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I have heard again and again that you can get a big sound out of a small amp. I don't really understand how this is possible, and was wondering if someone could expain this phenomenon.
I am after a Guns&Roses (Appetite for destruction) kind of sound. Or a Lynyrd Skynyrd (That Smell) sound. Can I get this with a fender champ or little danelectr?

Comments

Ted Nightshade Thu, 02/28/2002 - 17:20

I hear the champ is great through another speaker cabinet.
I love my li'l Gibson Goldtone, 6 or 15 watts switchable, Class A. Crank it up with a Les Paul and it sounds huge, but is only too loud, not way way too loud.
I've made it sound like two or three of Jimi Hendrix's souped-up Marshall stacks, with an inspired player and a couple distance mics and a close mic in a live room with a high ceiling. Actually that last one required a preamp before the Goldtone to get the requisite gain from the Strat. Not necessary with the Les Paul.
So yes it's possible, and a big room helps a lot to get a big sound, but not a requirement.
If you want the sound of a close-backed cabinet like a Marshall, some proximity effect from a cardioid close mic can help, and of course closing the back of the cabinet works too.
Ted

Ted Nightshade Thu, 02/28/2002 - 17:28

Oh, and a brief explanation of the phenomenon:
Big amps cranked flat out get power amp distortion and often speaker distortion. A small amp cranked flat out also gets power amp distortion and if a suitably rated celestion is used, some speaker distortion too.
A big amp won't get the power amp and speaker distortion unless it's cranked.
So, at a bearable volume, a little amp can sound bigger than a big amp.
Ted

anonymous Fri, 03/01/2002 - 04:16

So you say a big room is helpful, but not neccessary, What about mics?
Can I achieve that big sound with one sm57, or will I need to add another mic backed off somewhere. Would a third and fourth mike add to the big effect?
On the champ, isn't that solid state? would I need to get a tube mic pre? Or would a nice plug in be appropriate?

anonymous Fri, 03/01/2002 - 10:49

Check out Emery Sound amps. [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.emerysou…"]emerysound.com[/]="http://www.emerysou…"]emerysound.com[/] Totally hand built little beauties. Nothing but Volume and Tone knobs, and switchable tubes, a very minimalist approach.

I just got my hands on a Superbaby which is 8 watts, switchable down to four, and has Preamp, Rectifier and Output tubes. There's even a kit full of various tubes to interchange for all three locations. The tone was very full, and the growl produced at higher volume settings was pretty badass. I've only been playing with it for a day or so, so I'm still in the honeymoon phase, but my guitar sounds definately improved instantly.

Nate Tschetter Fri, 03/01/2002 - 16:08

Has anyone tried the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.musicyo…"]Electar Tube 10[/]="http://www.musicyo…"]Electar Tube 10[/]? I've heard a few people speak well of it as a "cheap dirty amp".

I have a mid '70s Champ. I'd rather have a VibraChamp but this is nice for clean sounds. Some Telecaster players have commented that its "fucking bright" and I concur.

The Pignose can make good dirty sounds. Its also small enough to swing from a rope for excellent "Doppler effects".

The Smokey can be fun too. Same pendulum qualities as the Pignose plus, you can use it as a kind of "Rube Goldberg Talkbox". Always worth trying through a cabinet.

Ted Nightshade Sun, 03/03/2002 - 06:53

Gee, that Emery thing sounds cool. 8 watts! Yes! But after 6 watts it might be a little much! :p
The shortcoming of the Goldtone is that the spring reverb is driven by solid state circuitry, so it doesn't get the "classic" reverb tone. It's more lush and less twangy. I have a nice biggish live room, so mixed with the room reverb it sounds good. I always give the amp some room to breathe.
Does that Emery have a reverb? What's it like?
I like that the Goldtone is capable (with a Les Paul) of a huge amount of gain, which sounds hendrixier and hendrixier rather than ever really saturating into something blander.
I gotta get an old Champ while they're still affordable. Groovy how one tube does it all, rather than the push pull thing (which is, however, how all the big amps do it).
Ted

faganking Sun, 03/03/2002 - 14:42

I have prefered using a 'Danelectro Nifty Fifty' over larger/loud amps for the past two years. With a Royer ribbon mic up against the grill you can achieve a very large, in your face sound. If you want the 80's, so to speak, sound with more room...this is what we always did (Steve Lukather, for example). Assuming the little amp is on a chair: place a large diaphragm condenser mic about four or five feet in front of the cabinet, waist high, in OMNI. Have the Royer or 57 shoved into the grill cloth. Now, bring up the omni mic ONLY. Let yourself acclimate to the sound for a moment. Then bring up the close mic to taste. Badda-bing.
Benjy

