stratguy23
New member
I went to NAMM this year for 2 days and wanted to share some of what I saw. I'll be starting threads in the Pickups, Guitars, Amps, and Pedals sections. Please note the following disclaimers:
DISCLAIMER 1: These previews are by no means comprehensive. I was at NAMM for only 2 out of 4 days. There are, like, 10 billion things there. I only checked out what interested me.
DISCLAIMER 2: Guitars and Amp threads will be more substantial because those interest me most. Pedals and Pickups threads will be skimpy because those don't demo well in the NAMM environment.
DISCLAIMER 3: My 5 year-old phone has a terrible camera.
Enjoy!
NAMM 2017 Guitars thread
NAMM 2017 Pedals thread
NAMM 2017 Pickups thread
*********************************************
1a. Vox MV50

View attachment 77937
My hands down "best in show" for NAMM this year.
Tube preamp, solid state Class D power section. 1 pound, literally fits in the palm of your hand. Tube is a Korg "Nutube" - not new technology, but fairly new in guitar amps. The Nutube is a true triode tube in a tiny form factor (stick of gum, perhaps). Tube life is ~30,000 hours so basically you never have to replace it. Street price is $200, so these should sell like hotcakes.
These amps are AWESOME, all 3 flavors - Rock (higher gain, think pushed AC), AC (jangly AC), Clean (all headroom, i.e., pedal platform.) They felt so good to play. I bet the Rock and AC ones will cannibalize sales of the AC15; they are that good. The matching 8" cab amazingly sounds great. Vox is doing something right here.
MV50 is head and shoulders above the "tiny hybrid" competition - Orange Micro and Peavey Piranha. I've played all of those, and while Micro and Piranha aren't bad, MV50 is actually GOOD.
50 watts is @ 4 ohms, so in reality you are only getting 25 or 12.5 watts. That's OK, because Vox is working on a
1b. Vox 150 watt Nutube prototype


I did not get to play through this. But it looks promising, no?
2. Peavey Invective 120


This is the sig amp of Misha Mansoor from Periphery. It is one of the smartest designed amps I've ever seen. Evidently the idea was to eliminate tone-related pedals and put all that functionality into the head.
So you get a clean channel with adjustable overdrive that goes all the way up to classic rock territory. Then you get a noise gate and a Tube Screamer. Then you get the 5150 Block Letters amp verbatim. In the back you have 2 effects loops and 2 9V power sockets for powering pedals (cool!). There is also a clean boost (I'm guessing that's the "Master Boost"). You can switch down from 120 watts to 60 watts in the back.
The whole thing has MIDI, not for knob settings, but for switches/things being turned on/off.
I asked if a smaller wattage version would be available. The answer: "No comment." I take that as a yes.
3. BluGuitar Amp1, BluBox

The Amp1 is not new; it was introduced in 2015. But it's new to me, and more than timely in the current trend of ever-smaller amps. Smaller here doesn't mean small power. It's 100 watts in the space of a double-wide pedal.
Yes, there's a power section, so it's an actual amp. Converse to the Vox MV50, the preamp section is solid state (all analog, no digital modeling), and the power section is tube, albeit a "Nanotube" that seems to be of Russian origin, as opposed to the Japanese made-Nutube in the Vox.

