I had the opportunity to play through a Mesa Lone Star today and you guys were totally right. They didn't have a Lone Star Special, so I gave the regular Lone Star a go.
Instead of a BS, buzz word-laden review, let me sum it up. It seems like Mesa came up with a marketing strategy and then tried to build an amp to fit it instead of making a great amp first and then figuring out how to sell it.
This thing seemed to be trying to look and sound vintage, but it still has that Recto series low end 'thunk' that you can't dial out. The two things don't mix well, IMO. Clean channel was good, but I have something better in a Rectoverb.
You'll have to go a long way to find a bigger Mesa Boogie apologist than me, but this amp doesn't live up to Boogie standards. I wouldn't say that it flat out sucks, but it certainly isn't worth what they're charging for them. IMO, of course.
Instead of a BS, buzz word-laden review, let me sum it up. It seems like Mesa came up with a marketing strategy and then tried to build an amp to fit it instead of making a great amp first and then figuring out how to sell it.
This thing seemed to be trying to look and sound vintage, but it still has that Recto series low end 'thunk' that you can't dial out. The two things don't mix well, IMO. Clean channel was good, but I have something better in a Rectoverb.
You'll have to go a long way to find a bigger Mesa Boogie apologist than me, but this amp doesn't live up to Boogie standards. I wouldn't say that it flat out sucks, but it certainly isn't worth what they're charging for them. IMO, of course.