Tube Amps Are A Dying Luxury.

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Hoenstly, tube amps are becoming a very expensive luxury that will only be seen in museums in the following decades. This is why.
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Пікірлер: 1 800

  • @electropentatonic
    @electropentatonic Жыл бұрын

    I'm older and from what I see, great tube amplifiers have never been more affordable

  • @Eric-dd8bk

    @Eric-dd8bk

    Жыл бұрын

    Youknow? Things dropping in price means demand drop

  • @electropentatonic

    @electropentatonic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Eric-dd8bk I would agree if we were seeing markets respond to this with less amplifier production, but we're not. Instead, we're seeing an abundance of amplifier innovation. Prices dropped due to an increase in the supply of quality amplifiers

  • @mohamedtlass3842

    @mohamedtlass3842

    Жыл бұрын

    It depends which ones. Many larger amplifiers on used market can be had for some sort of a deal now at least compared to small and mid sized classics… with vintage vox acs, Marshall’s, and bassmen being exceptions

  • @guitarexpert2245

    @guitarexpert2245

    11 ай бұрын

    Well i'm a Marshall guy and it's the opposite. They keep going up on price and getting sold for the new price.

  • @electropentatonic

    @electropentatonic

    11 ай бұрын

    @@guitarexpert2245 Electronics are just that way for now. Still catching up from the ridiculous Covid shutdowns

  • @lucistired
    @lucistired Жыл бұрын

    Conversations like this always focus on whether or not the amp or plugin sounds the same but always neglects to consider whether or not the player will sound different using different gear. Having a powerful amp in the room changes how I feel about my playing, inspires me, gives me confidence, and that makes *me* sound better. Tube amps are a cool inspiring musical device, and that counts for a lot

  • @PlottingTheDownfall

    @PlottingTheDownfall

    Жыл бұрын

    You hit the nail on the head in your first sentence. In my studio I have a lot of young (HS Sr, young college) they always want to play though my tube amps to record. It dawned on after working with a band several days trying to get a good guitar tone recorded, that they had no idea how to play through a tube head. So I loaded up S-Gear and/or TH-U and dialed in their sound, and like magic, they performed better, sounded better and we got all the parts down. They were not used to the sag, and dynamics that a quality tube head imparts - they only ever played solid state or Amp Sim pedals live. Likewise, I had some 50-60 year olds in to record and they could not play through an amp sim at all. A good friend of mine who has a collection of very nice vintage fenders, some matchless and marshalls finally added a Amp Sim Pedal to his touring board...it's taken him about 2 years to really learn how to get the most out of it which forced him to adjust his playing style. For me - Tube head. ToneX IR load box. best of both worlds.

  • @xRickAstleyx

    @xRickAstleyx

    Жыл бұрын

    being good at guitar makes me sound better. but hey cant pay for that can you?

  • @lucistired

    @lucistired

    Жыл бұрын

    @@xRickAstleyx no i had to earn that, by practicing with my cheap but slightly hot rodded vox ac15 :)

  • @xRickAstleyx

    @xRickAstleyx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucistired ive never met any guitarists that had confidence issues based on gear they use. on the contrary, ive met many, many guitarists that use gear as an excuse to not practice as much as they should. theyre always that one expensive piece of gear away from being able to finally just start playing. if youre a competent guitarists, your performance should be consistent and not dependant on having a certain kind of amp. in the real worls, youll need to be adaptable. the kind of musician that "needs" a 100w tube amp in a situation where its completely inappropriate is the worst musician to be around. the kind that can play the same wether theyre plugged into a marshall or a can of coke are the ones that make great music.

  • @lucistired

    @lucistired

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@xRickAstleyx You make that comment about amps as if there aren't so many people who need that one plugin to be able to well. What you're saying is an issue with amp people is just an issue with people. I never said anything about needing a particular piece to sound good, I regularly play through modelers at sessions, and various different practice and backline amps, but I prefer my tube amps because I know them well and I love their sound. Adaptability comes with being good at the instrument, being good at the instrument comes from practice, and practice that leads to real artful playing comes from inspiration. Let people have their inspiration

  • @AlexH8280
    @AlexH8280 Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps and analog are incredible to play through. It's like playing a real grand piano vs. a synthesizer. Every guitarist should be familiar with it.

  • @acoffeewithsatan

    @acoffeewithsatan

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with everything but the last section. Whatever works for you is the best, it’s all a subjective matter. While a fan of analog myself too, the main advantages of digital from a practical perspective are, as a gigging player, every space has a decent PA these days to hook them into and sound good being lightweight; as a studio player/producer, you can easily re-record, overdub and edit projects whereas an analog environment makes it near impossible to recreate once the session’s over. For the bedroom player or the gigging musician who knows the tone they’re after and so all the versatility digital offers is redundant, sure thing its the way to go!

  • @AlexH8280

    @AlexH8280

    Жыл бұрын

    @@acoffeewithsatan To be clear, I said every guitarist should be *familiar* with tube amps, as in get acquainted with how it feels to play one and what exactly is being modeled, etc. I didn’t say anyone should be forced to use one and I would be the last to argue against the many benefits of digital setups these days. That said, I’ll never forget when I was sound-checking, using a tube amp with real cab and mic setup. The other guitarist was using a Helix. (This was outdoors, not a metal gig but mainstream pop/rock) The sound guy comes up and says “ok you (Helix guy) sound good, you (me) sound DAMN good.” So there’s that.

  • @ClaimedEagle

    @ClaimedEagle

    Жыл бұрын

    @@AlexH8280 most people I have seen have terrible tones call it amp users or modelers users. You are probably one of the good musicians who have good tones. What I have noticed is that Helix users or any modelers users try to look for setups that are plug it and quit it without investing time in their sound to make it sound better. In the other hand we have people (including me) who likes to dedicate a lot of time building their sound to archive the holly grail of sound using the advantages of computers combining pedals in convenient ways or modulating the sound in ways are almost impossible with analog setups (otherwise a real pedalboard would be excessively big). In short, most musicians sucks and probably you don't. (BOSS GT1000 user here)

  • @AlexH8280

    @AlexH8280

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ClaimedEagle Thanks I’ll take that - I believe too that I don’t suck 😂. I remember now, that was a hybrid rig; I was running my Eleven Rack into the power section of my Marshall Origin 50, using it for preamps and effects, but still using the amp and cab for that “real amp vibe”. Why? Mostly because I could 😂 but yeah, it wasn’t hard at all to dial in and sound, as the sound guy put it, “damn good”.

  • @GuitarsAndSynths

    @GuitarsAndSynths

    Жыл бұрын

    agree love my Mesa Mark V, Uberschall and Mezzabarba tube amps. But when the tubes fail they are a pain and expensive to replace every few years.

