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Well I'm new here, so excuse me if this has been asked before or I'm in the wrong forum. I tried using the search, yet i cant seem to search by topic only, leaving me with over 400 pages of results :roll:

So, i was eyeing the Alesis Sumo 300. Im looking to just use this for practicing, and maybe as a personal monitor for live performance.

I cant find many reviews on this amp, so i want to know if anyone here has tried it. I have a pair of Alesis monitor speakers that sound incredible, so I'm not really liking when someone tells me Alesis is bottom of the barrell stuff (guy at the local music store)

Also, the Roland KC550. This one is a bit more than the sumo 300, so i would probably get this one used. I know roland is a better brand, yet it only rates as 180w, when the Alesis claims 300w.

Now i know wattage numbers can mean nothing when comparing different brands, so let me know what too look for in a vocal amp!

Again, its just for practice, but i want it LOUD. i have a Mackie 1400i amp coming and eventually a pair of nice big speakers for live performance...

Thanks in advance

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KurtFoster Fri, 02/25/2005 - 17:29

Most people use a PA to amplify vocals ... these 2 products you have mentioned are really keyboard amps ... that accommodate vocals as an afterthought.

If that's what you think you want, then by all means go for it. Don't let the sales people coerce you into buying something you don't want. The Roland brand is no better than Alesis .... actually, they both are kinda crappy.

therecordingart Fri, 02/25/2005 - 23:13

If you go with a small, self powered PA.....you can't go wrong with Mackie. I cant think of the model, but I used one for band practice and they do want they are supposed to and then some. I've even seen wedding DJ's use them cranking the hell out of them and they sounded fine. Not great, but as good as a wedding DJ gets that doesn't know how to properly drive a PA.

Nothing is worse than a singer that can't hear himself at band practice and then realizes he can't sing when he gets to a studio! hahaah I've been there with one of my old singers.

anonymous Mon, 02/28/2005 - 10:45

If you're going the small PA route with a powered mixer and passive speakers, then I would suggest getting monitors, maybe something similar to the Yamaha SM12V (1x12 + horn). There are several advantages to using a monitor speaker versus a regular speaker on a stick. First, when you're practicing, you have a speaker on a stick shooting across the band, then you are much more likely to have feedback problems than if the monitor is on the floor shooting up at you (and at the null point of your cardiod SM58). Second, many of these monitors have pole-mounts so that they can be used for "mains" in a speaker on a stick format if needed.

And if you're someone like who is always planning ahead, thinking about the next step, then you can always keep the monitor speakers around (assuming you buy decent quality) even if you upgrade the rest of the PA (speakers, board, amps). I have a feeling that you might soon outgrow or get frustrated with a lower end speaker, but a decent monitor can last you for a while.

Personally, I went the monitor route and it has proven to be very flexible. I have since bought better "mains," but I still have the monitors to use for smaller gigs, rehearsals, etc. Just a suggestion.