Diego
New member
I was reflecting a bit about this last night, as I thought a bit on what I'd purchase next guitar-wise.
For Rock sounds, the way most guys would go with a tiny amp head like my Tweaker 15 would be a closed back cabinet with V30s or something, but then I realized that I really like my amp's tone at the moment, only that it sounds small and loses a bit of definition when set loud. I've been using a 1x12 DIY open back cabinet with a Eminence Wizard for more than a year and I like the presence it has. It's very punchy without being screechy or too sizzly. It has a cut that feels just right to me and I'd like to keep using Wizards because I'm used to them.
Every closed back cabinet and amp I've tried has always felt a bit flat to me, except for a Peavey 6505+ which despite sounding sick, is not the tone I'm after. And I absolutely hate the directional nature of closed back cabs for gigs and rehearsals.
Now, I do use fairly high-gain sounds, but I'm not a metal player. If anything, I like what guys like Ty Tabor (King's X) and Brett and Bill from Mastodon get tone-wise. The latest Opeth album (Pale Communion) has some SICK rock tones as well.
I like bright, cutting tones that feel airy and warm somehow, but I wouldn't call it a "vintage" sound either. I find that I'm not as much after a certain tone, as much as the feel I like to get from it. I'll never forget the best tone I've had at my hands, which was a Bogner Shiva 2x12 combo which was, surprise, open back.
I do not need a super tight bass response. And I like to feel bloom and harmonics in my sound, the opposite of a dead two-dimensional bark.
I know the right answer here is "Try them all and tell us later", but what's your experience with this? Am I crazy? I guess a convertible 2x12 cab like the Egnater Tourmaster is the way to go for me.
EDIT:
I also read something last night that I can't find anymore which went like this... someone said that, for open back cabinets, if you're going to be loud, you don't want to have just one speaker doing the job, since it would screw up the sound definition (exactly what I'm facing once I get the power tubes cooking) due to excessive speaker movement.
So he mentioned you'd want to spread the output with at least four speakers to keep them more "still", which would deliver a firmer bass response, and retaining the good stuff of having a open back cab.
In your opinion... Horse**** or truth?
I hate the idea of a 4x12 but I could do with a couple of 2x12.
For Rock sounds, the way most guys would go with a tiny amp head like my Tweaker 15 would be a closed back cabinet with V30s or something, but then I realized that I really like my amp's tone at the moment, only that it sounds small and loses a bit of definition when set loud. I've been using a 1x12 DIY open back cabinet with a Eminence Wizard for more than a year and I like the presence it has. It's very punchy without being screechy or too sizzly. It has a cut that feels just right to me and I'd like to keep using Wizards because I'm used to them.
Every closed back cabinet and amp I've tried has always felt a bit flat to me, except for a Peavey 6505+ which despite sounding sick, is not the tone I'm after. And I absolutely hate the directional nature of closed back cabs for gigs and rehearsals.
Now, I do use fairly high-gain sounds, but I'm not a metal player. If anything, I like what guys like Ty Tabor (King's X) and Brett and Bill from Mastodon get tone-wise. The latest Opeth album (Pale Communion) has some SICK rock tones as well.
I like bright, cutting tones that feel airy and warm somehow, but I wouldn't call it a "vintage" sound either. I find that I'm not as much after a certain tone, as much as the feel I like to get from it. I'll never forget the best tone I've had at my hands, which was a Bogner Shiva 2x12 combo which was, surprise, open back.
I do not need a super tight bass response. And I like to feel bloom and harmonics in my sound, the opposite of a dead two-dimensional bark.
I know the right answer here is "Try them all and tell us later", but what's your experience with this? Am I crazy? I guess a convertible 2x12 cab like the Egnater Tourmaster is the way to go for me.
EDIT:
I also read something last night that I can't find anymore which went like this... someone said that, for open back cabinets, if you're going to be loud, you don't want to have just one speaker doing the job, since it would screw up the sound definition (exactly what I'm facing once I get the power tubes cooking) due to excessive speaker movement.
So he mentioned you'd want to spread the output with at least four speakers to keep them more "still", which would deliver a firmer bass response, and retaining the good stuff of having a open back cab.
In your opinion... Horse**** or truth?
I hate the idea of a 4x12 but I could do with a couple of 2x12.
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