  • @KaddysJamKave
    @KaddysJamKave Жыл бұрын

    No matter how the world changes... I'll be that old dude that still sits in his garage with a WALL of tube amps and cabinets reminiscing about the "Good ol days" 😂

  • @redmuun519

    @redmuun519

    4 ай бұрын

    Beer in hand, awesome neon signs, and loud riffs all night long 🔥🔥

  • @Podcastforthewin

    @Podcastforthewin

    Ай бұрын

    i kinda like that though. .

  • @johanjotun1647

    @johanjotun1647

    25 күн бұрын

    every single guy Ive seen say tube amps are dead is sitting in their bedroom with no drummer or bassist and had questionable muscle tone

  • @stug5041
    @stug5041 Жыл бұрын

    My gigging days are over and I lm just a home player now - this said, I’ve never found a digital solution I’m happy with. I’ll run my tube heads at 2% volume happily for the rest of my life. You can get close with a recorded sound, but you’ll never nail the feel of a tube amp pushing a cab - that experience is part of the joy of playing for me

  • @deadasfak

    @deadasfak

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn't a digital modeler going thru a power amp and cab the same? Honest question, because even tho I played with tube amps in the past, I never really got the appeal, they didn't better than digital/solid state stuff.

  • @Stinger_1995

    @Stinger_1995

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen to that!

  • @gabrielr4329

    @gabrielr4329

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deadasfak tube amps respond differently, personally I feel the tube amp pushing back at me when playing, it’s a subtle feeling but it’s there, it’s a more embodied experience. Also, tubes do provide some overtones and different quality of the sound that is hard to replicate. Digital amps are an emulation that is physically removed from the guitar, especially the software like neural dsp. That said I do like my Boss Waza headphones.

  • @RyanWright

    @RyanWright

    Жыл бұрын

    You are entitled to your opinion. Quite happy with the Helix and the Powercab+

  • @smelltheglove2038

    @smelltheglove2038

    Жыл бұрын

    So, here’s the thing I like about tube amps….. they aren’t ever going to become obsolete, I can repair them myself, my brother has enough transformers, resistors, capacitors to fix 100 tube amps, plus hundreds of new old stock RCA tubes, Mullard, etc. It seems like every year the new generation of modeling systems come out, and guaranteed it’s going to become a subscription service like everything else. Also, the only genre they actually sound somewhat ok is metal. Anything that requires dynamics they don’t work.

  • @jameshayward9723
    @jameshayward9723 Жыл бұрын

    Not gonna lie, having a dad who was a tube amp repair tech and one of the only "good ones" in my area, i was SUPER fortunate growing up being able to check out a bunch of different amps as they came through the house. Stuff that id never be able to afford or see as some rare gems cane through. **edit** From the replies I'm not sure if my comment was read correctly, when I said "good ones" I meant out of repair techs, wasn't referring to amps. Alot of people would end up sending their amps to my dad to fix after bringing it to other places that either made the problem worse or better yet those places would just contract my dad to fix em lol

  • @TheCyberMantis

    @TheCyberMantis

    Жыл бұрын

    So which ones were good, and which ones were junk?

  • @chthonicwarlord

    @chthonicwarlord

    Жыл бұрын

    what are your favorites you've gotten to mess with? I've played a good amount of amps but I'm always eager to look for more lol

  • @davisphillips6409

    @davisphillips6409

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I also would like to know what some of the good amps were.

  • @jameshayward9723

    @jameshayward9723

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheCyberMantis "good is subjective" but junk? Well a there was a bunch of the old line6 tube amps came through, all with the same problem lol from what I remember how my dad explained was the placement of the tubes used to melt the circuit board 😬😬 terrible design flaw

  • @jameshayward9723

    @jameshayward9723

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chthonicwarlord it's going back in my memory but one of the amps I was completely stoked to check out was a old dime Krank signature. Awesome tone.

  • @haydenlee8332
    @haydenlee8332 Жыл бұрын

    I agree. Tube Amps are a luxury... Less in terms of "oh no, it's so pricey" luxury, but definitely more in terms of "I can't afford to keep something this big when my home is so small, and it's so cumbersome/costly to move it from place to place", "I can't afford to play something this loud when I'm not guaranteed to be able to play/practice where I won't get complaints" kind of luxury. (Especially considering that less and less people can buy their own homes these days. Size and Mass matters, unfortunately) Tube combo/stacks are most likely going to end up as enthusiast collecters' items, or for recording studio purposes.

  • @wilhelmrifflord
    @wilhelmrifflord Жыл бұрын

    So I wanna say that I’m 39 and I really feel this. I use a SS Orange these days and it really leaves me nothing to be desired so I’m not at all shocked that a younger person who isn’t conditioned to “need” an amp rig couldn’t care less about them. I do love amps and amp culture. K, I’m gonna go roll a blunt on my svt classic now ❤️‍🔥

  • @Jack1990Stevens
    @Jack1990Stevens Жыл бұрын

    Tube amp + attenuator and I’m fine at home. Attenuator completely changed my experience of playing at home. I always prefer the tone of tube amps over plugins, even though they are obviously less convenient.

  • @young_of_the_mill9560

    @young_of_the_mill9560

    Жыл бұрын

    What tube amp and attenuator you have?

  • @Jack1990Stevens

    @Jack1990Stevens

    Жыл бұрын

    @@young_of_the_mill9560 Peavey XXX, 6505+ and JVM410H, I use a Torpedo Captor for attenuation :)

  • @brownsparlour9813

    @brownsparlour9813

    Жыл бұрын

    Fully agree man!victory super kraken and torpedo captor with a closed back orange 2x12 sounds absolutely mint

  • @Jack1990Stevens

    @Jack1990Stevens

    Жыл бұрын

    @@brownsparlour9813 nice!

  • @cyberhead243

    @cyberhead243

    Жыл бұрын

    Marshall JCM2000 DSL100 + Torpedo Captor X here.

  • @fraktheskye
    @fraktheskye Жыл бұрын

    Amp companies are making smaller amps with built in load boxes to connect straight to an interface ie Mesa Badlander, REVV, etc. They’re also putting out lower wattage amps at relatively lower prices. I’m 33 and I’ve had all the modelers but finally found the tone I was looking for from a 25 W Mesa Badlander. I can record quietly or play into headphones. I also just got a speaker cab. I get option paralysis with amp sims, but with just a few knobs on the real amp, I can dial in exactly what I want. I think amp companies are shifting and I welcome it. I will be buying the 20W Friedman JJ next year.

