
Enjolras56
New member
It was literally just two days ago what I was thinking "Hmm... I should bring a backup head to gigs."
Then tonight it happened. You all know how it is in the pay-to-play circuit in Hollywood. Bands play for 30-40 minutes, then the next band has 15 minutes to set up as the previous band tears down. Lucky if you get a level check.
We were doing our frantic load in and set up at The Roxy tonight...
So as soon as I powered up my Randall NBKing100 to warm up, the lights went on for 1 second, then it was totally dead. Could not get it to power up at all. I tried everything to see if someone kicked the power cord out, if my power cable was intact. More than likely I blew a fuse? (I'm assuming.)
I frantically ran to the backstage dressing room and kindly asked if anyone was willing to let me use their amp.
Luckily, camaraderie/comradery was strong tonight, and one guy graciously stepped up and let me use his Line 6 solid state head (which I'm totally unfamiliar with- I think it was a Spider II?)
I asked him "Does it have an FX loop?" He said "Dude, it has effects in it!" haha... anyways, I just had to laugh it off and be grateful that I could even play through something tonight.
As soon as I plugged it in to my cab, the stage manager was saying, "Okay, we gotta go on guys ready or not."
So on we went. I just pushed at preset button that said "CRUNCH" and went with that. Of course it wasn't MY sound, but it wasn't bad at all. Just had to go with it and get lost in the performance. It helped that I had a Creation Audio Labs Holy Fire on my pedalboard, which gave it a more tube-y response. I just had to tweak throughout the gig to get as close to what I wanted as possible.
I've read many an advice column from touring pros like Pete Thron about carrying backup and/or spare fuses to gigs, but of course I never thought it would happen to me given that I only gig about once a month, play locally, and I take really good care of my gear. Like I said... lesson learned.
That being said, it's easy to change a fuse right?

Then tonight it happened. You all know how it is in the pay-to-play circuit in Hollywood. Bands play for 30-40 minutes, then the next band has 15 minutes to set up as the previous band tears down. Lucky if you get a level check.
We were doing our frantic load in and set up at The Roxy tonight...
So as soon as I powered up my Randall NBKing100 to warm up, the lights went on for 1 second, then it was totally dead. Could not get it to power up at all. I tried everything to see if someone kicked the power cord out, if my power cable was intact. More than likely I blew a fuse? (I'm assuming.)
I frantically ran to the backstage dressing room and kindly asked if anyone was willing to let me use their amp.
Luckily, camaraderie/comradery was strong tonight, and one guy graciously stepped up and let me use his Line 6 solid state head (which I'm totally unfamiliar with- I think it was a Spider II?)
I asked him "Does it have an FX loop?" He said "Dude, it has effects in it!" haha... anyways, I just had to laugh it off and be grateful that I could even play through something tonight.
As soon as I plugged it in to my cab, the stage manager was saying, "Okay, we gotta go on guys ready or not."
So on we went. I just pushed at preset button that said "CRUNCH" and went with that. Of course it wasn't MY sound, but it wasn't bad at all. Just had to go with it and get lost in the performance. It helped that I had a Creation Audio Labs Holy Fire on my pedalboard, which gave it a more tube-y response. I just had to tweak throughout the gig to get as close to what I wanted as possible.
I've read many an advice column from touring pros like Pete Thron about carrying backup and/or spare fuses to gigs, but of course I never thought it would happen to me given that I only gig about once a month, play locally, and I take really good care of my gear. Like I said... lesson learned.
That being said, it's easy to change a fuse right?
