rockinangus
New member
What is better, Tube or Solid State amp?, Tubes Sound really good and are cleaner IMO but I just want to see other peopls opinion
About the SS amps sounding the same at any volume, I disagree a little. I notice that at louder volumes my Randall sounds loads better. However that is probably due to speaker movement. Can't you open up the master volume of some tube amps and just use the preamp volumes to adjust to the overall volume? It works very well with the Peavey XXX apparently; I have yet to try that.gordon_39422 said:As noted previously, for full-volume gigs/pactices, TUBE all the way!!! But around the house, SS gives you the same tone regardless of volume... When I try to play my tube amps at lower volume, that "connection" between the guitar and amp disappears... not to mention the tones are not as full either.... So SS has it's place in a musicians gear list, but HANDS DOWN, TUBES walk all over Solid State!
Yeah, but jazz guys don't want to hear the amp. I have always felt that the electric guitar is the red-headed step child of jazz. What they really want is just a louder version of an archtop acoustic. In rock, the electric guitar is NOT a musicall instrument. The combination of guitar and ampis the complete instrument. Not so in traditional jazz.Mincer said:too many generalizations- i have played too many tube amps that sound terrible live, and many ss amps that sound good. it also depends on the sound- most pro jazz guitarists use SS. try them out, before you peek in the back and see how it is made.
I use both, for different situations.
Mincer said:yeah this is probably true, but i guess they choose those SS amps because they are light, reliable, and sound great for jazz out in the room. i guess it depends on what you really want do- if you are into the classic guitar + amp+ power chords and the truth, a tube amp is what you want to rock out. if you are into jazz, or like lots of different tones quickly (or get your sound from a modeling preamp), SS is a better choice.