F
Funkfingers
Guest
Re: Our guitars better than the guitarists of the late 60's and early 70's-why upgrad
A good deal of it was happenstance.
Many of our revered gear combinations were not what those who devised it intended.
Leo made guitars and amps for Country and Western Swing musicians. Les Paul's solid body guitar concept was for amplified Jazz applications. Both designs assumed flatwound Medium gauge strings with a wound G.
Fender tweed amplifiers were never intended to be turned up to 12 and thrashed. The Bassman 4x10 - clue's in the name, folks - was developed with the necessary additional gain to amplify the low output single coil pickup of the original Precision Bass.
Probably of necessity, somebody somewhere chose to plug in a guitar into a Fender Bassman and the rest, as Henry Ford would say, is bunk.
The original Marshall amps were a rip off of the Fender Bassman, just built using European components.
By the time Bloomfield, Clapton and others were plugging into Marshall amplifiers, Gibson had long since discontinued the Les Paul guitar as we know and love it.
Genius!
You are missing the point...It wasn't the equipment it was genius, talent and hard work that created those revered tones.
A good deal of it was happenstance.
Many of our revered gear combinations were not what those who devised it intended.
Leo made guitars and amps for Country and Western Swing musicians. Les Paul's solid body guitar concept was for amplified Jazz applications. Both designs assumed flatwound Medium gauge strings with a wound G.
Fender tweed amplifiers were never intended to be turned up to 12 and thrashed. The Bassman 4x10 - clue's in the name, folks - was developed with the necessary additional gain to amplify the low output single coil pickup of the original Precision Bass.
Probably of necessity, somebody somewhere chose to plug in a guitar into a Fender Bassman and the rest, as Henry Ford would say, is bunk.
The original Marshall amps were a rip off of the Fender Bassman, just built using European components.
By the time Bloomfield, Clapton and others were plugging into Marshall amplifiers, Gibson had long since discontinued the Les Paul guitar as we know and love it.
Genius!