Re: School me on Mesas
I was suprised to find out Mesa don't exclusively make metal amps.
Most Mesa's aren't metal amps and one of their most famous metal amps didn't start as metal amp. Marks were marketed towards Jazz, Blues and Roots-Rock. Even had a 15" combo version for bigger/smoother cleans.
A lot of people know the Santana thing (Mark I), but overlook Keith Richards (Mark I), John Scofield (Mark I), Joe Walsh (Mark I), George Thorogood (Mark II), Bruce Springsteen (Mark II, Mark III, Lone Star, Electra Dyne), Jerry Garcia (Mark II), Prince (Mark II, Mark III), Al Di Meola (Mark II, Mark V, Stiletto), AC/DC (Studio Preamp/2:95 power amp back stage), Andy Summers (Mark II, TriAxis/2:90, Electra Dyne), Trey Anastasio (Mark III), Alex Lifeson (Mark V). There's probably more that I'm forgetting.
Lone Stars are basically (IMO) Marks. They harken back to the Mark I/II era with the big cleans and fat leads, only with better channel switching and reverb.
Rectifiers went the other direction. Designed as a metal amp they started as two channels of high gain with crappy a clean mode that was an afterthought. Over time they've developed into a versatile amp. Tremoverbs are all over rock and pop. On modern Dual/Triple Rectos Raw mode is pretty much a Mesa flavoured Plexi while Pushed mode has a lot in common with a Fender Deluxe (although the Deluxe never ever came with 100w/150w power sections and aren't typically plugged into 4x12). Interestingly, people are finding the 25w Rectoverb to be a pretty cool little blues amp.
The Triple Crown is pretty cool. It's the first amp I've played that really nailed the clean/crunch/lead thing. A lot of Mesa's I've played have done the clean and high gain thing really well and kind of struggled to do the mid-gain Marshall style sounds. With this amp they seem to have figured it out.