I've got a cheap Johnson guitar/amp combo I got more than 12 years ago, and I've never really played anything else. I've gone through various gear phases but for years now have been using my first amp my parents bought me way back in high school...the little Peavey Audition I mentioned before. After "outgrowing" it and passing it on to various little cousins and nephews to learn on, it came back to me several years later and I realized I really liked how it sounded. I just needed to spend some time convincing myself I was a real guitarist because I had a big amp, first. If you like the tone you're getting now, maybe you can skip that wasteful "I'm legit because my amp is big" growth phase...? I do use a korg effects pedal to get a decent sound, but I can’t play the guitar clean as it sounds like the cheap chinese thing that it probably isYou don't mention what kind of guitar/pickups you're using, or what kind of music you're playing, but if you've got a compressor in the Korg, and especially if your guitar has single-coil pickups, gentle compression can really help little solid-state amps get a more pleasing clean tone. Set correctly, the compressor can soften note attacks a little, or add punch, or sustain, or some combination of all of those, and also help make a nice cutting rhythm tone that's right on the edge of distortion. You want to use lower gain settings earlier in the amp's signal path (on my Peavey, that is called "pre gain") and crank the later gain stages to make up the volume (post gain), so you're pushing a louder, cleaner signal through the power amp and working the speaker harder. In my case, running all three EQ knobs at low-to-middle settings helps the tone seem fuller, rounder and less harsh, but still plenty bright, and with lots of adjustability range up or down. Trying to pull a bunch of bass "chunk" or get a big scooped-mid sound out of a little SS combo is kind of spinning your wheels. But you can punch a bunch of snarly, midrangey rock craziness through a mix with a small SS rig. Here's a recording of me doing that with a single-coil Gibson Melody Maker, a DOD clean boost pedal for solos, a DOD compressor pedal and a Peavey Audition 20. All the electric guitar you hear is that setup: http://alonetone.com/benniven/tracks/bleach-bald-snow-tiresEven if you don't like that kind of tone as much as me, you can hear how it's pretty present in the mix. That's not because I'm a great audio engineer; it's because the amp is putting out a nice cutting sound and not competing with the other instruments for mix space. Keeping that kind of thing in mind will help you in both live situations and recording.I set the knobs on full vol, full overdrive, and on top of that, it gets the full tube overdrive effect and a decent amount of delay and reverb from the pedal. It always sounds like it’s screaming for it’s life at very low vols, but I’m not sure about how much of the sound comes from the pedal and how much from the amp. I've heard that Jonny Greenwood from Radiohead gets his dirty sound from a SS red-knob Fender combo (an Eighty-Five, maybe) with everything pretty much dimed. Spend some time just plugged straight into the amp with no pedal and give it a workout; you'll figure out how much of it the amp can do eventually.I'm getting a deluxe mexican Fender strat soon (vintage noiseless pickups), and I'm thinking about getting the Frontman 212r amp to go with it but I'm not sure about it!!! I feel I won't get the singing overdrive I get from my cheap 30 watt amp. At the same time, I’m not sure if I will be able to mic the amp at every gig, as I own neither an extra mic nor a proper PA so I would have to rely on the local setup everytime, can that be a problem? Or is it rare they won’t be able to mic the amp? You have no way of knowing the answers to those things until you have the new guitar and can try it through some stuff. Don't rush it. See how it works with what you have, and whether you like it or not, go put some music store showroom staff to work and try stuff. Re: the PA, talk to some bands that play places you'd like to play, and get a sense of what places around you hire bands that play your kind of music. Find out what range of sound systems they have, or if you need to be packing your own. If you need to pack your own and will be playing small places, check CL for powered mixer heads from Peavey or Crate; there are usually 4- and 6-channel ones available pretty cheap. You can amplify a couple vocalists, the kick drum and maybe the snare through a pair of small PA speakers on speaker stands and play smaller bars and parties and stuff like that. It'll sound good enough to have fun doing it. Add a small powered monitor, or a non-powered monitor or two with a power amp fed from one of the PA head's auxiliary outputs, and you'll even be able to hear what you're doing on stage...a total luxury.On the other hand, I feel the f212r is perfect in terms of price and usability. I wouldn’t have to rely on miking the amp for starters, and it seems I won’t need a bigger amp unless we start playing stadiums. I play using mostly overdive and delay/reverb but I would love to use clean stuff aswell as my complex chords lose color and get muffled with the overdrive. So, will I still be able to get the crazy overdriven sound I get from the pedal alone if I get the 212, or if not will it still sound better on both the clean and overdriven setup with the help of the pedal?You can't answer that yet. Too many unaddressed variables. You seem to like the amp you have, and miking...it's not a big deal. You WANT to find places with good enough PAs that you'll be miked, regardless of how big your amp is. The question I think you should be concerned with is whether you can hear your amp over the other bandmembers, and whether they can hear you. If so, move your show onto a stage and mic stuff and then you'll be good. You can't assume you'll need a bigger, louder amp so you can be really big and loud. You need to think in terms of the ensemble you're in and how big you need to go to hold your own there without blowing your bandmates off the stage or making them strain to hear you. Thanks Anyone!
