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How to Choose a Guitar Amplifier for
Rock Music
Although it is a simple matter to walk
into the first music shop you see and pick out a guitar amplifier ("amp") at
random, you will probably be unsatisfied with the results of this method. If you
take a couple of mintues to figure out what you are shopping for, you will be
able to make a purchase that you will enjoy for years to come.
Steps
Step 1:
Picking the Right Size and Wattage
Determine the size of the amp you will
need. Amps are rated by wattage rather than physical size (although
high-wattage amps do tend to be physically larger). By wattage, there are
essentially three main categories of guitar amplifiers (combos, heads, and
rack-mounted amplifiers), with several subcategories:
Combo Amps
Combo (combination) amps combine
the amplifier electronics with one or more speakers in a one-piece package.
They are the alternative to "heads," which contain only the electronics, and
are attached to separate speaker packages (known as "cabinets" or "cabs").
Because it is a one-piece unit, the combo design is generally preferred for
smaller, lower-wattage amps. The following are the most common varieties of
combo amp:
- Micro amps: 1-10 watts.
These are tiny, ultra-portable amps which are useful for practice on the
go (or when others are trying to sleep). They don't pack enough volume
to be used in most "jam" situations (where you must be heard above other
musicians). As a rule, their sound quality tends to be poor (when
compared to larger amps). The Marshall MS-2 is an example of a
super-portable (1 watt) micro amp which has received good reviews.
-
Marshall MS-2 - a tiny
micro amp with real Marshall tone
- Practice amps: 10-30
watts. Practice amps are also suited for the bedroom/living room
environment, although the loudest of them may be used for small gigs
(performances), especially if a microphone is used to run them through
the venue's PA system. As with micro amps, practice amps tend to compare
unfavorably to larger units in terms of sound quality, although as they
approach the 30 watt level, a few models offer increasingly competitive
sound. The Roland Cube 30 is an example of a practice amp which is
generally well-regarded. As a general rule, the best practice amps have
at least a 10 inch speaker. This is the smallest speaker size which is
generally considered a "real speaker." If you don't have a 10 inch (or
larger) speaker, don't try to use the amp outside the bedroom. The
embarrassment you save will be your own.
-
Roland Cube 30 - a
popular practice amp
- Full-size 1x12 combos:
With 50 or more watts of power and one 12 inch speaker, the 1x12 amp
offers the smallest package which is considered suitable as a
stand-alone amplifier for small gigs. In better models, sound quality
begins to approach levels acceptable to professional musicians. Quality
is always important, but perhaps even more so in the case of the 1x12
combo - with a good one, you'll prove the doubters wrong, but with one
of the many duds, you won't be taken seriously. The 1x12 is not a big
amp, and if you want to bring it to a serious audition or gig without
enduring a storm of eye-rolling and chuckling, it had better stand out
from the crowd.
-
Crate 1x12 combo amp
- 2x12 combos are similiar
to 1x12 combos, but they add a second 12 inch speaker. The 2x12 design
is considerably heavier and bulkier than the 1x12, but it is still a
favorite choice of working musicians for performances at small to
medium-sized venues. The addition of a second speaker allows for certain
stereo effects, and two speakers simply move more air than one (allowing
more "presence" in your sound). The 2x12 amp is small enough to be used
in the living room, light enough to be lugged around by someone without
major back problems, and yet formidable enough to be taken seriously at
rehearsals, auditions, and even on stage. If you have to buy a single
amp for practice, rehearsals, and club gigs, a 2x12 is a good choice.
You'll occassionally slip and set the volume knob a bit too high
(annihilating your unfortunate neighbors), and you'll be tempted to
gripe about lugging 50-80 pounds worth of amp all over the place, but it
will all be worthwhile when you avoid being "The Guy Who Showed Up to
the Audition or Gig With a Practice Amp." That guy usually becomes an
"inside story" for the band to tell other musicians when everybody needs
a laugh.
-
Crate 2x12 combo amp
There are other types of combos, but
these are the mainstays. Having discussed them, we are ready to move on to
heads and stacks.
