Well, it was really Saturday when I got her. I wasn't really intending to buy an amp, just try some out... Didn't even think for a minute they'd have a Mark V Combo at my local GC, but damned if they didn't, and damned if I could stop myself from bringing it home.
I have wanted a Mark-series Boogie for about... 20 years or so. I've been looking at the Mark V, reading lots of reviews, watching the few shitty videos available, watched some people buy the amp and flip it days later, so I decided to roll the dice and see what happens.
Here's my mini-review...
Channel 1: Sounds good so far. It's clean, or mildly distorted. I lost interest in this pretty quickly. Basically I dialed in a nice clean tone and moved on.
Channel 2: I'm struggling with this one. Not getting a good tone, but getting a really good REALLY HEAVY tone. I'm not sure it's in there, but I'm still trying.
I never cared much for the Mark I tone as a "core" sound I'd use, but I can get some fun 70's Aerosmith-ish tones out of the Mark I mode. So far I just flat-out don't like Edge mode, it's less of what Crunch Mode is, but again, I have not given up on it, as the tone knobs actually work on a MESA/Boogie.
But Crunch mode flat out rocks, it's not exactly a Marshall tone but it's in the ball park. Great rock and metal rhythm tones. Not Master of Puppets metal rhythm tones, more like 80's metal. Especially cranked up a bit, it would do very well for less "extreme" metal type tones.
Channel 3: Holy shit.
Channel 3 is insane. This is the MESA/Boogie tone I have always wanted, and then some.
There is a lot of bullshit and controversy over the "labeling" of the modes as Mark IV and Mark IIC and people whining about how they don't sound like the originals.
While I do personally agree this might have been a bad decision on MESA/Boogie's part, I admit I have never heard a IIC or Mark IV in real life that I know of (though I've obviously heard them on recordings) and I personally do not care at all if this amp accurately reproduces the exact tone that Joe Corksniffer gets on his vintage Mark IIC+.
What I care about is, it has 3 modes on Channel 3, and does it sound good. And what I do know, is that it sounds GOOD. Both the Mark IIC and Mark IV modes make some good sounds. And, the Extreme mode will satisfy all but the drop-tuningest of 6-string bass players. I could still hear the pick slapping the strings and I had gobs of tight floor-shaking bass.
I'm still getting it dialed in. It's very versatile, which is nice, but the important thing is if I can get "my sound" out of it, and I'm 99% there on Channel 3 and mostly there on Channel 2. Of course I've got 30 days to take it back... I don't think it's going back though.
I'm having so much fun playing through an amp instead of headphones, and this amp really sings, has loads of sustain, even at "bedroom" volumes.
I have wanted a Mark-series Boogie for about... 20 years or so. I've been looking at the Mark V, reading lots of reviews, watching the few shitty videos available, watched some people buy the amp and flip it days later, so I decided to roll the dice and see what happens.
Here's my mini-review...
Channel 1: Sounds good so far. It's clean, or mildly distorted. I lost interest in this pretty quickly. Basically I dialed in a nice clean tone and moved on.
Channel 2: I'm struggling with this one. Not getting a good tone, but getting a really good REALLY HEAVY tone. I'm not sure it's in there, but I'm still trying.
I never cared much for the Mark I tone as a "core" sound I'd use, but I can get some fun 70's Aerosmith-ish tones out of the Mark I mode. So far I just flat-out don't like Edge mode, it's less of what Crunch Mode is, but again, I have not given up on it, as the tone knobs actually work on a MESA/Boogie.
But Crunch mode flat out rocks, it's not exactly a Marshall tone but it's in the ball park. Great rock and metal rhythm tones. Not Master of Puppets metal rhythm tones, more like 80's metal. Especially cranked up a bit, it would do very well for less "extreme" metal type tones.
Channel 3: Holy shit.
Channel 3 is insane. This is the MESA/Boogie tone I have always wanted, and then some.
There is a lot of bullshit and controversy over the "labeling" of the modes as Mark IV and Mark IIC and people whining about how they don't sound like the originals.
While I do personally agree this might have been a bad decision on MESA/Boogie's part, I admit I have never heard a IIC or Mark IV in real life that I know of (though I've obviously heard them on recordings) and I personally do not care at all if this amp accurately reproduces the exact tone that Joe Corksniffer gets on his vintage Mark IIC+.
What I care about is, it has 3 modes on Channel 3, and does it sound good. And what I do know, is that it sounds GOOD. Both the Mark IIC and Mark IV modes make some good sounds. And, the Extreme mode will satisfy all but the drop-tuningest of 6-string bass players. I could still hear the pick slapping the strings and I had gobs of tight floor-shaking bass.
I'm still getting it dialed in. It's very versatile, which is nice, but the important thing is if I can get "my sound" out of it, and I'm 99% there on Channel 3 and mostly there on Channel 2. Of course I've got 30 days to take it back... I don't think it's going back though.
I'm having so much fun playing through an amp instead of headphones, and this amp really sings, has loads of sustain, even at "bedroom" volumes.
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