It's just a depth knob.Is the dynamics knob a compressor or something else?
I wish i bought an ADA MP-1 when they were selling for £100-150 a few years back. Now theyre £5-600 or have been poorly modded.
I used to see used Laney AORs pop up for $350 or less all the time. I kind of wish I would have been able to get one.
Rose colored glasses. I've owned two. Really high noise floor. All those patches but it gets two basic sounds: clean and shred.
I think they are commanding high prices because ******bag streamers are using them for background props. Like having three of them in a rack gives them 80s cred.
If you want better rack pres from that era, Rocktron Piranha or Rocktron Pro Gap.
Rose colored glasses. I've owned two. Really high noise floor. All those patches but it gets two basic sounds: clean and shred.
I think they are commanding high prices because ******bag streamers are using them for background props. Like having three of them in a rack gives them 80s cred.
If you want better rack pres from that era, Rocktron Piranha or Rocktron Pro Gap.
I wish i bought an ADA MP-1 when they were selling for £100-150 a few years back. Now theyre £5-600 or have been poorly modded.
Can't believe we made it this far without mentioning Sunn. I have a 90s model T 4x12 I paid about $100 to get, and a first-generation model T I paid $300 for. That head sells for more than $4k regularly nowadays.
I must admit that I have a certain loathing for the modding scene here. The MP-1s are such a limited resource in the first place, and there really isn't anything quite like them. Why use THAT as your foundation to emulate a 5150, which is common as dirt?
I will have to disagree on this one. I own two MP-1s, and I am having a third one reconstructed. To be fair, the channel switching thing was a bit gimmicky, but I think that their use as a mid-gain unit using the tube clean channel is greatly overlooked (IDK why, people might be fooled by the channel name?), but suffice it to say that they were good enough for AC/DC to adopt them for a while. But yeah, the unit lives on the distortion sound, and it has a certain greasiness to it that I have failed to achieve with any other unit. I can't comment on the Rocktron stuff, but I've owned units like the Peavey RockMaster and all the Marshall units from that era, and ended up selling them all because I preferred the ADA.
It has it's sound and can do a few things. But there is a reason everyone sold them off and you could get them for < $200 for two decades.
I think the MP-1 was the first of its kind, a merger of midi tech into a hot rodded marshall circuit, so at that time it was a very cool thing. In 1987 there weren't many amps that could do the MP-1 thing stock. As far a a useful piece of gear in 2022?? Like I said its distinctive look makes it popular with streamers who want 80s cred.
There's no real need to mod the ADA MP-1, except for the coin battery section.
Comes stock with a coin battery soldered to the board itself (which goes dead after ~20 years). Replace with a retrofit coin battery holder, new battery and you're good to go.
I have the 1.38 version, all stock except I did the coin battery holder mod... had it since 1989. Need more gain? Slap a stompbox in front (Nuno used a RAT).
I think this is basically the story of a lot of eighties gear, be it MP-1s, Rockman stuff, Kramers and Peavey Vandenbergs: they got heinously unpopular for a while with the in-crowd, accumulated a niche audience of fans and exploded once the eighties nostalgia wave reached them, to the point where they are now approaching their original price and people are looking into making modern recreations of them.
For what it is worth, I'm not familiar with anything today that quite does the MP-1 thing. It has a certain smoothness to it that, for want of a more accurate description, has a very desirable sound for integrating percussive techniques and harmonics (even at lower gain) into your playing. I just haven't found any amp that makes palm muting jump out like that, and for something like Nuno's stuff that is important. Hot-rodded Marshall may be part of its DNA, but my JCM 800 or JVM certainly don't do the trick, nor did the RockMaster that I let go. So you can blame YouTubers all you want, but honestly I think that a lot of the crowd interested in them have been around for almost two decades if not more by now.