Heads,
Cabinets, and Stacks
A head is an amplifier without
speakers. A cabinet ("cab") is a stand-alone speaker enclosure, which
can be connected to a head. A stack is a head and a set of cabinets
connected together, ready for use. Stacks are generally preferred for gigs
rather than practice, although there's no rule against having a enormous
stack in your living room - if your family allows it. Fair warning: in most
cases, they won't. Stacks are physically bulky, very heavy, and
devastatingly LOUD. These are the tools of musicians who either play
arenas and stadiums on a regular basis - or at least dream of doing so.
- Heads are all roughly the
same size physically, but they come in a variety of wattages. "Small"
heads pack 50-100 watts. Full-power heads are generally 100 watts or
more. There are also super heads, boasting a tinnitus-inducing 200-400
watts of power. For performances at small to medium-size venues, a small
head is more than enough. The smaller heads are often connected to a
single 4x12 cabinet (which contains four 12 inch speakers, as the name
suggests). This type of setup is known as a "half stack," and it is a
favorite of working musicians. The half stack offers plenty of volume,
the presence of four speakers, and the "credibility" associated with
stacks.
-
Soldano head - a
high-end amplifier
-
Marshall half stack -
a perennial favorite
- The full stack is the
dream of many a guitarist. This is usually a 100 watt head connected to
two 4x12 cabinets, although other wattages are sometimes employed. The
cabinets are stacked vertically (one on top of the other), giving the
setup its distinctive name. A full stack is as tall as a grown man,
making for quite an impressive sight. The sound is equally impressive.
If you set one of these up in your living room and play it to its full
capabilities, you will be evicted from the neighborhood (unless you are
an isolated hermit). A full stack can handle all but the very largest of
venues. Guitarists who are truly sadistic (in a sonic sense), such as
some heavy metal players, may run one of the 200-400 watt super heads
through a full stack. With any full stack (and especially the "hot rod"
setups), you will require ear protection to play at higher volumes
without sustaining potentially serious ear damage.
-
Full Marshall Stack -
the tower of power (half stack in foreground)
Stacks are great for playing big
venues (and for impressing your friends), but if you aren't a working or
touring musician, they can be "overkill" for most situations. Lugging around
full-size 4x12 speaker cabinets is hard work, fit only for "roadies" who are
getting paid to do it. Showing up to an audition with a full stack and a
hand truck to set it up can be almost as bad as showing up with a practice
amp. If you lug in a stack, you'd better have the skills to justify it, or
(once again), you'll become another "inside story" for the band to chuckle
about after rehearsal - "The Newbie Guy Who Brought a Full Stack to the
Audition."
Rack-Mounted
Products
Many musicians
use "racks," usually a reinforced metal box with removable panels on the
front and back. The front side of the rack, when open, has two verticale
rows of threaded screw holes on the sides. Rack sizes have been standardized
for years -- they are made to fit ALL rack-moutable units, including
recording gear, PA amplifiers, vocal processors, chromatic tuners, DJ gear,
etc. in addition to guitar amps. Rack-mounted products have a sturdy metal
face plate strong enough to support the entire product; they are a standard
width, a standard maximum depth, and are usually much shorter than they are
tall or deep. The face plate is wider than the rest of the unit and has
screw holes on each corner, spaced to line up with the screw holes on the
front of any rack. To attach gear to the rack, lay your rack on its
backside, place the unit in the rack so that the unit dangles down into the
rack, its entire weight supported by the face plate, line it up with the
screw holes, and fasten it at each corner with properly-sized screws. The
smallest rack products are the shortest, covering only two screw holes --
these are said to take up "one rack space." A larger product that covers up
four screw holes on your rack takes up "two rack spaces," and so on. To
figure out how many spaces a rack has, count the screw holes on one side and
divide it by two.
