Unless something has recently changed, the SLO's warranty is transferrable just so you guys know. It covers workmanship on components but not tubes and transformers for obvious reasons. They put a lot of up front effort in construction and component quality to minimize the risk of production flaws so it is worth the tradeoff to them in marketing value to offer the warranty. I bet they don't get a lot of SLO owners calling them about bad solder joints! ;-)
The funny thing is when you see clips of sessions even for MTV bands there is almost always an SLO somewhere in the control room or studio. So many people use these amps for recording that you don't hear about....you just hear the tone, LOL. Engineers probably like to have one around so when SUM 41 comes into the studio with whatever they happen to be endorsing at the time the production guys can just say.."here, use this." LOL
I firmly believe EVH falls in that camp, as well as tons of others. Then there are guys like Warren Haynes and DeMartini who use and have used them for years live.
Part of the decision for EVH going with Peavey was certainly the endorsement/licensing contract terms ($$$) but also the manufacturing power of Peavey. Peavey is certainly top 5 in terms of dealer and distribution network, name brand, marketing, and manufacturing ability and Ed would naturally select a partner that would be able to bring his named amp to the masses. I believe this was a factor, in part, that led to the split from Music Man.
The SLO is an all time classic amp that can do lots of things with a minimum of options, bells, and whistles. I think this is why studios love them because you can dial in great tones quickly. Same goes for Matchless amps, old Marshalls, and other no-frills tone machines. Plug and play!
I have a Bogner 100B that I love but even with that amp which is only three channels I find myself tinkering with half power, triode/pentode, voicing selections, etc. With the SLO I just plug in and it works and sounds like it should and there is something to be said for that!
The funny thing is when you see clips of sessions even for MTV bands there is almost always an SLO somewhere in the control room or studio. So many people use these amps for recording that you don't hear about....you just hear the tone, LOL. Engineers probably like to have one around so when SUM 41 comes into the studio with whatever they happen to be endorsing at the time the production guys can just say.."here, use this." LOL
I firmly believe EVH falls in that camp, as well as tons of others. Then there are guys like Warren Haynes and DeMartini who use and have used them for years live.
Part of the decision for EVH going with Peavey was certainly the endorsement/licensing contract terms ($$$) but also the manufacturing power of Peavey. Peavey is certainly top 5 in terms of dealer and distribution network, name brand, marketing, and manufacturing ability and Ed would naturally select a partner that would be able to bring his named amp to the masses. I believe this was a factor, in part, that led to the split from Music Man.
The SLO is an all time classic amp that can do lots of things with a minimum of options, bells, and whistles. I think this is why studios love them because you can dial in great tones quickly. Same goes for Matchless amps, old Marshalls, and other no-frills tone machines. Plug and play!
I have a Bogner 100B that I love but even with that amp which is only three channels I find myself tinkering with half power, triode/pentode, voicing selections, etc. With the SLO I just plug in and it works and sounds like it should and there is something to be said for that!
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