Re: 20-Year Quest for the Best Low-Volume Amp
A heavy sound with a jcm800 is often a result of the cabinet, followed by the mix, technique, and guitar and pickups. and a couple of the clips I heard of the new studio series have been through 1x12 which is a lot less oomph than 412.
But remember traditionally it's not the heaviest sounding amp and the 20 would probably lack a little bass depth compared to a 50 or 100W. The Marshall 800 sound is midrange focused by nature though anyways, and in classic studio recordings you have all sorts of production techniques shaping things. Mic choice, cab/speaker, mic placement, the room, and very important is the bass player working with your riffs for a huge sound. By itself the jcm800 sound I find not very heavy in the bass depth, I find that you gotta dial back the bass, let the bass player have that area, and then you get a very tight cutting sound that rides perfectly on top of the bass guitar and kick drum. The three together put the heavy feel into riffs.
I haven't tried the code amps out, but if you have a sound dialed in that you like that has a lot of tweaks then I would say yeah don't change that until you've found wether or not the studio classic gets it for you.
For what it's worth, in the studio classic thread, cynical posted a clip of his new studio classic and it sounded like the real thing and was what I expected to hear. And it wasn't a real "huge" sound by modern standards. But it was alive with mids and instantly took me back to 80s metal records.
I dunno. Everyone likes different stuff so you're right to want to try them out first.
Sent from my SM-G930U using Tapatalk