  • @kencubala9560

    @kencubala9560

    Жыл бұрын

    Though I understand the many benefits of the newer technology, option paralysis is a thing for some of us. There is something wonderful about plugging into a nice amplifier (maybe with some pedals) designed for the instrument, turning some knobs and simply playing. No futzing about too much with this and that. Even at lower volumes they impart a quality that I am uncertain can be duplicated otherwise.

  • @revolead

    @revolead

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a 1-watt Fryette that's the same concept except even less output. Run that sucker into my Two Notes Torpedo CAB M+, and I'm rocking away with a tube headphone amp and DI interface. Any amp tone I want to make is a switch and a cab sim away.

  • @based_circuit

    @based_circuit

    Жыл бұрын

    I love my Revv 120 mkiii for this reason. I get the sound of a tube amp with the convenience of two notes direct into my interface when I don’t want to hear my cab speakers. It’s almost the best of both worlds and I would love to see this more standard on some of the bigger amp makers out there. If they made a dual rectifier or orange rocker verb with two notes built in I would buy it yesterday.

  • @DonnyRocker2012

    @DonnyRocker2012

    Жыл бұрын

    The speaker sim out of JJ jr sounds great FOH. I still don’t get to turn the head up through 112 Friedman cab at most local venues. Same volume control for sim out, so having the speaker as my "personal" guitar monitor is no advantage. that said, I *do* look for JJ models for my, er, modelers.

  • @MykEviiL

    @MykEviiL

    Жыл бұрын

    I had a pod go. Brought it to rehearsal. Well at the rehearsal you are not playing through a 5000 or 10,000 dollar p.a. ( unless you have your own space and invested in one yourself) so now you need a FRfR or really good wedge monitor. So practicality became impractical. Remember if you are a local hero playing local shows you are at the mercy of whatever p.a. they either own or have rented at the local gig. So unless you are a big touring band playing through high end pa's with your moddler you will still need a good sounding FRFr or wedge monitor. Due to this I sold my pod go. Rebuilt my pedal board and am.sticking with my Amp head and cab set up. Maybe I'll try a katana artist at some point or something like that. Cheers.

  • @kosmajahn2877
    @kosmajahn2877 Жыл бұрын

    Hey, I'm 17 and I just bought a 100W Marshall head with 4x12 cabinet, and what I can say is that you will never get that feeling of playing a big, cranked tube amp from a plugin. It's just.. impossible. You have to feel the knobs under your fingers, and feel the wind blowing through the speakers. I know it's a bit uncomfortable to tour and carry big stacks of amps and cabs, but it's really worth it, especially when you finally can play a show with a tube amp behind you. Love it Greetings from Poland!

  • @Plexi417

    @Plexi417

    Жыл бұрын

    I couldn’t agree with you more. Having the sound of your amp hitting you onstage just magnifies the energy of the experience, and as long as the sound guy is worth a shit, that energy will get transferred to the audience and they’ll walk away from your show thinking how much better your band was then the last band they saw that was using modelers and in-ears, but they won’t know why.

  • @kosmajahn2877

    @kosmajahn2877

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Plexi417 exactly!

  • @sdriza

    @sdriza

    6 күн бұрын

    rock on brother!!! hope you have a fill stack by now!!!! (Gave my full stack + head to a local band here and they are killing it!!!)

  • @kevinjones3888
    @kevinjones3888 Жыл бұрын

    As a working guitar player I can say you are bang on!! Guitar processors, direct to FOH, in ear systems, very minimal stage noise, etc.

  • @RyvenProductions
    @RyvenProductions Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps will never die, and vinyl records will tell you the same thing. As much as I love amp sims, I will always gravitate towards the real thing. Tube amp, load box, and some IR's are the perfect solution for bedroom volumes. There are a ton of affordable used tube amps out there. You don't need some 3000-dollar amp to get good tone. Most of us know it's the speaker, mic, and cab that matter most in your signal chain.

  • @gx1tar1er

    @gx1tar1er

    Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps will never go away but sadly it will never go mainstream again unlike vinyl recrod. The reason vinyl came back to mainstream is because it's "cool" & way more varsity or appeal to a wider audience than tube amp which will only appeal to niche legit guitarists. Also another thing: a tube amp are way more expensive than whole vinyl setup lol

  • @totalbullion5882

    @totalbullion5882

    Жыл бұрын

    I think what he's saying is that they will get more expensive over time and have less appeal to the younger crowd as digital takes over more and more. I agree that you can't beat the sound of the real thing with a real cab.

  • @kriskunisch

    @kriskunisch

    Жыл бұрын

    Mechanical watches come to mind. Quartz was supposed to be the latest and greatest. There is an industry and a very dedicated and growing consumer base.

  • @mykeread

    @mykeread

    Жыл бұрын

    5150 iconic 40w combo with the 10w feature. Bedroom volume with full powered tubes, problem solved ;)

  • @devingrubbs

    @devingrubbs

    Жыл бұрын

    Even cheaper amps like H&K, Egnater, etc sound awesome thru a loadbox. I use modelers most of the time but occasionally will run a tube amp direct and it’s a thing of beauty. Biggest things I notice upon switching are better response and harsh top end goes away. Not always practical though like Fluff says so I do both depending on my needs.

  • @ilikelittlebikes
    @ilikelittlebikes Жыл бұрын

    I bought a fender tonemaster when they came out specifically because I wanted to avoid the caveats that come with tubes. i.e. weight, maintenance, etc. After a year of enjoying it, I had the opportunity to buy a vintage 60's deluxe. Now the poor tonemaster sits there, in all it's lightweight and convenient glory, silently looking on as the valve amp gets all the love. It's not that the tonemaster is a bad amp in any way.. its a very serviceable pedal platform with some actual character; but the valve amp just feels better in every conceivable way. The advantage of this is that my amp inspires me to play where it used to just be a part of the rig. Now I can glance over lovingly at the thing and get the urge to flip that standby switch and see what fun there is to be had. I think ultimately it comes down to what works for you and what inspires you to play.

  • @donatolepore3520

    @donatolepore3520

    Жыл бұрын

    More room in the the tube amp for the electrons to bounce and create over tones in a modeling amp you are , modeling why not just play the thing that sounds good to begin with ?

  • @martyshwaartz971

    @martyshwaartz971

    Жыл бұрын

    I’d be curious as to what would happen if you swapped the speakers in those two amps, cause that difference is like having two equal football teams and then giving one of them Messi.

  • @mikecorey8370

    @mikecorey8370

    Жыл бұрын

    We hear the difference. Audiences don't.

