DannyG wrote:Thanks for the help but it's way too confusing. Without doing extensive reseach, what's the difference in the JCM800, 900, 2000..There's JCM, JTM, JMP....man, it makes my head spin.
I'll try to explain each model in order from oldest to newest:
JTM- Originally 4xKT66 and 100 watts, later evolving to the 2xKT66 JTM 45 head and Bluesbreaker combo at about 30 watts. The tone is very glassy, gritty, fuzzy, warm, and classic. Think Beano Clapton era tone.
1959 Superlead/Superbass/1986 and 1987- 1959 Superlead model (not the year but model number) is essentially the same as the 1987 only 100 watts (the 1987 is 50 watts). The Superbass amps are almost the same just voiced slightly different. Superlead = brighter, gainier, less headroom, more aggressive. Superbass = warmer, more headroom, rounder sounding. EJ, Cream era Clapton, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page tone.
JMP- early master volume models essentially the same as the SLP and 1987 just with more gain, circuit board wiring instead of PTP wiring, and master volumes. Similar to the later JCM 800 amps. Great '70s rock tone.
JCM series- JCM 800 '80s rock tone think GnR, Zakk Wylde, Slash, etc. Jubilee model is a warmer sound than the JCM 800 with more gain and midrange. A great hybrid between the 1959 and JCM 800 as far as tone goes. JCM900 more modern higher gain sound of the '90s. Great heavy gain grungy sound with decent cleans and reverb. JCM 2000 Classic Gain like the 1959/JTM 100 Ultra Gain sounds range from 1959 to JCM 800 and beyond.
All are good, I like the 1959, Jubilee, JCM800, and JCM2000 best.
'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.