Re: $2000 Budget for Amp
The Lone Star is a good choice, either the Special or the Classic....just pick your power lever and preferred power amp tubes.
The Mark V is the ultimate Mesa, and it's like getting nine different amps in one package....actually 27, because each of those nine modes has a minimum of three power options. This one has really allowed me to tailor my sound, and it makes it easy with all the different guitars I use. I bought the C90 112 combo, and added a V30-loaded 112 Wide-Body Closed-Back cab. I like this rig better than the head/412 or 212 version, as it is more portable and more versatile. If you want to go "All In", it's hard to beat a Mark V.
I also own Mark IIIs and a Mark IV combo. The IIIs are pretty simple, but I think all of the Mark Series amps are good for blues and rock, and obviously the Mark IV and V can do even more. I gig with either a Mark III half-stack, a Mark III EVM Combo or a Mark IV EVM combo. With the combos, I like to use them with the Mesa 112 EVM Thiele cab underneath, and I have never been out-gunned with this combo/cab rig. Yet, they sound pretty good at low volumes and the Mark III and IV have power amp options from 15 thru 85 watts on the Mark IV. And don't buy into this crap about Mesa's being tooooo complicated. Criminy, if you can use a computer or a smart phone....
And late last year I found a deal on a used Mark V:25 that I could not refuse, and got the full stack version. Amazing little amp; I am so pleased. A simpler version of the big guy, it still rocks. Looks cool as hell, too! Very portable, versatile...what more can I say. I probably could have used this on 80% of the gigs I've done in the last 20 years or so, so it does have some power, but it works very well in my home, too. I love the FAT Clean, and the II-C+ modes.
Now, I haven't played one yet, but Mesa has another new amp out: the Mark V:35. It's basically an all-new version of my old DC-3, which is still a pretty fabulous little amp. I find that for basic blues and rock club amps, that 35-55 watt power range is about right where you want to be, unless--you are playing just super clean and dynamic rhythm parts very LOUDLY, in which case I would recommend a 100-watt amp. The V:35 has the 4xEL84 power tubes, but has 10- and 25-watt settings too. Thirty-five watts can play pretty clean, and yet when you push them they get that beautiful creamy tone. I would definitely tell you to check out the V:35, and I would get the combo and the 112 C-90 Thiele. Look into getting the combo with the new Fillmore Speaker, rather than the standard C-90.
Mesa makes a lot of great amps. One friend of mine in Seattle uses a TA-30 combo for his pop combo, another uses a Stiletto Ace in his strictly blues band, and another friend here in town uses an Electro-Dyne. All of them are really good players and all have killer tone. That's one of the things about why I love Mesas--when I bought my first Mesa back in the mid-'90s, not only did I start getting a lot more compliments on my tone, but I quickly became a better player. People NOTICED.
Lots of good amps on the market these days. I like new Carr, Allen, Headstrong and PRS amps; and I like the old Marshall Vintage Modern and the DSL50, and old BF Fenders and Music Man amps. But when I found Mesa, I sold all my vintage Fenders and Marshall amps. I feel really lucky to have found the tones I was searching for in these amps.
Bill