Gunny47
New member
Okay, I posted this on a very trusted forum that has known me for a while and knows my gear and my current decisions and what not. Some background first, I was going to get a Fender Tweed Twin-Amp (57 Custom RI) but I was going to get a Marshall TSL 122 before that until I changed my mind. I gave the Twin-Amp a fair chance by bringing it into one of those practice sound proof rooms in the back of Guitar Center and cranked it. The following talks about what I have, the Gibson GA5, and what pedals I was going to get for it. It also and more importantly talks about my next amp decision (A Marshall) which was originally meant to immitate Slash, but now a Marshall is just meant to give me a great all-around rock tone from mellow to metal. It also talks about how i gave the Marshall TSL 122 a fair chance in the practice room. Here it goes:
"O man, I gotta get a Marshall. I already got a vintage blues style amp with some nice growl and actually nice cleans. The Gibson amp I got acts a lot like a Tweed or an old Plexi, headroom but a godly crunch when drivven past 1 oclock. So I dont need to get a Tweed really, its kind of a waste of money to me being that I dont set anything in stone via recording) Ive been using the Gibson GA5 on clean a lot and its such a beautiful clean sound - pair it with my Boss GT-8 and set it to have some reverb and tremolo. Also like it with the delay and chorus or with a light flange and octave. Nice - the thing takes pedals amazingly anyway. Im gonna get some pedals for it (Vox Cooltron Brit Boost and Big Ben Overdrive, Fender Blender Reissue, EH LPB 2ube preamp, Seymour Duncan SFX-03 Twin Tube Classic Preamp, EH The Wiggler Trem/Vibrato pedal and maybe just stick a $400 Fender Reverb unit on top of it to complete the package). I can get some surf tone with it, nice jazz with the preamps on and some nice bluesy edge with the Big Ben Overdrive set at low gain levels (like a Tube Screamer) and of course, I can go over the top with the Fender Blender and go brian may with the Brit Boost.
So Ill have a nice rig with the Gibson GA5 and a crap load of the pedals. Now, i need an amp I can plug straight into with some slight heaviness and that god crunch and a great lead tone built in. Put an attenuator on top and I can get it as clipping as I want without destroying some ear drums. I need a Marshall! I want one good for some straight up rock and roll too. Maybe I can put one or two pedals in front of it just for some extra front end boost or warmth, but we'll see.
After walking in Guitar Center last night and looking at the Marshalls, I seen the one that I was going to buy for a long time the TSL 122. I was going to get this amp until I played the head paired up with the piece of **** 1960B cab with those garbage ear piercing trebly speakers. This was a few months ago already and the only reason why I dismissed the DSLs and the TSLs was because the ****ty cab gave me a bad taste in my mouth. So I tried the TSL122 combo again. I took an Iced Tea R8 off the shelf, took the amp to a practice room and cranked it! This is what they mean by Marshall! The speakers were great as I remembered from before. Not overly bright like those other ones. The speakers in the TSL 122 are like a combination between the vintage speakers in the 1960AV/BV cabs and the greenbacks in the 1960AC/BC. Nice and warm and really deliver the goods. I actually liked the clean channel on the TSL 122, it reminded me of a Tweed clean and stayed pretty clean until basically 10. Then some extra grit was added, but still not that dirty."
The rest is continued on the next post...
"O man, I gotta get a Marshall. I already got a vintage blues style amp with some nice growl and actually nice cleans. The Gibson amp I got acts a lot like a Tweed or an old Plexi, headroom but a godly crunch when drivven past 1 oclock. So I dont need to get a Tweed really, its kind of a waste of money to me being that I dont set anything in stone via recording) Ive been using the Gibson GA5 on clean a lot and its such a beautiful clean sound - pair it with my Boss GT-8 and set it to have some reverb and tremolo. Also like it with the delay and chorus or with a light flange and octave. Nice - the thing takes pedals amazingly anyway. Im gonna get some pedals for it (Vox Cooltron Brit Boost and Big Ben Overdrive, Fender Blender Reissue, EH LPB 2ube preamp, Seymour Duncan SFX-03 Twin Tube Classic Preamp, EH The Wiggler Trem/Vibrato pedal and maybe just stick a $400 Fender Reverb unit on top of it to complete the package). I can get some surf tone with it, nice jazz with the preamps on and some nice bluesy edge with the Big Ben Overdrive set at low gain levels (like a Tube Screamer) and of course, I can go over the top with the Fender Blender and go brian may with the Brit Boost.
So Ill have a nice rig with the Gibson GA5 and a crap load of the pedals. Now, i need an amp I can plug straight into with some slight heaviness and that god crunch and a great lead tone built in. Put an attenuator on top and I can get it as clipping as I want without destroying some ear drums. I need a Marshall! I want one good for some straight up rock and roll too. Maybe I can put one or two pedals in front of it just for some extra front end boost or warmth, but we'll see.
After walking in Guitar Center last night and looking at the Marshalls, I seen the one that I was going to buy for a long time the TSL 122. I was going to get this amp until I played the head paired up with the piece of **** 1960B cab with those garbage ear piercing trebly speakers. This was a few months ago already and the only reason why I dismissed the DSLs and the TSLs was because the ****ty cab gave me a bad taste in my mouth. So I tried the TSL122 combo again. I took an Iced Tea R8 off the shelf, took the amp to a practice room and cranked it! This is what they mean by Marshall! The speakers were great as I remembered from before. Not overly bright like those other ones. The speakers in the TSL 122 are like a combination between the vintage speakers in the 1960AV/BV cabs and the greenbacks in the 1960AC/BC. Nice and warm and really deliver the goods. I actually liked the clean channel on the TSL 122, it reminded me of a Tweed clean and stayed pretty clean until basically 10. Then some extra grit was added, but still not that dirty."
The rest is continued on the next post...