In short, try it. You'll know pretty quick if it's working for everyone or not. If it's the only sound/tone you've ever gotten used to, TRY EVERYTHING YOU CAN if decide to upgrade. There are many options and many possible things that will seduce you in the store but not seem so cool once you get them home. Always tell yourself this when you're gear-testing: "If I have to ask myself if I like it, I probably don't like it. If I don't know that I like it within the first minute or two of playing through it, there's a good chance that I don't, or won't, like it."Some gear takes some time and effort to tweak and get it to work but shouldn't be written off because of that. Like, say, a lot of Mesa amps. I have yet to bond with any Mesa amp, but a lot of people like them and they seem pretty sturdy...anyway, try everything you can get your hands on if you decide to upgrade. If you don't decide to upgrade, have fun with your exisiting rig and make every attempt to work in the phrase "my little Johnson" in conversations.
Just in case my post above didn't seem long enough, I'm posting a second time, with even more words!Quote from: daozen on May 11, 2012, 03:07:26 PMI've got a cheap Johnson guitar/amp combo I got more than 12 years ago, and I've never really played anything else. I've gone through various gear phases but for years now have been using my first amp my parents bought me way back in high school...the little Peavey Audition I mentioned before. After "outgrowing" it and passing it on to various little cousins and nephews to learn on, it came back to me several years later and I realized I really liked how it sounded. I just needed to spend some time convincing myself I was a real guitarist because I had a big amp, first. If you like the tone you're getting now, maybe you can skip that wasteful "I'm legit because my amp is big" growth phase...? I do use a korg effects pedal to get a decent sound, but I can’t play the guitar clean as it sounds like the cheap chinese thing that it probably isYou don't mention what kind of guitar/pickups you're using, or what kind of music you're playing, but if you've got a compressor in the Korg, and especially if your guitar has single-coil pickups, gentle compression can really help little solid-state amps get a more pleasing clean tone. Set correctly, the compressor can soften note attacks a little, or add punch, or sustain, or some combination of all of those, and also help make a nice cutting rhythm tone that's right on the edge of distortion. You want to use lower gain settings earlier in the amp's signal path (on my Peavey, that is called "pre gain") and crank the later gain stages to make up the volume (post gain), so you're pushing a louder, cleaner signal through the power amp and working the speaker harder. In my case, running all three EQ knobs at low-to-middle settings helps the tone seem fuller, rounder and less harsh, but still plenty bright, and with lots of adjustability range up or down. Trying to pull a bunch of bass "chunk" or get a big scooped-mid sound out of a little SS combo is kind of spinning your wheels. But you can punch a bunch of snarly, midrangey rock craziness through a mix with a small SS rig. Here's a recording of me doing that with a single-coil Gibson Melody Maker, a DOD clean boost pedal for solos, a DOD compressor pedal and a Peavey Audition 20. All the electric guitar you hear is that setup: http://alonetone.com/benniven/tracks/bleach-bald-snow-tiresEven if you don't like that kind of tone as much as me, you can hear how it's pretty present in the mix. That's not because I'm a great audio engineer; it's because the amp is putting out a nice cutting sound and not competing with the other instruments for mix space. Keeping that kind of thing in mind will help you in both live situations and recording.I set the knobs on full vol, full overdrive, and on top of that, it gets the full tube overdrive effect and a decent amount of delay and reverb from the pedal. It always sounds like it’s screaming for it’s life at very low vols, but I’m not sure about how much of the sound comes from the pedal and how much from the amp. I've heard that Jonny Greenwood from Radiohead gets his dirty sound from a SS red-knob Fender combo (an Eighty-Five, maybe) with everything pretty much dimed. Spend some time just plugged straight into the amp with no pedal and give it a workout; you'll figure out how much of it the amp can do eventually.I'm getting a deluxe mexican Fender strat soon (vintage noiseless pickups), and I'm thinking about getting the Frontman 212r amp to go with it but I'm not sure about it!!! I feel I won't get the singing overdrive I get from my cheap 30 watt amp. At the same