  • @based_circuit

    @based_circuit

    Жыл бұрын

    Feeling and experience is a huge appeal for me with tube amps. I enjoy playing with some neural dsp plugins when I want to experiment and push into weird territory, but my tube amp reigns supreme for that raw lived in sound. The responsiveness is immediate and having sound go through a real circuit has this magic to it. It’s the same reason I still collect and listen to music on vinyl. I know that vinyl isn’t a perfect medium, but the experience of taking the record out and appreciating the art in the LP is a connection to music that has been lost in the digital age. I’m a millennial but I still have nostalgia for a past I’ve never lived. Digital is wonderful but I still enjoy the physical mediums just as much.

  • @ChrsGuit

    @ChrsGuit

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@SlayerGamingHQ This. Tube amps respond differently... they just feel organic... especially old Fenders. you just can't replace them... no matter how many cpus and firmware updates you use

  • @hertzrecording
    @hertzrecording Жыл бұрын

    You are right, when considering stage performances and touring, there are several positive aspects to using amp simulations (such as Fractal, Kemper, Neural, etc.): 1. Quieter stage environment: Amp simulations contribute to a reduction in overall stage volume. 2. Reduced background noise: Using amp simulations requires fewer microphones, resulting in less noise interference, especially for vocals, drummers microphones. Drummers also benefit from a reduced number of microphones/ triggers. 3. Improved microphone isolation and on-stage comfort: Amp simulations help isolate microphones, providing a more comfortable and less noisy experience for musicians on stage. 4. Consistent sound reproduction: Amp simulations ensure a consistent sound across different gigs, stages, and venues. 5. Decreased weight and financial burden: Amp simulations eliminate the need for heavy amplifier cabinets, reducing the weight and cost of transportation. However, there are some drawbacks to using amp simulations: 1. Potential loss of dynamic playing: Relying solely on amp simulations may lead to a tendency for your right hand to become lazy (due to compression and digital response which sounds better but also resulting in a loss of dynamic expression!!! In studio environment it's absolutely important!!! 2. Good tube amps are easy to maintenance/nor expensive:) 3. Its great money investment: so far really good/used amp became more expensive tool every year. 4 History make a circles....

  • @johnphillips4638

    @johnphillips4638

    Жыл бұрын

    If you can get the Drummer to play electronic drums and pipe everything through a good PA, you can play at all venues.

  • @castleanthrax1833

    @castleanthrax1833

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure how amp sims eliminate the need for cabinets. Isn't it the pa that serves that purpose? Surely amp sims only eliminate the need for an amp. Btw, I'm not trying to be argumentative. Maybe I'm missing something.

  • @guitarexpert2245

    @guitarexpert2245

    11 ай бұрын

    @@castleanthrax1833 Amp sims do what they say. Simulate an real amp. So why not use the real thing? There is nothing like it

  • @castleanthrax1833

    @castleanthrax1833

    11 ай бұрын

    @guitarexpert2245 My comment was about cabinets, not amps. It's clear from my comment that I'm aware of what an amps sim is. Btw, to answer your question, there's loads of reasons why you'd use amp sims over a "real" amp. To save your back is just one. You can carry hundreds of amps sims in one hand, but you can't do that with real amps.

  • @Ya-boi-Josh
    @Ya-boi-Josh Жыл бұрын

    I used to be a huge proponent of solid state and digital modeling amps. Then I got tube amps and they sound so much better. In a mix they sound so much better when mic’d up than modeling amps. I’ve totally changed my opinion because I used to think tubes were overrated

  • @KyleKingGuitar
    @KyleKingGuitar Жыл бұрын

    Completely agree. I think the main turning point has been that everything surrounding a modern musician is conducive to using gear that is as small, light and quiet as possible on stage. I found out really early on when playing clubs how unusable a traditional amp and cab was on stage (completely regardless of what the wattage or cabinet size was), I was never able to get my amp loud enough for it to start sounding right. I was being constantly told to turn down, sometimes to the point where if I turned my amp down anymore there would be no volume at all. I got to the point where I thought what’s the point anymore, ended up buying a quad cortex and as much as I do miss my amps it’s so much easier in pretty much every way. I really don’t miss being hounded by the promoter or sound engineer to hurry up setting up my equipment because they can’t ever seem to organise changeover timing properly. And if you are able to leave your modeller plugged in until you go on you literally just have to switch it on and you’re good to go.

  • @ClaimedEagle

    @ClaimedEagle

    Жыл бұрын

    For me was something like I don't want to have only one amp sound for my entire show. A lot of the songs I play work better with different sounds and a tube amp can't deliver that unless I carry more than one which is a pain in the ass. I'm a GT1000 user and I play with all the flexibility I could ask. Funny thing is I don't use the replicas, the original models that BOSS included are awesome and knowing that there's no real amp with that sound just solidify my bond to my unit.

  • @Stratman5150

    @Stratman5150

    Жыл бұрын

    Just curious what you use for monitoring? IEM's, FRFR or house monitors? I've scaled back toa lunch box sized head and small speaker cab for convenience but would love to just go direct with a modeler but I'm not sure what would be best/easiest to hear myself.

  • @About64Goats
    @About64Goats Жыл бұрын

    Fuck that! A tube head through a 4x12 has a magic that just can’t be replicated, i use my kemper to track guitars for studio stuff but will never stop using my 5150 through a 4x12 live! Its just unmatched

  • @MitchellSpille
    @MitchellSpille Жыл бұрын

    I'll never ditch my tube amps. Not only will they always sound better, even if the gap between the two worlds is getting smaller, but tube amps are MUCH more inspiring for me to play through. The workkflow is also super simple for recording. I don't have to dive through menus, create presets, or anything like that. Just put the mic(s) in front of the cab and turn the knobs to taste. For live, even though I'm using in ears, my ac30+mojotone cab gives me a much better experience than playing direct (which I do twice a week for the church gigs I play). For any non church gigs, I bring my amps. Plus, when I'm bringing my own volume, I'm not at the mercy of the FOH engineer's skills.

  • @tims001

    @tims001

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I absolutely agree, I have a few tube amps but my favourite just has a gain/volume/tone... More playing guitar and less playing around with settings. 👍

  • @nebularain3338

    @nebularain3338

    8 ай бұрын

    It only sounds better to you becasue you have one. Ask a kid to A/B a sim and a tube, and they'll pick the sim becasue that's what they're used to and it's what sounds good to them. Subjectivity.

  • @gnatiu

    @gnatiu

    7 ай бұрын

    You are an evangelist I guess. As long as you don't shoot someone just because you feel so - play through whatever you like.

