One Song, 32+ Amps! (the ultimate amp demo compilation thread)

Hey folks, a little update:

I was planning on releasing the BIG 6.5 hour long 'One Song, 33 Amps!' compilation yesterday but at the last minute I discovered a pretty big error that I had to fix. So I had to go back and re-render the video. That took about a day and now I'm reuploading that video which will take a couple more days unfortunately. So I figured, while it's uploading we'd have some fun and check out some more amps!

Today we're looking at the wonderful Orange Rockerverb 50 MK III. SUCH a serious amp! Absolutely love this thing. I think the tones speak for themselves:


Which amp would you like to see next? Blackstar HT CLUB 50 MK II? Marshall JMP-1? Orange Brent Hinds? Peavey 6505MH? One of these perhaps?
 
The upload for the big video is at 50%. I hope it will be ready for release on sunday. Fingers crossed!

In the meantime, here's the episode with the Peavey 6505 MH! This amp is really cool and it replicates the sound of the big amps quite well. It doesn't sound exactly the same but it definitely still sounds like a 6505! Great cleans and all the driven tones are great too imho! The clean on this small one are even better than the cleans on the big 6505 imho! Check it out:

 
Here's the next episode. This one features the Blackstar HT Club 50 MK II! A very cool amp with a broad tonal palette!

 
It's here: the BIGGEST guitar amp demo video in human history! 'One Song, 33 Amps!'. I've worked on this project for over a month and I'm so excited and relieved to finally be sharing this with the world. I sincerely hope that you get enjoyment out of it and perhaps also some new knowledge about guitar amps and their tones in a recording/studio setting.

All the amps can be heard with clean, crunch, rock, solo lead and boosted metal tones and I've included detailed timecodes in the description for easy skipping between the amps. Enjoy and ROCK!

 
Alright, since the big one is out I figured I'd just star releasing all the final episodes to round everything off. One that came to mind is the awesome and classic Marshall JMP-1, that I always run through the poweramp of my DSL 50 JCM 2000. There's something special about this amp. The mids are just so solid! It's pretty tight and chunky. It almost sounds kind of Friedman-y. That more compact and solid crunch. I guess Friedmans are mainly based on that 80s rock tone that we all know and love so it does make sense. Anyway, really enjoyed this one, the JMP-1. Don't forget that you can compare this amp to all other 32 amps in the main compilation video above!

 
Here's another one, the Orange Brent Hinds Terror!

It may look the same as the Rocker 15 Terror but this thing has a very raw and more vintage tone to it. The natural or clean channel sounds very pure, great for pedals and the drive channel is really similar to a pissed off vintage Marshall amp. Very cool indeed! Compare it to 32 other amps in the main comparison as posted above!

 
The OR15 is a cool looking Orange lunchbox amp. 15 watts and only one channel but surprisingly versatile. The clean and crunch tones are great (typical Orange) but it has quite a lot of gain on tap so it can do metal as well. Same PCB as the Jim Root but with a different flavor. More vintage and 'fizzy' (the good fizz). Check it out:

 
And here's the next one: the EVH 5150 III 50W EL34!

This amp certainly is popular and for good reasons! It's a killer amp, designed by a great guitarist! (RIP EVH!)

I'm not a huge fan of the clean tones myself because they are very very clean with a lot of headroom. I personally prefer cleans that are a little bit more compressed/saturated but I guess a lot of people do like these types of cleans. Definitely not bad, just a certain sound that you have to gell with.

The blue channel is somewhat controversial because it's not as tight and aggressive as the red channel. I've said this before but I think that the blue channel is great BECAUSE of that! It gives the amp way more versatility and it gives the player a more vintage sounding alternative to the modern and blistering red channel. So the red channel is amazing for (heavy) rock and metal but the blue channel is great for classic rock and even more modern rock as well. I would say, let's give the blue channel a chance folks!

Tight high gain tones are cool, but sometimes I think people tend to obsess too much over tightness of tones. A little bit of fatness and looseness can make guitars sound huge in a mix, and more tube-y too imho. Just my 2 cents! Sure, I like tight tones as well but I have just as much love for 'rounder' tones too! :)

Alrighty, here's the episode:


This is the one I would buy.

I hated the down tuned chugga chugga stuff (I have no use for that...) but liked everything else. including the cleans.

I'm happy with what I have and not in the market for another amp but if I were and I had the cash I'd get this one.
 
Check out this new amp collection tour where I talk about all my amps. What I like about them, what sounds they do well etc.

 
Back
Top