time, I’m not sure if I will be able to mic the amp at every gig, as I own neither an extra mic nor a proper PA so I would have to rely on the local setup everytime, can that be a problem? Or is it rare they won’t be able to mic the amp? You have no way of knowing the answers to those things until you have the new guitar and can try it through some stuff. Don't rush it. See how it works with what you have, and whether you like it or not, go put some music store showroom staff to work and try stuff. Re: the PA, talk to some bands that play places you'd like to play, and get a sense of what places around you hire bands that play your kind of music. Find out what range of sound systems they have, or if you need to be packing your own. If you need to pack your own and will be playing small places, check CL for powered mixer heads from Peavey or Crate; there are usually 4- and 6-channel ones available pretty cheap. You can amplify a couple vocalists, the kick drum and maybe the snare through a pair of small PA speakers on speaker stands and play smaller bars and parties and stuff like that. It'll sound good enough to have fun doing it. Add a small powered monitor, or a non-powered monitor or two with a power amp fed from one of the PA head's auxiliary outputs, and you'll even be able to hear what you're doing on stage...a total luxury.On the other hand, I feel the f212r is perfect in terms of price and usability. I wouldn’t have to rely on miking the amp for starters, and it seems I won’t need a bigger amp unless we start playing stadiums. I play using mostly overdive and delay/reverb but I would love to use clean stuff aswell as my complex chords lose color and get muffled with the overdrive. So, will I still be able to get the crazy overdriven sound I get from the pedal alone if I get the 212, or if not will it still sound better on both the clean and overdriven setup with the help of the pedal?You can't answer that yet. Too many unaddressed variables. You seem to like the amp you have, and miking...it's not a big deal. You WANT to find places with good enough PAs that you'll be miked, regardless of how big your amp is. The question I think you should be concerned with is whether you can hear your amp over the other bandmembers, and whether they can hear you. If so, move your show onto a stage and mic stuff and then you'll be good. You can't assume you'll need a bigger, louder amp so you can be really big and loud. You need to think in terms of the ensemble you're in and how big you need to go to hold your own there without blowing your bandmates off the stage or making them strain to hear you. Thanks Anyone!
Hello daozen,Take your much loved Amp to the shop and side by side test it out against the big brand robbers Amplifier names.An,,Tell the shop owner to shut for at least 10 min.*Note* Small Amps will always come out sweeter sounding than big Amps.If you need more power from a small Amp??? Just 2 resistors from the speaker (maybe add a pot for some control) and send the signal to a second amp for more room fill.If I had a dollar for every guitar player that purchases a bigger amp rather than linking two small amps ,,, I'd be stinking rich. 9 times out of ten,, Bigger Amps will just get you frustrated.If the gig is really big Hire professional people to setup the rig. Phil.
Yeah, I'm with Phatt on that one; running two little amps has always worked well for me, either as a stereo pair or in a master amp/slave amp situation.Can you post the model of amp you're using, or some photos of it, or something? Seeing its specs and features might prompt ideas for you to try with it, etc...
I don't know that amp, but it's got a line out jack on the back...if you decide there's a tone there that you can't get from other amps, you could connect that line out jack to another amp's line in, power amp in or effects return jack and get the little Johnson sound at higher volumes.Or, you could buy a used rackmount power amp and drive it from your Johnson's preamp, in order to power one or more guitar speaker cabinets. Or you may be able to hold your own with your bandmates, volume-wise, just as you are right now...at least in rehearsal. Try it and see.Be wary of online reviews saying pickups are too warm or whatever. It's totally possible that you would disagree; always try and listen for yourself when possible. Is that F-hole guitar an Ibanez Artcore-something? Looks nice.
I don't know that amp, but it's got a line out jack on the back...if you decide there's a tone there that you can't get from other amps, you could connect that line out jack to another amp's line in, power amp in or effects return jack and get the little Johnson sound at higher volumes....