  • @PhuketMyMac
    @PhuketMyMac Жыл бұрын

    Funnily I've started collecting tube amps when modeling became really a thing and I don't regret it. These are beautiful devices and playing through these with an attenuator feels a lot different than playing with my plugins and I prefer it. I'll continue to buy tube amps.

  • @mattgilbert7347

    @mattgilbert7347

    6 ай бұрын

    Same. The more folks switched to modelling, the more valve amps I bought . So many great bargains around as folks sell off their amps!

  • @charlesrocks
    @charlesrocks Жыл бұрын

    I'll be playing tube amps until the day I die, or retire from this passion.

  • @TelesPlayMetal
    @TelesPlayMetal Жыл бұрын

    I’ve got an AxeFx III. I also have 11 tube amps. I think it comes down to physical feel. The AxeFx, even through cheap speakers, sounds great. But the feel of a speaker cab with a tube amp pushing air back at you is the feel you can’t get with processors. The AxeFx with a power amp into a speaker cab doesn’t do the same thing either.

  • @TheMirrorify
    @TheMirrorify Жыл бұрын

    I'm new to the guitar game, 3 or 4 years in. Didn't start till my 30s. I started with digital stuff as I came from an electronic music production background so digital was familiar. As soon as I tried a tube amp I was instantly converted and haven't looked back, I'm saying this as a relatively new guitar player with no nostalgic ties to tubes.

  • @edima

    @edima

    3 ай бұрын

    very late reply, but truth be told, this has been the case for alot of the younger guitar players ive met. i still use all my old tube amps, and when i invite younger players to jam and they plug into one for the first time, its like seeing a kids first trip to disney world. i dont think tube amps will dissapear, they will definitely have a place for all musicians.

  • @TheMirrorify

    @TheMirrorify

    3 ай бұрын

    @@edima it's funny you've responded to this now as this week I've been playing around with a Helix my buddy lent me. It's a great thing which covers a lot of ground but once I plugged back into my amp after a few days on the modeller, I was immediately reminded of why I love my tube amps.

  • @larsheuker
    @larsheuker Жыл бұрын

    Going from digital to tube amps was the best thing ive ever done. I can be categorized as the young ones at 24

  • @ledchickenfpv7164

    @ledchickenfpv7164

    Жыл бұрын

    Perhaps there's hope for humanity after all. 😉😁👍🤘👊

  • @mohamedtlass3842

    @mohamedtlass3842

    Жыл бұрын

    I know a 22 year old who refuses to play anything except vintage tube amps

  • @SinjaEs
    @SinjaEs Жыл бұрын

    tube based gear will never go away, the people are still just just too addicted to that little glowing sweet glass bulbs imo 😂🙏

  • @deckert618
    @deckert618 Жыл бұрын

    54 years old, and I agree. I grew up on tubes, but modern tech is so much more versatile and convenient

  • @shinebox6451
    @shinebox6451 Жыл бұрын

    Im 27 and have always played through tube amps. Feeling has a lot to do with music, and having cool ass heads on top of 4x12 cabinets with a nice pedalboard in front of it feels cool! I dont think that they will ever fully go away.

  • @johanhasan4707
    @johanhasan4707 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Fluff. Great vid as always. Tube amps are a luxury which I will hold on to 🤘🏼

  • @WhiteTigerSynth
    @WhiteTigerSynth Жыл бұрын

    They said the same about vinyl and cassettes. Tube amps will make a come back as people will get fed up of digital and want a return to a more natural sounding amp. I recently got a Fender Blues Deluxe and no plugin comes even close to it. Sure its loud, heavy and has tubes. But what sounds good, sounds good.

  • @horrifyinggelatinousblob

    @horrifyinggelatinousblob

    Жыл бұрын

    for recording purposes Tube amps are indistinguishable from modellers. For a live setting as well the crowd is not going to notice a difference. Only matters if you're jamming in a garage with the homies.

  • @ClaimedEagle

    @ClaimedEagle

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah is your brain with the nostalgia factor making you think that can't be replicated. Only a few things are complicated or impossible to replicate. One, is the tube smell, I just love the smell; two, is how the amp reacts to your guitar playing, that part is really hard, but I like to see it that not every tube amp reacts the same so it applies the same to Amp sims. Out of that, we already at a point where amp sims are better than tube amps. Tube amps is just a luxury at this point and you get more per buck using technology that also is reliable, cheap and confortable.

  • @scottster8858

    @scottster8858

    Жыл бұрын

    What "sounds good" is completely subjective. If you are accustomed to hearing a tube amp that sounds good/natural to you. If you are accustomed to hearing a modeler, that sounds good/natural to you. The reality is it really mostly depends on what time you came up playing in.

  • @jasonbates2687

    @jasonbates2687

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a Blues Deluxe as well with an upgraded speaker. With a Blues Driver and an attenuator it is el primo.

  • @jasondorsey7110

    @jasondorsey7110

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@jasonbates2687 Tube amps obsolete? What I see is these modellers are obsolete within a few years, and if they have a problem they can't be fixed...on the other hand, tube amps from the 50s and 60s are still being used because they sound amazing, and serviced because they can actually be worked on

  • @johnpublic1415
    @johnpublic1415 Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps are like everything else, the steady march of progress and time. Adapt or die. Now let me go crank my JCM.

  • @mikewrightify

    @mikewrightify

    Жыл бұрын

    I honestly think it's because these kids ain't strong enough to carry

  • @metalvisionsongcontest7055

    @metalvisionsongcontest7055

    18 күн бұрын

    @@mikewrightifyHeavy amps create strong men… strong men built light amps… 😂

  • @satchrules101
    @satchrules101 Жыл бұрын

    No way the power of a tube amp and feel , is ultimate feeling , and makes me play in a different way !

  • @emach07
    @emach07 Жыл бұрын

    You'll have to pry mine out of my cold dead hands! 😆🤣😂 🤣

  • @mattyg695
    @mattyg695 Жыл бұрын

    I love tube amps, but they're big and heavy and take up a lot of room when touring. They are more susceptible to breaking and I think they'll sound different from the start of the tour to the end of a tour or two. The digital age just makes it easier and cheaper to use

  • @RokDAWG1
    @RokDAWG1 Жыл бұрын

    I love the sound of a cab on stage! Younger people will never understand the awesomeness of the big stage sounds…or the broken backs from loading & unloading. Haha

  • @cederickforsberg5840

    @cederickforsberg5840

    Жыл бұрын

    I prefer in-ears with straight to FOH modelers over loud amps on stage :)

  • @ShredRexGuitar
    @ShredRexGuitar Жыл бұрын

    I work in a music store....and I am an old guy that grew up on tube amps. Most younger players have no idea what it like to plug into a real amp, or play at pant leg moving volumes. They know modeling amps and plug ins. We sell modeling amps every day, the odd tube amp and normally to the 40 and up demographic. I love both tube amps and today's modeling and capture options. Honestly my tube amps stay at home, I don't wanna haul them around anymore. And having XLR outs to FOH live and USB for recording has made it easier than ever to get a great tone anywhere. I have this convo almost daily at work, and I agree while amps may never go away, they are not mainstream anymore.

