Re: Why arent boutique amps used for all our favorite recordings??
Gr8Scott said:
What completely blows my mind these days is how far off track the big guys are nowadays. They haven't been expanding on the tried and true circuits that have established rock for all these years. I know certain features are important and I don't diminish the need for channel switching and master volume amps for certain applications, but I don't understand why anyone would be so dogged in their pursuit of these features to the exclusion of simple good sound.
When I worked retail (long long ago) I had a couple of amp designers & reps tell me that "Features sell amps, not sound".
?!? :smack:
NOW you tell me!!! Thanks for that bit of information.
They want a dude to walk in there with their hard earned 'bucks and all the clerk has to do is pick a price point and show 'em two amps while pointing out all the stuff they can do. "Look bro, it's got a tuner & built in digital effects, recording compensated outputs, a drum machine, 8-track recorder, digital outputs, TWO 300 watt power amps and can sound like 400 different amps...and it's only $1500!!!" :eek13:
The idjit buys it because he doesn't know any better and 'Johnny X' uses 'em, says so right here in this ad! And yeah...maybe it
kinda sounds like something 'Johnny X' uses but who can really tell after all the 'studio magik' but hey! That's built INTO the amp!!!
IMO, a big reason for the boutique thing (at least with repros of old amps) is the reliabilty factor. Most of the old amps just aren't anything that you could or would want to gig with. Like the old Marshall that needs to warm up for at least 10 minutes before it comes off standby or it freaks out. Or the AC30 that lets out a puff of smoke and goes into the shop every four days. Sure, they sound GREAT when they work but are nuttin' but a headache the rest of the time. Personally I want a reliable
tool, not a collectors piece and not some 'magik do-it-all' box that can get 200 different sounds, but none of 'em are good.
As fer recordin'...people use ALL KINDS of stuff these days. I've worked on modern rock records where we've used
everything int he course of one album. There's a Boogie Rectum Fryer for the sound it makes, old Fenders for their thang, various Marshalls for their mojos, Matchless, VHT, Selmer, Hughes & Kettner, no-name solid state practice amps, Bogners, Dr Z and yes...even a POD all on the same record. It's about creating a pallete and set of textrues to create a landscape of guitar tones, and whatever gets the job done is valid.