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Posts Tagged ‘Fryette’

I Am a Guitar Amplifier Guinea Pig

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

This head went from being a broken-down cat chair to a fire-breathing monster.

I am a hand-built guitar amplifier guinea pig. My buddy and bassist Chris treats me like his personal Bruce Campbell of tone, and I like it.

See, I had this old Laney AOR100 head sitting around. Everyone around here tried fixing it, including the crew at Krank Amplification. All failed.

Except Chris. He took the Laney head. He gutted it. He built a circuit based on the Soldano SLO 100 head’s lead channel. And boom! A new amp was born.

How’s it sound? It sings. It has an almost-human vocal quality, a thick, warm, syrup voice with tons of sustain. It is a guitar solo lover’s dream. It also meshes with Todd’s Mesa amplifiers – an F100 and a Triple Rectifier – beautifully during live shows. Take a listen at the bad YouTube recording below.

You know I love my VHT Deliverance 60. It has a tight bottom end. Its tone is defined, sharp. It grinds, it crushes, it chugs. But for guitar solos, it can’t match Chris’s resurrected Soldaney … or Angry Duck, as we call it.

I know he has a dream – to one day build decently priced handbuilt amps for workaday players like us: Guys who are unlikely to make a living as musicians, but love playing and know their stuff.

To reach them and their buckage, Chris needs to take a few steps:

  • More usable gain. The Angry Duck quacks unpleasantly if your crank any of the gain stages up too high. The perception is that, if the dial turns that far, you should be able to use it.
  • Tighter bottom end. Yes, this is a lead guitarist’s amp. But we like to chug, too!

Aside from that, I frreakin’ love this amp. I use it live more than I do the VHT.

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Musician’s Lament – Looking for Gear

Saturday, June 6th, 2009
My first 100-watt tube head. That's about what it's good for.

My first 100-watt tube head. That's about what it's good for.

So, rock musicians are really supposed to think about sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll, right? Well, if that’s what you think, you’re leaving something out: gear.

Guitars, amps, cables, pickups, effects – you name it, and musicians obsess over it.

The only thing that makes me different is that I rarely get anything new. I bought my last amp five years ago. My last guitar came two years ago. Last speaker cabinet? Three years ago.

Amps are my obsession, but it’s kind of a difficult one. My current amp is a THD Univalve, a beautiful piece of low-wattage, no-fat, low-fuss machinery. But I’ve had a few outdoor and unmic’d gigs lately, and it’s low wattage has been a bit of a liability for those.

That made me decide to look into a new head, something in the 50-watt range, with a more aggressive distortion. The Uni nails those early-80s Iron Maiden-style sounds. But I wanted some a bit more modern – not the swarm-of-bees sound so prevalent in nu-metal: I still want a good midrange and powerful articulation.

I wanted it to be priced reasonably and built in the United States, too. The benefits of a reasonable price are obvious. Plenty of fine amps are built outside the United States, but I wanted to support those who make a living here. I also wanted to avoid the big guys, and have a single-channel amp.

This is a tall order.

An awesome setup for the studio and for club gigs.

An awesome setup for the studio and for club gigs.

First, the smaller guys are terrible at describing their products. I have clicked on so many “high-gain” amps that fell well short of that sound. Maybe we need a new description, like “modern high-gain.” Too many of these sounded straight out of the 1970s – definitely not the tone I want. If I were an amp builder or describing an amp’s tone, I would put it in terms of type of music, e.g. “This is a perfect amp for replicating George Lynch’s tone from the Back for the Attack album, but with a more modern grind for rhythm parts. If you have the hands for it, this amp can deliver.” Boom!

Second, there are too many amps festooned with three or four channels. That adds up to a long signal chain and a bunch of relays and integrated circuits that increase the chance of breaking down. I really pine for the day when Carvin decides to make a single-channel version of its V3, running on just 50 watts, but with the gain structure of its Channel 1. That would be a great American-made amp for a reasonable price. Maybe even put Power Scaling in it stock!

Third, small builders generally have big prices. Or if they’re reasonably priced, they do one thing that ruins the package for me (Valvetech would be brilliant with a diode rectifier instead of a tube rectifier).

Fourth, let’s talk about sound clips. I don’t trust them. A good engineer can twiddle the EQ to make anything sound good. You really have to play an amp to see how it responds to your touch and to your guitar (or take a chance on eBay). And really, would it kill any of these guys to actually record some clips with a Jackson or ESP instead of a Strat and a Les Paul? That goes to knowing your potential customer, and the small builders are awful awful awful in that regard. That shows even those who don’t have much regard for sound clips that you at least get what they’re looking for.

So … you might be wondering what decision I made for my 50-watter: Well, this one goes to 60: The VHT Deliverance 60. Yes, they’re called Fryette now, but mine pre-dates the name change. Expect a review in a few weeks!

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