astrozombie
KatyPerryologist
What was that about? I look and I see vintage marshalls but hear modern day tones. How did he achieve that in 1973?
...Anyways......has everyone and their dead mums forgotten how loud these old bands where????
It is not hard to get an old Marshall to do what it does, making saturated tones.
mojo beyond mortal comprehension
It's just the sound of rock music.What was that about? I look and I see vintage marshalls but hear modern day tones. How did he achieve that in 1973?
I know little about Jimmy Page's actual rig used and all those anorek details, but I can offer one data point about how a vintage Marshall can make 'modern' saturated tones. In a recording studio in the 1990's I had a rare opportunity to play through what was Santana's 1968 Plexi with original straight back 4x12 cab. The studio engineer set it up, and plugged in the cable for me (wouldn't let me touch it, of course). There were no jumpers between the channels and no master volume. The first chord I hit sounded like the afterburner of a military jet howling away and it was ****ing loud. Sounded like the speakers were blown, but when I backed off and played clean they were clear. I guess just pushed to their limits without getting blown. But that 1968 Marshall amp and cab combo did sweet saturation way better than my fizzy ice pick JCM head/cab has ever been able to. The clip Jeff posted was pretty much it. The only other song off the top of my head I can think of that made that exact same sound I heard out of that 1968 Plexi/cab is Smashing Pumpkins Rhinoceros (starting at 3:04)
Edit: here's another clip from the same EP that really is what a vintage Plexi through a vintage cab sounds like when standing in front of it. (Listen to the rhythm guitar track)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90v2hrrijds