XXX-FACTOR
New member
Re: Anyone seen and/or tried the new Satriani/Peavey amp?
I played it at NAMM and heard Joe play it as well, it's a great head. IMO, the best amp Peavey has put out yet. The clean channel is just that clean, chimey (is that a word?). The amber channel was taken from the classic 50, one of Joe's favorite heads, and tweaked to his specs, the red channel is the gain channel from a Triple X that was also tweaked to Joe's specs, he wanted more punch and less gain.
He wanted a reliable road amp and one that he didn't have to use outboard distortion with. Peavey made him that amp. The Marshall's have been increasingly hard for him to come by and they aren't very reliable, so he decided to have a signature amp made that would fulfill his requirements. IMO, Peavey has become one of the most progressive companies around. They listen to what players, both famous and not, want and they go about producing it for them.
Outshine a Bogner? No, but it's less than half the price. Great amp? Definitely, and reliability is a Peavey trademark. It doesn't matter how great an amp sounds if you can't keep it running. We talk a lot about tone on this board, reliability is at least as important. So, in that regard, the Peavey should work better for him than the Marshalls.
Gearjoneser said:Better friggin smoke. I have a hard time believing he'd lay down his 30th Ann Marshalls and Bogners for this thing. All about the $$$$$$$ friggin DiMarzio players. LOL
I played it at NAMM and heard Joe play it as well, it's a great head. IMO, the best amp Peavey has put out yet. The clean channel is just that clean, chimey (is that a word?). The amber channel was taken from the classic 50, one of Joe's favorite heads, and tweaked to his specs, the red channel is the gain channel from a Triple X that was also tweaked to Joe's specs, he wanted more punch and less gain.
He wanted a reliable road amp and one that he didn't have to use outboard distortion with. Peavey made him that amp. The Marshall's have been increasingly hard for him to come by and they aren't very reliable, so he decided to have a signature amp made that would fulfill his requirements. IMO, Peavey has become one of the most progressive companies around. They listen to what players, both famous and not, want and they go about producing it for them.
Outshine a Bogner? No, but it's less than half the price. Great amp? Definitely, and reliability is a Peavey trademark. It doesn't matter how great an amp sounds if you can't keep it running. We talk a lot about tone on this board, reliability is at least as important. So, in that regard, the Peavey should work better for him than the Marshalls.