crazy_guitar Sun, 03/03/2002 - 23:29

Well the other day I was experimenting, and I decided to close mic a little mini-twin (2watt?) amp (the ones that look like a toy, solid state). I put a condensor right in front of the little speaker, and to my surprise, it sounded huge and fuzzy. It's one of the most interesting sounds I've ever gotten. But it only works if you are going for a classic tube breaking sound. It's funny to see peoples reactions when I tell them how I got that sound.
happy miking
Joz

anonymous Tue, 03/05/2002 - 17:30

posted March 03, 2002 08:53 AM
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gee, that Emery thing sounds cool. 8 watts! Yes! But after 6 watts it might be a little much!
The shortcoming of the Goldtone is that the spring reverb is driven by solid state circuitry, so it doesn't get the "classic" reverb tone. It's more lush and less twangy. I have a nice biggish live room, so mixed with the room reverb it sounds good. I always give the amp some room to breathe.
Does that Emery have a reverb? What's it like?

The Emery Amp, known as the "Superbaby" has no reverb. All it's got for controls is Volume and a roll off dila for either bass or treble rolloff, and that dial is switchable, so as to be removed from the signal path. So far, I haven't felt the need for any more tonal sculpting than the rolloff provides, as it seems to just "get it right".

The meat of the tone comes from the three tubes. I haven't swapped any of mine around yet, as I'm still diggin the one that came with it.

It's definately a minimalist approach, but I have never heard any of my guitars sound so solid and full.

I bet that Demeter spring verb tank used on a Superbaby track would be superbad. Anyone heard that thing?

anonymous Sat, 03/09/2002 - 05:27

Did a tracking session last weekend and we got a great 70's tone off a small amp. It was a fender (american) strat into a fender Blues Jr. He also had a boss overdrive pedal for some extra edge when needed. We put an M-88 on it turned it up and let it go. The room was a large (old chapel) practice space for the Music Department. A great live room overall. We tracked drums, bass, and two guitars at the same time. I think that the bleed and the room helped with the overall sound. He had great tone on a couple different tracks!

Ted Nightshade Sat, 03/09/2002 - 05:36

"The Emery Amp, known as the "Superbaby" has no reverb. All it's got for controls is Volume and a roll off dila for either bass or treble rolloff, and that dial is switchable, so as to be removed from the signal path."

How totally cool! I've long thought of putting a bypass switch on the tone control of the Goldtone. I got what I need on the guitar itself.
Ted

KurtFoster Mon, 02/10/2003 - 09:23

The first Led Zeppelin record was cut using a small Fender amp, a champ or a Deluxe.. I can't remember which. I have a theory that a small speaker works better for a distortion type sound due to the ratio of size between the speaker and the mic element.. just a crazy idea that popped up in my addled brain .... Fats
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Tannoy, Dynaudio, Blue Sky, JBL, Earthworks, Westlake, NS 10's :D , Genelec, Hafler, KRK, and PMC
Those are good. …………………….. Pick one.
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Davedog Mon, 02/10/2003 - 10:08

Small IS Large....around here, we use a couple of different things and always get the large guitar sound without deafening either us or the neighbors....oh yeah...no neighbors..but still, big sounds reside in each little amp...i personally have recorded a LOT of tracks with a 50watt plexi on 11 and other such stuff...yes very big sound...yes very loud in the room...yes very necessary to find really good isolation headphones just to hear myself...now, i use a fender blues jr..15 watts...a pair of el84's for power and the standard fender tube front end...sounds kinda like a cross between a top-boost ac-15 and an old vibro-verb...theres a master and a channel volume so it'll break up to taste...if you want darker tone you back it up to a gobo and angle your mike a bit...great little amp and seriously LOUD for 15 watts...the other is a modified 1970 princeton reverb...the toob doctor (my bassist) has added a mid-range to it...its now a blackface deluxe with only 12 wattsinstead of 20..and he made it so it can be removed and put back stock without defacing the collectability of the amp...then theres the rex...gold anodized chassis(think marshall) volume,tone,on/off,8" speaker,no transformer, the output is the power toob...4 watts, sounds like a marshall if you close your eyes and listen on the big speakers....made in 1950....very portable...sometimes i'll put one of the little amps in a gobo'd 'box'...close it in with a mike inside nd turn it up to 11...that makes a big sound and different shapes of the box give different response curves....enough....peace :w:

cjenrick Mon, 02/10/2003 - 19:51

Small amps work great for live sound also. The last time I saw ZZ Top, Willy G had a little Alamo or something of to the side of the stage with a mic on it. I don't know if the Orange stacks were just for show, or if he split the signal to both. Clapton use to do the same thing. The Marshalls were just for show.

Pez Tue, 02/11/2003 - 05:24

Cedar, I'm pretty sure Page used a Supro or Danelectro amp with a Tele on those early Zep recordings. I still enjoy the engineering on those old Zep records. Did you ever notice that 90% of the great guitar riffs of that era had chromatic runs in them?

I recorded a killer harp player through my old tube tweed champ last night. He was very happy with his tone. This is another great use for a small tube amp.