A rack-mounted guitar amplifier rig is
similar to heads in that they have separate amplifier components that are
plugged into external speaker cabinets. But nearly all rack-mounted
amplifiers are broken down into two further categories -- the pre-amp
and the power amp. Both heads and combos have these separate
components as well -- racks merely separate them out into two units. Most
major amplifier manufacturers, including Marshall, Carvin, Mesa-Boogie, and
Peavey make rack-mountable amp rigs.
- The Pre-Amp shapes the
signal entering your amplifier into a tone. In its basic form, a pre-amp
defines the levels of treble, bass, and middle in your tone. However,
functions such as gain, presence, and contour have become standard
features of modern guitar amplifiers, and rack-mountable pre-amps
usually have many more functions indeed -- they are essentially effects
processors. Footpedal multi-effects processors are also pre-amps. Plug
your guitar into the pre-amp. Most rack pre-amps only take up one rack
space.
- The Power Amp is connected
to the pre-amp by a speaker cable. It takes the signal the pre-amp
shaped and gives it volume. Like heads, power amps are available in
different sizes, from a minimum of 50 watts to monster 200-400W power
amps. 100W or larger power amps will take up two rack spaces. The power
amp plugs into the speaker cab like on a head. However, as many power
amps as you want can be connected in a daisy chain or to different
pre-amp outputs to boost the power of the signal, as well as possibly
blend the tonal influences of two different power amps.
Disadvantages of Rack Rigs. As
you can probably tell, racks are frequently very complicated rigs. A novice
guitarrist may find them perplexing. They are also heavier and bulkier than
heads -- and add onto that the bulk and heft of the rack itself. Since you
need to buy multiple products and accessories, the price for a new rack rig
can be (but isn't always) higher than that of a head.
Advantages of Rack Rigs. On the
other hand, using a rack allows you to mix and match products by different
manufacturers and find a tone that is distinctly "yours," not the boutique
design concept of some engineer at Marshall or Fender. And if you have a
reasonably good mind for engineering or basic spatial sequencing (i.e.
lining things up in order), even complicated digital pre-amps can be
surprisingly user-friendly, providing a more easy-to-understand interface
than a row of inscrutable knobs on the front of a head or combo. If you are
already a DJ, vocalist, or recording artist, or want to become any one of
these, many valuable products are availble that can be mounted right on the
same rack with your amplifier.
Also, big racks frequently have caster
wheels, making them very easy to roll around, and having a rack can also
simplify pre-gig or -practise setup. Instead of having to plug in all your
components from scratch, your components can already be plugged in and ready
to go as soon as you wheel your rack onto the stage or into the studio and
remove the front and back panels. A rack-mountable power conditioner
(essentially a rack-mounted power strip with surge protection) can be
invaluable to this end as most rack units are independently powered --
simply plug all your products into the conditioner, then whenever you arrive
at a gig or practice, plug in the one master power cable from the
conditioner, plug in your speaker cab and guitar, switch everything on, and
you're ready to rock. If you have pedals, microphones, etc, you can usually
fit them into the rack as well, making it your all-purpose, highly-portable
gig box (provided that it's on wheels).
Finally, racks are uncommon, and will
attract attention. People will be impressed if you wheel a rack rig into
rehearsal or performance, but beware -- they will expect you to be a
seasoned guitarrist, or at least be able to effectively USE your rack. Don't
bring your rack anywhere unless you know how to get those pre-amps and
processors to do exactly what you want them to do. Such professionals asU2's
The Edge and Nirvana's Kurt Cobain have favored rack rigs.
MIDI. Many rack-mounted
pre-amps are digital and use MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface)
technology. This allows pre-amp settings to be saved in the pre-amp's
digital memory to be recalled again later at the push of a button. These
buttons can be on the faceplate of the unit, but MIDI pedalboards can be
utilized to access those pre-set channels by stepping on footpedal buttons,
to prevent a guitarrist from having to go to his rack and search out the
right setting in the dark between each song.
Step 2:
Selecting the Right Sound
In order to get the most from a guitar
amplifier, you need to understand how different types of amps suit different
styles of music. For the most part, amps are not "one size fits all."
Although there are all sorts of amps, they can be classified in two broad
categories - "vintage" and "high gain."