  • @fallotpc
    @fallotpc Жыл бұрын

    This is very interesting because in the 80's and 90's this is the gear we wished we had. We had some companies like ADA, Rocktron, Digitech and others that had great sound but they were only a rack. The sounds for all these big multi pedals were mediocre but today it's amazing the quality sound you can get on a computer or pedal. Remember, much of the sound is subjective and most people (listeners) can't tell the difference with the sound. Also, with the pandemic it changed the way we do things. Things got more practical and tech blew up in such a way that the sound quality, usability and accessibility skyrocketed in such a positive way.

  • @jessestrobel2

    @jessestrobel2

    Жыл бұрын

    Speaking highly of the effects of the plague there

  • @grantmiller9004
    @grantmiller9004 Жыл бұрын

    I've been struggling with my Mesa Boogie Dual Rec Roadster 100w head recently. I was on the fence about moving it on, couldn't get the amp to sound good at bedroom levels (young kids etc). I fitted new valves last week in an attempt to de-fizz the hi-gain channels with great success (JJ 6L6's and JJ 12AX7's gold pins). I got a Captor X after seeing my friend Michaels success with his Mark 5. I can drive it hard with the attenuator or straight into my Beyerdynamic DT770 250 ohm headphones. I also just got a Mesa MIDI matrix so I can run all 8 features of the Roadster from my Line 6 HXFX. It feels like the best of all worlds with this combo. The love for my Rectifier is back, I have a solid live rig and can practice with it in my home without annoying my family. Valve amplification FTW! Cheers Fluff!

  • @OlegAryutkin
    @OlegAryutkin Жыл бұрын

    Our guitarist won’t give up his tube stacks. We run all sorts of modern gear (in ears, VSTs, video art) but he simply has to have his wall of sound behind him. He’s ok unloading 4x12s from his van every time

  • @guitarexpert2245

    @guitarexpert2245

    11 ай бұрын

    Cause it just Fun. The interation between the amp and the guitar feel is what makes playing fun

  • @acoffeewithsatan
    @acoffeewithsatan Жыл бұрын

    My band has recently participated in a local competition against some of the top names of the local, garage band scene. My mate and I have brought our big ass amps and were appalled when we found out we were the only ones doing so. Everyone was on pedalboard sims and in-ears but us. To that point I had always thought, yeah, amps are the simplest and cheapest way to go for small gigs, that stuff is either for studio or bigger names - yup, guess again. I don’t own a tube amp, but my gigging rig is a ‘89 Peavey Classic Chorus, a 140 watt, 2x12 Roland JC competitor. My bandmate also has a hybrid 2x12 Marshall Valvestate. They weigh a ton, are a pain to load and unload and take most of the van’s trunk space, yet they’re fun, dependable and reliable. Both were fully restored and cheaper than a half-decent sim rig, so why not! As long as I can afford the space of having mine around, even if I have to double it as a nice end table!

  • @romansingleton8831
    @romansingleton8831 Жыл бұрын

    20 years later still love my Mesa Triple rec, thing is a beast and still sounds awesome.

  • @JonathanHiller
    @JonathanHiller Жыл бұрын

    If you're doing small gigs, playing in church, playing the pit for local musicals, or just playing at home, the Marshall DSL1HR is all the amp you need. I used mine in the pit for two different musicals last year and it was great, got compliments from the musical directors of both. It's not so loud as a home amp that the neighbors get mad... only weakness is that it's digital reverb is just ok, not fantastic, but it IS usable at least. I have a couple of the Kustom Defender 5H heads, too. They're much more loud than the DSL-1, and they take pedals well, but I'm to the point that I just prefer how the little Marshall sounds. You don't need more than a 1X12 cab for the DSL-1.

  • @dustinrieseberg8707
    @dustinrieseberg8707 Жыл бұрын

    I look at it like this: Tube amps or even great old solid state will always be a thing as long as bands like Queens of the Stone Age are playing and creating. I'm just using them as an example. I just can't see a band like them fully switching to the digital realm. The analog vs digital crowd will continue to exist. Long live "real" amplifiers!

  • @julianbastida5502
    @julianbastida5502 Жыл бұрын

    I think another reason for the transition is like you said is cause of the pain of taking the Amps and heads to gigs but also the risk of theft. Not saying your quad cortex or helix is not at risk for theft but weighing out the 2 I much rather keep my JP2C or 6505+ at home then to take on tour with me.

  • @mindlantern1
    @mindlantern1 Жыл бұрын

    An excellent video and much appreciated. I am 71 years young. My rig is tube heads(EVH-PRS) and Positive Grid from my iPad and a Spark Amp. A very exoctic Tri-Amp steup in my studio. We must evolve to keep living in the realm of the Ether of music.

  • @alexanderkochetkov3527
    @alexanderkochetkov3527 Жыл бұрын

    I’d if somebody never got spoiled playing good tube amps and just starts out, a digital box makes total sense. And that’s probably how it’s going to be for the lifespan of this player. Personally, I tried to switch to the modelers and spent 5 years on a Kemper and a couple more on Axe FX 3 but ultimately went back to a set of tube amps. And I am at peace with myself again.

  • @MrCalicious

    @MrCalicious

    Жыл бұрын

    I toured with Peavey 5150, Dual Rec, and Uberschall. I went Helix and VSTs and have no desire to go back. It's all about what scratches that itch for each of us. We are so blessed with choice.

  • @JackR617

    @JackR617

    Жыл бұрын

    I hated the Kemper and helix. Especially, the Kemper. It took yrs to get some great tube amps and I love them. Gave in and got a quad cortex and I was surprised how good it felt and sounded. I really like it. I think if someone has only ever used a plug in they’ll never understand. I believe amps are staying and will make a comeback like vinyl for a lot of players that had switched over to digital.

