A
The golden age of tube amplifiers is waaaay over. If you would have told me 30 years ago that one day I would witness people obsessing over the tonal subtleties of current production Chinese tubes and selling them second hand I would have laughed in your face. Marshalls made in China ? Fuck that. Tubes made in China, fuck that too.Most boomer guitarists I know practically beat off to stories of Marshalls catching fire on stage back in the good old days. seems like it’s nothing new
I still love tube amps and all that crap, but at this point I can’t imagine ever getting rid of my Kemper. It’s just too good and too easyThe golden age of tube amplifiers is waaaay over. If you would have told me 30 years ago that one day I would witness people obsessing over the tonal subtleties of current production Chinese tubes and selling them second hand I would have laughed in your face. Marshalls made in China ? Fuck that. Tubes made in China, fuck that too.
I know a few respected old boomer tube amp guys who are running Kempers now too. I suppose if I was a boomer guitarist and performed regularly I might be enticed by the ease and weight. Ten years ago when I quit gigging though I was thoroughly in the " Never sacrifice tone for weight" camp and gigged exclusively with full SVT/810 rigs. At this point I just enjoy playing with myself, so old ass tube amps loaded with old ass tubes it is.I still love tube amps and all that crap, but at this point I can’t imagine ever getting rid of my Kemper. It’s just too good and too easy
I know a few respected old boomer tube amp guys who are running Kempers now too. I suppose if I was a boomer guitarist and performed regularly I might be enticed by the ease and weight. Ten years ago when I quit gigging though I was thoroughly in the " Never sacrifice tone for weight" camp and gigged exclusively with full SVT/810 rigs. At this point I just enjoy playing with myself, so old ass tube amps loaded with old ass tubes it is.
I know a few respected old boomer tube amp guys who are running Kempers now too. I suppose if I was a boomer guitarist and performed regularly I might be enticed by the ease and weight. Ten years ago when I quit gigging though I was thoroughly in the " Never sacrifice tone for weight" camp and gigged exclusively with full SVT/810 rigs. At this point I just enjoy playing with myself, so old ass tube amps loaded with old ass tubes it is.
The guy I am thinking about is a professional touring musician. He's Cyndi Lauper's bassist/music director.They're great for recording, or if you play in a boomer cover band where you need a million tones. Not so great for normal band type stuff, usable, but not great. Mostly because people lie on the internet about their gigging practices and pretend every venue has really good sound reinforcement.
In most cases, you'll need to schlep around a power amp and cabinet of some kind - either a guitar centric power/cab with IRs off, or a IR centric clean power with FRFR.
In the actual trenches where people actually play gigs? People still use tube amps almost exclusively. It's only situations where you're supplying your own sound reinforcement, or you are playing high dollar venues where the sound reinforcement is guaranteed, that Kemper/axe/quad rigs are common.
I love the kemper for its recording utility, but I have no illusions about its strengths and weaknesses. Generally speaking, depending on what side of the argument you fall on, you exaggerate the positives or negatives.
The guy I am thinking about is a professional touring musician. He's Cyndi Lauper's bassist/music director.
This is more relevant than many of us would like to admit.In those types of situations, the kemper/axe/quads are fantastic - especially if you have your own sound guy, or the venues you play provide them
If you can have someone (besides yourself) running damage control and putting out any technical fires, they almost always sound excellent - and consistent from gig to gig - which is the really important thing for higher level bands.
This is almost always the case for big cover bands or original bands that can play theaters - in the clubs, dive bars, and small venues, this is almost never the case.
That's why the arguments about digital vs tube amps are almost always disingenuous. Someone's experience is entirely informed by variables around them that are going to be wildly fucking different depending on the music/gig.
This is more relevant than many of us would like to admit.
I've played rock & roll dive bars in the southeast for 20+ years, almost exclusively. Occasionally we'll play a bigger venue or get to open for someone, but it's essentially the same environment on a larger scale. I always show up with a 4x12 and whatever 50-100w head suits the band. Keep the gain & feedback under control, have enough mids, & don't crank it stupidly loud.
I never really have issues with venues or sound guys, occasionally I'll have one who insists on me turning down a little lower than I'd like. In those cases, I just suck it up & deal with it. I'd say 90% of the bands I see are running a comparable setup, some of them are using 2x12's, occasionally I'll see a 1x12 or 4x10 setup. Maybe 10% of the bands I see playing out in that realm are using modelers & running direct.
There's a hundred other scenarios though, where guys are playing out just as much; church gigs, theater shows, more 'professional' corporate venues, etc. where they do things completely different. I've got buddies that play in those circles, but zero real life experience, so I honestly couldn't tell you the first thing about what people run there or how.
I've seen a string of bands shit the bed lately trying that. One was a big club and good sound system, but the lunchbox did not fill the room right. The other was a small bar where there wasn't PA support. They ran IEMs, but they matched stage volume. The 5150 was quiet and neutered just to match the 6506MH. It sucks to see a good band and struggle to hear the guitars.I'm not sure why we're talking 50/100 watt heads, 4x12's and modelers. You don't need any of those things to play live. We all know that a 15 watt lunchbox combo will cover any gig you could possibly think of.
Most boomer guitarists I know practically beat off to stories of Marshalls catching fire on stage back in the good old days. seems like it’s nothing new