Marshall Silver Jubilee

Benr08

New member
Hi!

I would like to present to you a demo that I have made of the Marshall 1987 Silver Jubilee 2555 and 2551A cab.

I haven't really found a complete walkthrough of the amp presenting the history and the complete capabilty of the amp and as I am planning on making demos on Youtube, as a first demo, I decided of doing one of the legendary 2555.

I hope you'll like it! :fingersx:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqtcwEYSqeU

Thank you :D
 
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Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

I had a 2554 never really liked it, but you seemed to get some good sounds out of it
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Good to see someone demoing the amp playing blues instead of 80's metal riffs for a change.

I'm curious to know how difficult or costly it was to find a mint '87 2555 in France.

I've had a lot of good amps over the years, but have a fondness for Jubilees. I got my first one in 1988, at 17. The store owner liked me and gave me a good deal at $800 plus tax.....my first major purchase.
Like a fool, I sold that 2555 in the mid 90's for $650. How dumb was that?

Luckily, I scored a dead mint 50W 2550 fullsize fullstack in 2002 for a great price of $1500 from an older guy out in the desert.

My 50W doesn't really require attenuation like the 100W, but I'd like to know more about your attenuator. I'm sure it does a good job lowering the volume but retaining the tone.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

I had a 2554 never really liked it, but you seemed to get some good sounds out of it

It's a good amp for low volume use when you only have one speaker. You connect it to a cab and the amp shows it blooms, the sound is 10 times better.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Good to see someone demoing the amp playing blues instead of 80's metal riffs for a change.

I'm curious to know how difficult or costly it was to find a mint '87 2555 in France.

I've had a lot of good amps over the years, but have a fondness for Jubilees. I got my first one in 1988, at 17. The store owner liked me and gave me a good deal at $800 plus tax.....my first major purchase.
Like a fool, I sold that 2555 in the mid 90's for $650. How dumb was that?

Luckily, I scored a dead mint 50W 2550 fullsize fullstack in 2002 for a great price of $1500 from an older guy out in the desert.

My 50W doesn't really require attenuation like the 100W, but I'd like to know more about your attenuator. I'm sure it does a good job lowering the volume but retaining the tone.

Thanks! I don't think this amp is made for metal at all. People should use it for blues/jazz/rock.

In fact, I remember seeing around last summer tons of Jubilees and Super Leads popup on reverb.com or french websites.
When I had put all the money together by the end of July, I saw an ad from a guy in Paris (200km from my place) saying he was selling a halfstack in clean condition.
In 3 weeks, managed to discuss the price and get it lowered of 1300$ so I got the amp for about 3500$.
The amp+cab are in excellent condition, just had to clean the back and get off a thick layer of dust off the chassis and everything looked as good as it was 29 years ago.
Was a lucky find!

The Torpedo Reload is the attenuator I used.It is manufactured in France by a french company called Two-Notes: http://two-notes.com It has multiple functions:
_Attenuator: You can attenuate the output volume and still keep the signal identical. It retains the tone as it was coming out of the amp but you have a control that lets you get a more modern or vintage sound (adds mids or scoops bass)
_D.I you can use it to record a D.I track, you plug your guitar in the attenuator input on the front and it records the signal coming out of your guitar
_Reamping: You can then send the D.I track you recorded back into the amp and tweak it to get the tone you want to record (used in studio I.E: you record the D.I track and whenever you want just plug the torpedo into the amp and get the sound you want and record it)
_Loadbox: It has an integrated loadbox, you plug the amp into the torpedo, you plug the output of the torpedo in your cabs and in your soundcard so you can either play through the cabs or play through a DAW addon called Torpedo Wall of Sound which is currently the best speaker simulator on the market. You can simulate up to +40 cabs and you can choose the mic placement, which mic you want, how many cabs to use, how many mics to use etc..
_It has a replay function meaning that while you are doing your reamping (the D.i goes through the amp) you can also plug your guitar in the torpedo and play along so the D.I signal and guitar signal are sent into the amp. Cool thing is that the replay tells you if your guitar signal is louder than the D.I signal and with a knob, you can adjust the loudness of the D.I signal so it can be as loud as your guitar, louder or quieter.

Here's their website for more/better info: http://www.two-notes.com/en/hardware/torpedo-reload/
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Thanks for the info on Two-notes/Torpedo. It sounds like the perfect compliment to my Bogner Ecstasy or JCM 800's. Great amps, but bone crushing loud.

I wonder how long Marshall is going to keep making the silver reissues. I wouldn't mind having one, but would only go out of my way if I knew they were going to be discontinued.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Bah - I played Christine through a reissue. It worked just fine for hot rod marshall KISS tones!

Want…
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Thanks! I don't think this amp is made for metal at all. People should use it for blues/jazz/rock.

I have been using these for blues for decades. They really excel at Warren Hayne's SLO 100 type singing tones.

They have such a great vocal midrange. Anything you would use a good hot rodded Marshall tone for, Jubilees do very well.

Even though I have a 50 watt original, I'm still thinking about getting the 20 watt mini. Being able to have only 20 big bottle watts in pentode could make it such a great gigging option. Jubilees really come to life with the masters at 6 or higher. The transparent attenuator used here is of interest.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

It's a good amp for low volume use when you only have one speaker. You connect it to a cab and the amp shows it blooms, the sound is 10 times better.

I used it as a head at 25 watts into a 2x12 with v30's I liked the amount of gain available and the volume it broke up at and way it broke up is perfect, but it just sounded too thin I had to leave a delay pedal on with a short setting to beef it up a little.
I went to ac15 style amps and they suit me better I'd like a 5e3 now so perhaps these jubilees just aren't designed to do what I want?

