My 80's metal band IMPULSE is loud and proud. 2 lead guitars, super loud drummer, loud bass player, lead singer and a killer keyboard player. 6pc and we all hit really hard live. We play everything from Skid Row to Motley Crue to Ratt to Scorpions to Whitesnake to Cinderella. You get the idea.
The last several gigs we have done I brought different amps. Most of these gigs didn't require us to mic the guitars. They were small 100 person shows. We used the PA for vocals and used amp power for everything else. We played as loud as the drummer but believe me.. he beats his drums to death.
Cabs used.... Marshall 1960A loaded with stock V30's.
Amps used.... 1995 Marshall JCM900 2100 SL-X
1995 Marshall JCM900 4100 Dual Reverb
Carvin V3 head
Peavey Triple X
Early Crate Blue Voodoo BV120H
All of these amps are stock. Marshalls are running stock EL34's. Carvin, Peavey and Crate run 5881's (6L6)
They were turned up.. they were turned down.. Some had pedals in front (Marshalls) for added gain. The rest were basically guitar plugged into the amp with maybe a delay in the loop but that's it.
In order of what I feel sounded the best and felt the best live from best to worst....
Crate Blue Voodoo
Peavey Triple X
Marshall 2100 SL-X with a Okko Diablo out in front
Marshall 4100 Dual Reverb with an MXR OD-GT out in front
Carvin V3
The Crate Blue Voodoo has a very pleasing high gain roar. It is very easy to hear live. The notes just jump off the fretboard because it has so much gain. The footswitchable effects loop is awesome. The clean channel is very good. Its not as powerful as the Marshalls but believe me.. you could get arrested if you turned this up to much. With my extremely loud band and not being mic'd the master volume was never over 6. I got compliment after compliment after the show. It was stage left. The Marshall 2100 SL-X was stage right. The Marshall was louder and easier to hear but the Crate just sounded SOOO much better for 80's high gain metal.
I am totally shocked at all the bashing this amp gets online. I would say that mostly everybody that has one or had one hates it. They say it sounds aweful and buzzy and every negative comment you can think of in regards to an amp. Maybe I got the only good one because mine ROCKS. Its the amp I am using live from now on. I really dig how it sounds. Its smooth... not grainy. I don't like grainy sounding amps.
The Marshalls would be great live but neither of them really start sounding good until they are turned way up and the volume they need to be at is way to loud for me to use in a 6pc band. Maybe if I was in a 4pc and the only guitar player it would be different. I would absolutely use the SL-X if I was in a Black Sabbath cover band though!!! Its so heavy and pissed off sounding. The 4100 is a high gain screamer.
The Peavey Triple X is just too hard for me to hear live. Can't explain that one. It sounds great at home. It just vanishes at the show. It also cleans up too much as its turned up.
The Carvin V3 turned out to be a disappointment. The guys in my band said... please don't bring that amp to another show. It just doesn't sound that good. It has a weird gain structure. I think it would be a fine amp for classic rock and blues. I think it tries too hard for metal.
Anyway... to all the Crate bashers out there... FLAME ON!!!
The last several gigs we have done I brought different amps. Most of these gigs didn't require us to mic the guitars. They were small 100 person shows. We used the PA for vocals and used amp power for everything else. We played as loud as the drummer but believe me.. he beats his drums to death.
Cabs used.... Marshall 1960A loaded with stock V30's.
Amps used.... 1995 Marshall JCM900 2100 SL-X
1995 Marshall JCM900 4100 Dual Reverb
Carvin V3 head
Peavey Triple X
Early Crate Blue Voodoo BV120H
All of these amps are stock. Marshalls are running stock EL34's. Carvin, Peavey and Crate run 5881's (6L6)
They were turned up.. they were turned down.. Some had pedals in front (Marshalls) for added gain. The rest were basically guitar plugged into the amp with maybe a delay in the loop but that's it.
In order of what I feel sounded the best and felt the best live from best to worst....
Crate Blue Voodoo
Peavey Triple X
Marshall 2100 SL-X with a Okko Diablo out in front
Marshall 4100 Dual Reverb with an MXR OD-GT out in front
Carvin V3
The Crate Blue Voodoo has a very pleasing high gain roar. It is very easy to hear live. The notes just jump off the fretboard because it has so much gain. The footswitchable effects loop is awesome. The clean channel is very good. Its not as powerful as the Marshalls but believe me.. you could get arrested if you turned this up to much. With my extremely loud band and not being mic'd the master volume was never over 6. I got compliment after compliment after the show. It was stage left. The Marshall 2100 SL-X was stage right. The Marshall was louder and easier to hear but the Crate just sounded SOOO much better for 80's high gain metal.
I am totally shocked at all the bashing this amp gets online. I would say that mostly everybody that has one or had one hates it. They say it sounds aweful and buzzy and every negative comment you can think of in regards to an amp. Maybe I got the only good one because mine ROCKS. Its the amp I am using live from now on. I really dig how it sounds. Its smooth... not grainy. I don't like grainy sounding amps.
The Marshalls would be great live but neither of them really start sounding good until they are turned way up and the volume they need to be at is way to loud for me to use in a 6pc band. Maybe if I was in a 4pc and the only guitar player it would be different. I would absolutely use the SL-X if I was in a Black Sabbath cover band though!!! Its so heavy and pissed off sounding. The 4100 is a high gain screamer.
The Peavey Triple X is just too hard for me to hear live. Can't explain that one. It sounds great at home. It just vanishes at the show. It also cleans up too much as its turned up.
The Carvin V3 turned out to be a disappointment. The guys in my band said... please don't bring that amp to another show. It just doesn't sound that good. It has a weird gain structure. I think it would be a fine amp for classic rock and blues. I think it tries too hard for metal.
Anyway... to all the Crate bashers out there... FLAME ON!!!
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