Mattr4president
New member
Re: What does modern high-gain mean to you? (NAD related)
Never played one so don't know if it's worth it. But Def Hi-gain.
http://guitars.musiciansfriend.com/product/ISP-Technologies-Theta-300W-Guitar-Amp-Head?sku=483011
and here's a cool little thing I read today on solid state amps. I still think Tuibes are better but to each theor own.
http://www.frugalguitarist.com/Frugal.aspx?Issue=15&Page=Solid State Hate
Uggghhh...
I had a Randall combo for a while that just sounded terrible. I could NEVER get a decent high-gain tone out of it. Some of the bands mentioned in this thread have good tone, even if it is higher gain than I would ever play. None of them are using solid-state amps. Who is using solid-state amps? Anyone? Seriously?
In fact, who even makes solid-state amps anymore? Marshall MG, and who else? I think even Randall, which was the king in my mind, got out of it, unless they've still got maybe one product. But seriously, what solid-state amp is well respected today? And by solid-state, of course, I mean non-digital.
The only solid-state amp I can think of that's worth its salt (i.e. used by professionals) is the Roland stuff, and the only one of those that pros use is the Jazz Chorus, which is definitely not known as a high-gain amp.
Never played one so don't know if it's worth it. But Def Hi-gain.
http://guitars.musiciansfriend.com/product/ISP-Technologies-Theta-300W-Guitar-Amp-Head?sku=483011
and here's a cool little thing I read today on solid state amps. I still think Tuibes are better but to each theor own.
http://www.frugalguitarist.com/Frugal.aspx?Issue=15&Page=Solid State Hate