  • @mykeread
    @mykeread Жыл бұрын

    Tried a quad cortex for one show. Ran front of house, and sounded pretty rad at soundcheck… I really missed the speakers pushing air on the stage. I need that low end thump near me. I think I’ll keep my tube amp ;)

  • @billy4643

    @billy4643

    9 ай бұрын

    You can just connect to a cab will be basically the same

  • @aaronfisher7159
    @aaronfisher7159 Жыл бұрын

    As someone who isn’t a guitar player, but a drummer in a band who deals with tube amps. The sound from a Marshall, Mesa, peavey or any other quality tube amp is such a raw and awesome tone. BUT carrying those things to shows can be taxing, plus the constant moving and hauling can cause a lot of wear on the internals of the amp. Our goal is to go digital for shows as soon as we can just because it makes more sense honestly

  • @davidgriffin5031

    @davidgriffin5031

    Жыл бұрын

    On my experience, the audience can't tell. Also, a modelled amp may not be perfect but the sound is better than trying to get a Marshall sound from a Fender, or a Vox sound from a Marshall.

  • @drsrsv8884

    @drsrsv8884

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@davidgriffin5031Yeah, no one listening even cares what the amp is😂 Guitar players are mentally ill, when it comes to their obsession with tone/gear

  • @anthonyring123
    @anthonyring123 Жыл бұрын

    Ive always been in the mindset of, "if it sounds good, it sounds good". I'm in the middle. I came into guitar 15 years ago, and digital stuff was starting to get popular, was starting to not be total garbage, ie fractal, 11rack (which im still rocking to this day. Really want a Helix tho), hd500.. types. So it was all the same to me, just different tools for different jobs. What Orange has been doing with their solid state stuff, pedal baby (which i use to play the 11rack thru my 2x12 from time to time), the terror stamp, super crush series, just proves that a good sound, is a good sound. No matter what type of circuit the amp is made of.

  • @matt926uk1
    @matt926uk1 Жыл бұрын

    I ditched tube amps because they just weren’t practical for a home player like me. Then along came load boxes and irs and I’ve since amassed a little collection of amps because there’s something about a real amp that still can’t be beat. So in this context tube amps are actually more practical than they’ve ever been but technology is getting so close to replicating them now I can see a time when they just won’t be worth bothering with for most players.

  • @Proper_Gander

    @Proper_Gander

    Жыл бұрын

    The exact same thing happened to me. I used to do everything in the box, but with the load boxes and IRs, now I’ve got 5 tube amps lol I had zero a few years ago. I’m also old in comparison FWIW

  • @joelcprice

    @joelcprice

    Жыл бұрын

    Bro, I ditched them and I play live. Don’t miss them. Moving my gear around is so much more convenient. And I still have an amp and cab. It’s just solid state, and a REALLY efficient ported 112. Going to go stereo soon, and I’ll just be adding a Tube Amp Expander, and a cab. I don’t see any point in having a tube amp. And Fluff and I are only a few months apart in age. I know a ton of older dudes who switched to Kemper years ago for gigging too and didn’t look back.

  • @RyanWright
    @RyanWright Жыл бұрын

    I would have to agree. They will probably not completely go away for a long time (think about record players and vinyl), but they won't be the "standard" anymore

  • @billcoley4426

    @billcoley4426

    Жыл бұрын

    I think that's a great comparison. Tube amps will be for the purist who is willing to put up with the inconvenience and cost in order to experience those beautiful intangibles that come from tube amps.

  • @csnide6702

    @csnide6702

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly

  • @RyanWright

    @RyanWright

    Жыл бұрын

    @@billcoley4426 "beautiful intangibles", eh? In other words, the make believe magical unicorns that live in the tubes?

  • @RyanWright

    @RyanWright

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robpellew4975 I don't see it anywhere. Sorry bud.

  • @billcoley4426

    @billcoley4426

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RyanWright Yup. 40's era magical unicorns.

  • @MrJingles021
    @MrJingles021 Жыл бұрын

    Man you nailed this. I grew up playing my dad's tube amps, but as a 33 year old now I will not buy tube amps. I like the format of using a combo amp at home, something about turning my computer on to play guitar doesn't appeal to me, and I like my pedalboard. However, the inexpensive solid state and digital combo amps are so good now. I use the Line 6 Catalyst, and it is essentially Helix profiles and effects...it's great.

  • @geomusicmove
    @geomusicmove Жыл бұрын

    I sold all my valve amps a few years ago to migrate into the ampless/cabless world. So I tried hardware like preamp pedals to amp/cab sims, I tried premps into computer with virtual power amp and IRs, I tried all in one units like the Helix, I tried virtual amp/cab plugins; all very nice and interesting. Fastforwad to now...I've bought all my valve amps back (not literally the same units though, that would be stupid LOL). I don't think once you play through a valve amp you can easily replace that feeling.

  • @alexwalker67
    @alexwalker67 Жыл бұрын

    I recently moved to pedalboard PreAmp straight into the PA but mainly because our band has invested in some pretty good in ears so we don't need the stage noise. Most venues have good enough facilities to deal with it too. I think the quality of in ears and PA in general has brought on a lot of the change too.

  • @frankenstein4106
    @frankenstein4106 Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps will never go away, but they are definitely becoming a luxury to own. I bought a Z-Wreck Jr. head when they first came out a few years back for $1599, now they are selling for $2299. Price increases have been crazy, especially at Fender.

  • @masterofreality230

    @masterofreality230

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea, I almost wonder if there will be a crash in prices or will they keep going up?

  • @charlesbolton8471

    @charlesbolton8471

    Жыл бұрын

    @@masterofreality230 There won’t be a crash in prices from the manufacturers. It is possible that they will temporarily lower prices to move slower selling products, but as far as prices across the board are concerned the best we can hope for is less frequent price increases.

  • @teerexness
    @teerexness4 ай бұрын

    From Mesa Boogie to Line 6 Helix here. I'm 61 and I'll never go back. The versatility, predictability, dependability are off the charts. Add a Variax, and the versatility is insane. A rolling suitcase and dual guitar backpack gig-bag is all I take, all I need. One trip to/from the car.

  • @dv8322
    @dv83223 ай бұрын

    I'm an old tube amp guy but I have always been intrigued by modeling tech. It's always looked like it had a high learning curve that really dissuaded me. I just recently bought the new Fender Tone Master Pro with the FR-12 speaker and all my modeling prayers have been answered. The tones are great and even I can use it easily. My tube amps are all in the closet. I'm keeping them for nostalgic reasons but I don't see myself playing them too often.

  • @evanmiller2579
    @evanmiller2579 Жыл бұрын

    Great topic. Just don't know if I could ever get to no amp or speaker on stage with my tone. I have in ears but prefer one in and one out as I feel more involved in the overall live gig experience. With the one ear out, I need some guitar stage volume to compete with the acoustic drums. Thanks for all you do.

  • @teknonmy7210
    @teknonmy7210 Жыл бұрын

    I loved my Orange Micro Terror Dark and my 1x12 cab. I probably shouldn't have sold it. But I also like living in an apartment and that thing was l o u d. Owning a tube amp is like owning a massive marble statue. Sure, the statue is expensive, but it's nothing in comparison to the cost of the room it should be in to make the most of it.