I think if you had it part of a 2 amp rig with a blues breaker or bassman with the jubilee giving the drive and the other amp the meat it would be great, but too loud to be practical
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

I have been using these for blues for decades. They really excel at Warren Hayne's SLO 100 type singing tones.

They have such a great vocal midrange. Anything you would use a good hot rodded Marshall tone for, Jubilees do very well.

Even though I have a 50 watt original, I'm still thinking about getting the 20 watt mini. Being able to have only 20 big bottle watts in pentode could make it such a great gigging option. Jubilees really come to life with the masters at 6 or higher. The transparent attenuator used here is of interest.

I have a 100 watt from '88 and I play heavy rock instead of blues, but I find myself with the same GAS. I love my Jube, but it's just too loud (and a bit heavy) for a lot of places I end up playing. I run the input gain at about 8, so mine gets sounding pretty good around 4 on the output master and starts to get mushy above about 6. The problem is that I'm lucky to get to 2.5 on the master in a lot of places. Hopefully I'll be able to run a 20 watter in that 4-6 range to gig with and maybe use the 5 watt setting at home.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Thanks guys for your comments :D !

@YeRedHouseOverYonder Thanks! I remember at the shop having to choose between the ES and a LP, the ES sounded much better! Had to get rid of a tuning problem but it now sounds amazing!

@LakePlacidBlues, I don't know about the reissues, never had the opportunity to try one but I am scared that they might be disappointing. But if they are good, the 20watts would be great. As one speaker is not enough, I'd go for the head+2*12" cab.

@Regan, the amp is perfect like Joe B said to use as a multi-amp rig tone basis but as you say, too loud for home use even though using plexi shields and attenuators are really effective.

@dystrust, I recently gigged with the 2554, the speaker on itself with the amp maxed out sounded horrible. Had to add a small delay for the sound to get "better" but still, the speaker couldn't bear it. Maybe get the 20 watter with a 2x12" or a 4x12"
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Thanks guys for your comments :D !

@LakePlacidBlues, I don't know about the reissues, never had the opportunity to try one but I am scared that they might be disappointing. But if they are good, the 20watts would be great. As one speaker is not enough, I'd go for the head+2*12" cab.

@dystrust, I recently gigged with the 2554, the speaker on itself with the amp maxed out sounded horrible. Had to add a small delay for the sound to get "better" but still, the speaker couldn't bear it. Maybe get the 20 watter with a 2x12" or a 4x12"

When I first got my Jubilee, I ran it into a '78 straight 4x12 loaded with blackback H30s. It sounds amazing, but a 47lb head & 96lb cab is a PITA to move especially if there's stairs involved. I acquired an Ear Candy Buzz Bomb ported 2x12 in mid-2007, and I've hardly used the 4x12 since. I have it loaded with Eminence Wizards which are rated at 102.5db vs 100db for the H30s, so I don't notice much volume difference between the two, but I do notice how it only weighs 55lbs. I've also tried the Jubilee (being careful about volume) into a ported 1x12, and it sounded pretty good. Maybe the 2554 sounds like it does due to the small open-back cabinet?

I figure if I manage to grab one of the new 20W heads, I'll have the choice of these 3 options:
20W head / 1x12 for home or really small venues
20W head / 2x12 for slightly bigger gigs
100W head / 2x12 for medium / large gigs

Honestly I've only played through the 4x12 a handful of times in the last decade, so I'll probably end up selling it.
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

When I first got my Jubilee, I ran it into a '78 straight 4x12 loaded with blackback H30s. It sounds amazing, but a 47lb head & 96lb cab is a PITA to move especially if there's stairs involved. I acquired an Ear Candy Buzz Bomb ported 2x12 in mid-2007, and I've hardly used the 4x12 since. I have it loaded with Eminence Wizards which are rated at 102.5db vs 100db for the H30s, so I don't notice much volume difference between the two, but I do notice how it only weighs 55lbs. I've also tried the Jubilee (being careful about volume) into a ported 1x12, and it sounded pretty good. Maybe the 2554 sounds like it does due to the small open-back cabinet?

I figure if I manage to grab one of the new 20W heads, I'll have the choice of these 3 options:
20W head / 1x12 for home or really small venues
20W head / 2x12 for slightly bigger gigs
100W head / 2x12 for medium / large gigs

Honestly I've only played through the 4x12 a handful of times in the last decade, so I'll probably end up selling it.

Must be that, the cabinet is probably too small for the speaker to "breathe". I remember when I had to get the 40kg 4x12" cab in my room up the stairs, back breaker for sure!
I'm sure that the 20 and 2x12" mic'ed is good for large gigs but the 100w is sure enough for any venue.
If you don't use the 4x12, maybe sell it, you'll get money, free some space, 100% winner ;)
 
Re: Marshall Silver Jubilee

Hi!

I would like to present to you a demo that I have made of the Marshall 1987 Silver Jubilee 2555 and 2551A cab.

I haven't really found a complete walkthrough of the amp presenting the history and the complete capabilty of the amp and as I am planning on making demos on Youtube, as a first demo, I decided of doing one of the legendary 2555.

I hope you'll like it! :fingersx:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqtcwEYSqeU

Thank you :D

Wow that tone brings back memories of my old silver jubilee half stack. Fun amp with my old 76 explorer. I played Scorpions like a boss with that setup. A little judis priest, iron maiden, Def Leppard, quiet riot, fast way, led zeppelin, bad company, foghat, thin lizzy, all those tones were in there.............."you got your balls to the walls"
 
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