Tone Wars
Vintage amps produce (or
reproduce) the classic sounds of early amplifiers. For the jazz, blues, or
blues-rock guitarist, the vintage sound is still widely considered the best
tone available. Vintage amps can be actual antiques, or they can be modern
amps that replicate the sound of antique amps. The sound of Fender, Vox,
Marshall, and similar amplifiers from the 50's, 60's and early 70's is the
foundation of the vintage tone. When you think "vintage," you think Hendrix,
Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, Deep Purple, etc. These are the sounds that
started it all.
Fender Twin Reverb - a
quintessential vintage amp
High-gain amps produce a sound
with greater distortion than that of vintage amps. Although there is some
debate about the evolution of high-gain amps, many believe that a large part
of their history is owed to Eddie Van Halen, who took apart his
vintage-style Marshall head and played around with the electronics, allowing
him to get far more gain (the source of the classic rock/metal distortion
sound). With his landmark "Eruption" solo in 1977, Van Halen introduced the
roaring, face-melting sound of super high gain to the guitar community. At
around the same time, the emergence of heavy metal bands added another
dimension to the high-gain phenomena. For hard rock and heavy metal music
from the early 80's and beyond, vintage amps are overshadowed by their
modern high-gain counterparts.
Randall Warhead - a
contemporary "gain monster"
If you want to play jazz, blues,
blues-rock (in the style of Led Zeppelin) or very early heavy metal (in the
style of Black Sabbath), a vintage amp may be your best choice. If you want
to play hard rock, 80's metal, and "shred" guitar (in the style of the
countless 80's "guitar heroes"), you will probably want to go with a
high-gain model. Note that many newer amps can provide both high-gain and
vintage sounds, although some purists feel that the only vintage amps worth
playing are the actual antique amplifiers themselves. "Amp modeling"
technnology (which allows one amp to simulate the sound of many different
amps) is a relatively recent development which has both fans and critics. If
you don't plan to specialize exclusively in vintage-style music, a modeling
amp can be very useful, although if you're a purist, nothing beats walking
in with a real Fender Twin Reverb, an ancient Marshall "Plexi" head, or
something similar.
Tube vs
Solid State
A vacuum tube - the heart
of great amp tone
In the vintage days, all amplifiers
used vacuum tubes to accomplish the actual amplification. Nowdays, many amps
use transistors instead, sparking a long-standing debate about which is
better. The concensus is that for almost all types of music, the sound of
tubes is noticeably superior. However, tubes have several drawbacks:
- Tubes can be expensive, depending
the tubes used. Expect to replace them after 4 or more years of use,
depending on their quality and how loud/often they are used.
- Tubes are somewhat unreliable.
They can and do go out at random times, crippling the amp. This can be
aleviated by using good quality tubes.
- Tubes (and the associated design
factors) add considerable weight to the amplifier. Back problems caused
by skinny guitar players lugging around big 2x12 tube combos are an
insurance company's nightmare.
- Tube amps are, generally
speaking, more pricey than solid-state amps. You will almost certainly
pay more for this ancient technology than you will pay for modern
solid-state (transistor) electronics. There are tube amps, however, like
the Fender Blues Jr., that go for roughly $300; the Fender Hot Rod
Deluxe (which is an extremely loud, 40 Watt, 1x12 amp), goes for about
$550-$600. A Vox AC-30 2x12" reissue, on the other hand, will set you
back no less than $1200; and a Marshall head + half stack can be well
over $2000.
If you can afford a tube amp, you
should strongly consider buying one. In almost all cases, the sound is
noticeably better. One possible exception to this is for heavy metal
players. Many metal guitarists find that the harsher sound of transistors
suits their style of music. Given the reliability, weight, and price
advantages of solid-state amps, even the professional-level heavy metal
guitarist may not require a tube amp. Pantera's Darrell Abbott used
solid-state amps, as do many other notable heavy metal musicians.
