Chris6870
Well-known member
How do you pick which rig you gig with? Do you switch it up and stick with one setup? I have a bunch of cool amps plus an AX8 and can't seem to settle on one setup.
Yeah man, with the Kemper and AX8 I definitely got some option paralysis. I have been using the Katana head direct with a few pedals for gigs like I mentioned above and it has been great.BrokenFusion":26zech00 said:Playing a wide range of covers so the AX8 works great, but sometimes I really want to bust out the Mesa or Splawn. Jumping between rigs just gets frustrating.
Badronald":2r5l6j2v said:I've played many fly dates so you just learn to use anything. The pedals these days are fantastic so you just get what you need and be prepared.
The only time I need a specific rig is for metal. Pedals never cut it. You need a modern amp.
BrokenFusion":1e03qrkg said:How do you pick which rig you gig with? Do you switch it up and stick with one setup? I have a bunch of cool amps plus an AX8 and can't seem to settle on one setup.
HellraiserJohnny":2wu94sep said:Well first . . . if I may. . . . Let me point out that playing to an audience is in fact . . . . . SHOW BUSINESS. . . . . In that respect, I tend to drag out the full wall of Marshall 1960 B cabinets (hiring road crew of course to lift it all) because at some levels of the game, people expect to see a great stage show and part of that has always been the gear used at the gig (for me anyway).
It's very different today so I have a much smaller rig (Combo Amp) that uses all the Pre-Amp, MIDI and FX used on my "Big Rig". Of course I'll not be "surfing the air waves" as I would with the stacks but I still get a killer tone that cuts right through.
I think that is the most important thing here . . . . . If you know what your tone is supposed to sound like, your reproduce that no matter what you use. No compromises.
HellraiserJohnny":3dx1s5ck said:Well first . . . if I may. . . . Let me point out that playing to an audience is in fact . . . . . SHOW BUSINESS. . . . . In that respect, I tend to drag out the full wall of Marshall 1960 B cabinets (hiring road crew of course to lift it all) because at some levels of the game, people expect to see a great stage show and part of that has always been the gear used at the gig (for me anyway).
It's very different today so I have a much smaller rig (Combo Amp) that uses all the Pre-Amp, MIDI and FX used on my "Big Rig". Of course I'll not be "surfing the air waves" as I would with the stacks but I still get a killer tone that cuts right through.
I think that is the most important thing here . . . . . If you know what your tone is supposed to sound like, your reproduce that no matter what you use. No compromises.