some_dude
Raging BB Gunologist
Someone sent me this quote off the ESP guitar forum. I of course have no way of verifiying if any of this is accurate, but if even half of this is true, it's time for me to start saving for another amp.... :32:
From the esp guitars forum: said:wow. first let me say i am not a huge boogie fan-- i think they make great amps for the most part but they're just not my thing. i'm more of a marshall guy (well, technically a bogner guy now).
BUT, after playing the stiletto, i can say with confidence that marshall is in SERIOUS trouble. the stiletto is ALL OVER the JCM2000's, and i've owned and loved the TSL100, so it's not like i hate the JCM2000's by any means. there's just no contest. game over, boogie wins. i never thought i'd say it but it's true-- marshall is going to have to step it WAY up.
first of all, the stiletto isn't a super high gain amp. it has plenty of gain, but not as much as the rectifier, herbert, uberschall, etc. it's more along the lines of an ecstacy gain-wise, and it has a similar (sort of) vibe in that it has a lower-mid voicing and a lot of clarity. but where the ecstacy is smoother and more refined, the stiletto is bolder and more in-your-face.
each channel has three dramatically different voicings. channel one has "fat clean", which was a bit dark for my taste, "tight clean" which i liked better because it had more "spank" to it and really starts to "bark" when you lay into it, and "crunch" which was my favorite-- depending where the gain (or your guitar's volume knob) is set it goes from the who to ac/dc. very plexi/hiwatt-ish and very cool.
channel two has "crunch", which was pretty similar to channel one's crunch, "tight gain" which was my favorite-- think marshall jubilee, and "fat gain" or something like that which was definately more for single note playing-- darker, thicker, more compressed, and oddly enough, a touch less gain than the "tight gain" setting. although i'm not much of a lead player, i could see why a lead player would love this setting, because single notes sounded MASSIVE and punchy. very cool, but a bit too loose and dark for rhythm stuff IMHO.
overall, you can hear a touch of "boogie-ness" in the tone, in a good way, but they really nailed the vintage marshall vibe, down to the "kerrang" of the plexi-era amps. pretty incredible actually. it takes a bit to find the magic in this amp, but not long really, especially compared to most of their other amps.
sorry if this sounds like a mesa boogie ad, but i was just totally impressed and surprised, and i know there's a lot of people on this board who are curious about this amp, so i had to report in with my first impressions. i wouldn't be surprised if this amp became just as popular as the rectifiers, and i guarantee marshall will be forced to respond with a new line of amps, because if they don't they're going to have a hard time selling JCM2000's.