Okay, so today I've been to my local music store to get some new strings and as I had some time to waste I figured I could as well try out some amps...
I entered the room and instantly focused on the Orange PPC 412, been looking for a cab with Vintage 30s for a while now and these heavy fokkers have a reputation for being awesome. Next up I scanned the amps they had there and I decided to try an Engl Powerball (Mk2), the infamous Peavey 6505+ (newer made in china version) and the EVH 5150 III 100 Watter. Got an ESP Eclipse II with your typical EMG 81/60 combo off the wall, asked for a cable and gave it a go.
I was... dissapointed. There are so many things racing through my head right now I'll try to write them all down.
Let's start with the amps first: The Powerball. Ah, the amp that probably causes a lot of love/hate relationships, deemed as scooped sounding, overcompressed and prone to get lost in a band mix. I have an Engl Savage 60 I absolutely loved whilst it was working (gonna get it repaired soon) so I wanted to see if the Powerball is that much different in voicing. Well, the Engl tightness was there for sure (played all the amps without a tubescreamer boosting them), the cleans were a bit sterile but I liked them, good foundation for delay/reverb and I was shocked how much gain that thing had on tap. Now I didn't even move on to the second channel (Lead 1, Lead 2) yet, it was pretty mind boggling that I had enough saturation with the gain turned up midway on the effin crunch channel for heavy riffing and thrash stuff. I liked where this was going and switched over to the lead channels. Awful.
Now there are two things are stuck in my mind (was pretty much the same with the Peavey and the EVH), first of all, waaaay too much gain. I play a boosted JCM 2000 DSL 100 at home and never pass the 5 on the gain pot, with the Lead Channel this was overkill for me and the gain was set on like 2-3. Granted I didn't play too much with the EQ, I tried to suck out some lows and add presence and mids and it helped, but this brings me to the second problem: the sound seemed muffled. I think I'm trying to say too many low mids, but I'm not sure. Needles to say it didn't get any better on Lead 2. Too much compression, I felt like my notes and chords where being reduced to mush and I missed that bitey yet clear and full "ching" I like so much and seem to get with my DSL. Call me crazy.
Anyway, fired up the 6505+ next. Spent a minute on the cleans which weren't all that bad people make them out to be and engaged the crunch. Better than the ENGL Lead Channels although not as bright and tight as the Powerballs Crunch channel. I felt like the Peavey would have really benefited being boosted with a Tubescreamer but I didn't want to go trough the hassle of getting one. Moved on to the Lead... liked it better than the PBs Lead channel yet again... oversaturated and too mushy...
Last head was the 5150 III. This one had the best clean sound to my ears out of the three and I really liked it. Moved on to the Blue Channel and again I didn't feel any need to move the gain pot past the 3-4 mark. It sounded quite biting (way more focused in the highs it seemed to me) and I'm sure a Tubescreamer would have been great, however on the Red channel I had the same problem as with the previous two heads.
My conclusion: give me all those three amps with a proper clean channel and the crunch and remove the lead channels. I'd be a happy man. Yeah I know the Lead channels are for leads, but the compression, oversaturation and gain was too much for me. I'd rather kick in an external EQ or boost for my leads.
What I don't understand is why my setup at home sounds soo much better for me. My ears being used to it? Do I actually hate V30s? (I know they need to be broken in first); Did I finally pass that teenage phase where it was all about high gain heads and teh metulz? Why was there so much mud?
Now before I risk people telling me I EQ differently at home (scooped mids yadayada) or I don't appreciate a good high gain amp here's my current setup:
A Gibson LP Studio with the EMG 57/66 set in E-Standard and 10-52 Elixir Strings, A 2004 Marshall JCM 2000 DSL 100 boosted with a Bad Monkey or Ibanez TS-9DX and probably the most important ingredient: a Marshall JCM 800 1960 Lead Cab with old, broken in Made in England Celestion G12-65 speakers with the lead cone. Every Amp I played through this cab has sounded amazing so far, this includes a Peavey Valveking, a Jet City JCA50H, an Orange Micro Terror, the ENGL Savage 60 and my DSL.
My settings are bass pulled back to 3, mids on 8, Treble Noon and Presence on 7 or higher depending on the channel and the volume. Mid Cut and Low Boost always disengaged. As already mentioned, this gives me a nice warm yet clear sound. I'm able to palm mute without having too much bass, everything stays tight and together even when playing triplets and thrashing away on some Metallica, Megadeath, Revocation or Sylosis tunes, the chords and open notes have plenty of bite and crunch yet never get piercing and leads sing and sustain. Needless to say with my MXR 10 Band in the loop I can pretty much fine tune everything I need.
The last few weeks I discovered another amazing way to play the head: Channel 1 on Clean, the Master dimed and the Pre-Amp/Gain control used for volume. Engage the Tubescreamer and I have all the dynamics I need and the notes just punch you in the face. Gary Moore lead sound. The only gain coming from the Tubescreamer (and the hot pickups obviously). I think I'm finally ready to look in the exact opposite direction regarding a new amp: the JCM 800. Less gain and more tone. Now if I could only find a store that has one...
I'm really sorry for the wall of text but I feel this could turn into a rather interessting discussion, so feel free to chime in and tell me what you think! Cheers!
