 and '74 Fender Twin Reverbs, '74 Marshall 1987 lead mkII, Metro Superlead 100. Pedals from TC Electronic, Ibanez, Dunlop, BK Butler, Electro-Harmonix, Fulltone, Maestro/Gibson, Loopmaster switching, VoodooLab, Boss. Gibson and Fender guitars, Dimarzio pickups.

Re: Solid State Experience

Well also everyone knows that the trainning video for a sound guy is Spinal Tap so its no wonder Marshalls are not welcome anymore because they go to 11!  But don't touch it, in fact don't even look at it!