The BluBox is the actual new product for 2017. It's a cab and mic placement sim box, with 16 cab options and a knob that sweeps mic placement from center out to edge. This is a middle ground between the several switches available in a SansAmp and the all-cabs-and-speakers-are-fair-game multiplicity of digital IRs.
I heard both Thomas Blug and Jennifer Batten demo the Amp1-BluBox combo at NAMM. Their demos sounded great, though they are 2 of the finest guitar players alive today and could make anything sound good.
As far as I know, there aren't really competitors for these products. The Quilter Tone Block is probably the closest true amp, power-wise, in a pedal size, but it has fewer features and isn't meant to be foot-operated like the Amp1. Digitech is coming out this year with the CabDryVR cabinet sim pedal, but it has fewer cab options and no mic placement options.
DISCLAIMER 1: These previews are by no means comprehensive. I was at NAMM for only 2 out of 4 days. There are, like, 10 billion things there. I only checked out what interested me.
DISCLAIMER 2: Guitars and Amp threads will be more substantial because those interest me most. Pedals and Pickups threads will be skimpy because those don't demo well in the NAMM environment.
DISCLAIMER 3: My 5 year-old phone has a terrible camera.
Enjoy!
NAMM 2017 Guitars thread
NAMM 2017 Pedals thread
NAMM 2017 Pickups thread
*********************************************
1a. Vox MV50

View attachment 77937
My hands down "best in show" for NAMM this year.
Tube preamp, solid state Class D power section. 1 pound, literally fits in the palm of your hand. Tube is a Korg "Nutube" - not new technology, but fairly new in guitar amps. The Nutube is a true triode tube in a tiny form factor (stick of gum, perhaps). Tube life is ~30,000 hours so basically you never have to replace it. Street price is $200, so these should sell like hotcakes.
These amps are AWESOME, all 3 flavors - Rock (higher gain, think pushed AC), AC (jangly AC), Clean (all headroom, i.e., pedal platform.) They felt so good to play. I bet the Rock and AC ones will cannibalize sales of the AC15; they are that good. The matching 8" cab amazingly sounds great. Vox is doing something right here.
MV50 is head and shoulders above the "tiny hybrid" competition - Orange Micro and Peavey Piranha. I've played all of those, and while Micro and Piranha aren't bad, MV50 is actually GOOD.
50 watts is @ 4 ohms, so in reality you are only getting 25 or 12.5 watts. That's OK, because Vox is working on a
1b. Vox 150 watt Nutube prototype


I did not get to play through this. But it looks promising, no?
2. Peavey Invective 120


This is the sig amp of Misha Mansoor from Periphery. It is one of the smartest designed amps I've ever seen. Evidently the idea was to eliminate tone-related pedals and put all that functionality into the head.
So you get a clean channel with adjustable overdrive that goes all the way up to classic rock territory. Then you get a noise gate and a Tube Screamer. Then you get the 5150 Block Letters amp verbatim. In the back you have 2 effects loops and 2 9V power sockets for powering pedals (cool!). There is also a clean boost (I'm guessing that's the "Master Boost"). You can switch down from 120 watts to 60 watts in the back.
The whole thing has MIDI, not for knob settings, but for switches/things being turned on/off.
I asked if a smaller wattage version would be available. The answer: "No comment." I take that as a yes.
3. BluGuitar Amp1, BluBox

The Amp1 is not new; it was introduced in 2015. But it's new to me, and more than timely in the current trend of ever-smaller amps. Smaller here doesn't mean small power. It's 100 watts in the space of a double-wide pedal.
Yes, there's a power section, so it's an actual amp. Converse to the Vox MV50, the preamp section is solid state (all analog, no digital modeling), and the power section is tube, albeit a "Nanotube" that seems to be of Russian origin, as opposed to the Japanese made-Nutube in the Vox.

The BluBox is the actual new product for 2017. It's a cab and mic placement sim box, with 16 cab options and a knob that sweeps mic placement from center out to edge. This is a middle ground between the several switches available in a SansAmp and the all-cabs-and-speakers-are-fair-game multiplicity of digital IRs.
I heard both Thomas Blug and Jennifer Batten demo the Amp1-BluBox combo at NAMM. Their demos sounded great, though they are 2 of the finest guitar players alive today and could make anything sound good.
As far as I know, there aren't really competitors for these products. The Quilter Tone Block is probably the closest true amp, power-wise, in a pedal size, but it has fewer features and isn't meant to be foot-operated like the Amp1. Digitech is coming out this year with the CabDryVR cabinet sim pedal, but it has fewer cab options and no mic placement options.
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