Your amp will have two different kinds
of tubes -- pre-amp tubes and power-amp tubes (a few combos and heads mix
and match between tube and solid-state pre-amps and power amps). Many modern
guitarrists have forgotten that the original rock 'n' roll "crunch" or
distortion was created when guitarrists like Pete Townsend turned their
amps' volume up to 7 or 8, causing the power tubes to overdrive. A pre-amp
perameter called "Gain" has been added to most amps to simulate that
overdriven distortion. But unless you're into the tinny thrash-metal sound,
no artificial gain setting can compare to the sweet, distorted tone of
overdriven power tubes turned up to 7. The problem is, most guitarrists,
especially new ones, go whole hog for a 100W amp, which cannot be turned up
to 7 or 8 in a small club without blowing the doors off. They turn their
amps down to four or five, turn the gain up to ten, and never know what they
are missing that they could get froma 50W amp turned to 7 with the gain down
to 5. Angus Young of AC/DC plays live with both a 100W tube head turned up
to 6 for his rhythm parts, and a 50W tube head cranked up to 10 for
comparable volume but extra overdrive that he switched to for his solos.
Tips
- When shopping for an amp, price
should not be your only consideration. Some lower-priced amps offer
admirable sound, while you may find some costly amps unsuitable for your
needs. To judge quality, read user reviews on various guitar websites.
However, be aware that many equipment vendors publish only good reviews
(to ensure product sales). Do your research and make an informed
decision.
- If you purchase a tube amp, try
not to abuse it physically. In general, transistor (solid-state) units
are designed to take loads of punishment, but tube amps are much more
delicate. If your brand new (very expensive) Soldano tube head falls
down a flight of stairs, you are probably in deep trouble - while the
same thing happening to a solid-state combo will probably result in
nothing more than a momentary panic and some laughs (after the fact). In
short, do not kick, hurl, slam, pummel, or viciously bludgeon a tube amp
- and try to discourage others from doing so. If you're wondering why
such a warning is necessary, you probably haven't spent much time with
rock musicians.
- If you need one amp that can do
"everything," consider purchasing one of the new modeling amps with
onboard effects. The best of these amps can reproduce the sound of many
other units with passable accuracy, and you have instant access to those
cool effects that make even crappy guitarists (like me) sound good -
delay, chorus, flanger, reverb, etc. With enough effects, your little
old grandmother can sound like a rock star. Okay, that's an
exaggeration, but if guys like me can sound good, you can too. Crate and
Roland (among other companies) make some good effects combos.
- Unless you are playing heavy
metal, it is generally better to buy a smaller amp with good tone than
it is to buy a big loud amp that sounds cheesy. You will never regret
having a nice tone, but you will always regret bad tone. If you play
with a band, you will likely find that you never need that much volume
anyway unless you are playing an arena, and if you are reading this I
don't see any arenas in your near future. Buy a small tube amp with a
nice sound. Some music stores will try to sell loud amps with loads of
effects to beginners. Don't fall for that. Don't fall for all of the
"cool" effects; effects get old after a while. Use your ears and pick an
amp whose tone you absolutely love, and don't part with your money until
you find that amp.
- For most beginners, a 15 watt amp
will be more than enough for your bedroom and small gigs.
Warnings
- Buying a large combo or
(especially) a stack for the purpose of wailing in your living room at
all hours can lead to divorce. So can spending $2000 on an amplifier
without telling the wife (because you know she's going to say no). As a
general rule, guitar equipment is to be treated as if family members had
a restraining order against it. It doesn't matter if people pay good
money to have you assault their eardrums with your frenzied solos every
weekend, nobody at home is going to want to hear it. Whatever type of
amp you buy, headphones are a must for home practice. Similarly, if you
plan to install an enormous Marshall stack in your garage for
rehearsals, make sure it's a detached garage. The Mrs. doesn't want to
have Black Sabbath's "War Pigs" rattling windows and knocking pictures
off the walls while she is entertaining her Saturday bridge club.
- Do not ever play through a tube
amp unless it is plugged into a speaker - without a speaker load, you
will damage your amp.
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