  • @smelltheglove2038

    @smelltheglove2038

    Жыл бұрын

    My Princeton works fine, it’s not too loud, I live in a row home in Philly. It’s not a big deal to play it at a decent volume. I play my Vibrolux at volume too and that’s 35 watts, no issues. Plus they’ll never become obsolete and fender isn’t going to hit me with some subscription service down the line in order to keep using it, which is coming, dont doubt that. And then what happens in five years when the technology is obsolete and they stop supporting the version you have? Then you have a 1500 dollar paper weight. My 1500 dollar tube amp will last my entire life. Plus it actually sounds good, and feels good to play. Those digital modeling things only work for high gain metal tones because there’s hardly any real tone there anyway it’s just super compressed distortion. Plus I like playing with fuzz and fuzz really only works well with tube amps.

  • @channtastic

    @channtastic

    Жыл бұрын

    A micro terror and 1x12 is not that loud. 😂 Just play riffs and don’t care about the people around you.

  • @teknonmy7210

    @teknonmy7210

    Жыл бұрын

    @@channtastic I can hear conversations in the hallway like there's no door in between. I've been in places where I could hear conversations from the adjacent apartments. I can't run a subwoofer, I have to turn the bass down on my speakers so it doesn't resonate through the whole building. The micro terror was absolutely too loud.

  • @negromister

    @negromister

    Жыл бұрын

    @@teknonmy7210 you're right, I had the Micro Terror (not the Dark) with the same cab and they're loud af. I have a Rocker Terror 15 and a Torpedo and couldn't be happier - I think the amp + loadbox combo is the way to go.

  • @teddy3k3

    @teddy3k3

    Жыл бұрын

    @@channtastic tell me you dont live in an apartment without telling me you dont live in an apartment.

  • @timlind3129
    @timlind3129 Жыл бұрын

    Now that my bassist has moved to purely digital, it's a sign. Not only that, the roadies love him and the sound engineers love him - the bassist! :)

  • @Gk2003m
    @Gk2003m Жыл бұрын

    It’s about to happen for me. Just got a Katana a couple weeks ago. It’s lightweight (important for us older folks), the patches can be configured to sound very good in their own right AND to produce “good enough” simulations of my fave amp sounds, and it contains all but a couple of the effects I have used! And there’s no grounding issues when trying to wire all those effects together… I have a few classic tube amps, and will likely be selling them soon.

  • @saberreiter8569
    @saberreiter8569 Жыл бұрын

    Recently switched from a Rectifier to a line6 helix stomp. We still played through cabs on our Tour, since the soundguys usually had everything set up for using them already. But yeah, having a small little box on your pedal board is a lot less of a hassle than carrying a tube head (takes less space in the van, too).

  • @briansubsist

    @briansubsist

    Жыл бұрын

    Old person here. Help. How did you use your helix and a cab at the same time? I thought the point of those was to lose that. So you need a traditional cab and a power amp and the effects processor? What’s the point? Fluff was saying the same thing. Using his helix with cabs. Why and how? What am I missing? Lol.

  • @QuikdethDeviantart

    @QuikdethDeviantart

    Жыл бұрын

    @@briansubsist some folks like to use just the effects, or just an amp sim into a real cab. My band is a bunch of luddites that scoffed at my headrush, so for a while i used BOTH and to be fair it was glorious! But too much to carry in the end

  • @saberreiter8569

    @saberreiter8569

    Жыл бұрын

    @@briansubsist Hey Brian, you need a poweamp (I have a harley benton cheapo one but the seymure duncan ones are great for small form factor). you have to create a parallel output path after the amp block and then you can select another output for that path without a cab sim. I used that one live since most sound engineers were more comfortable with "their" setup (cab+mic) and I use it in our rehearsal room, since we only have a small pa for vocals. Cheers

  • @Plexi417

    @Plexi417

    Жыл бұрын

    Another old dude here that still goes to concerts all the time. No amps on stage is killing the rock concert experience. Rock concerts with modelers and in-ears are pale shadows of what rock concerts used to be. All the vibe, magic, and energy are almost gone. Might as well stay home and watch a concert on tv.

  • @saberreiter8569

    @saberreiter8569

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Plexi417 I, as part of the crowd, don't care tbh. Sound is better without way too loud amp stacks (even though most of them were dummys anyway for most bands). But that is just my opinion, I never cared much for the "aesthetic" of amps. As long as the band performs well and is charismatic with the crowd, I will have fun. But people enjoy different things :)

  • @Jared1469
    @Jared1469 Жыл бұрын

    As an old guy who got back into guitar a year ago after a long hiatus, it became a math problem. I couldn’t afford all of the physical options between amps/cabs/effects. The FM3 got me all of that and more. I still lust after the physical gear but it will be a future addition to the collection not the requirement just to play and rock out.

  • @Victorbrotto
    @Victorbrotto Жыл бұрын

    People been saying this for the last 20 years. In the early 2000s people swore modeling gear of that time sounded ''just like an amp dudeeee'', and now what do we think about those Line6 PODs? Kemper is now obsolete, and Quad Cortex is the new ''Sounds just like an amp brooo''. You know what really sounds like an amp and always will? Yeah.

  • @justuswilson9137
    @justuswilson9137 Жыл бұрын

    I recently became a fan of Eric Valentine's work on the first Third Eye Blind record and I was wondering if you think it's possible to achieve that sound today with plugins/modelers/profilers/etc...? Like I'm not sure if I can achieve the sound of capturing 1-6 amps being mic'ed up by a couple of mics a distance away to blend them together in one signal doing things digitally. I'm curious if you think it is possible to achieve similar results and if so how!

  • @chinatosinthiti3076
    @chinatosinthiti3076 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Fluff, I'm 35 and I do agree with you that it's mostly going to be like classic cars. However, I do think smaller size tube amps or hybrid amps will stay for a while like 1x12 combos. I also got myself a Joyo Zombie II and a Harley Benton V30 1x12, they are so much fun but I can hardly turn up the volume more than 1/10 as neighbor situations.

  • @AntonioRockGP
    @AntonioRockGP Жыл бұрын

    I've tried all digital for 3 years. That's a fair amount of gigs in my case. The tone was nice, the audience, band members and sound guys were happy. Unfortunately I couldn't do it. I'm back to my good old halfstack setup... So yeah, my back is hurting again, I'm too loud on stage again and I'm back to arguing with sound guys about the guitar volume on stage. Why keep going through that? Because of the experience and inspiration! It's a totally different experience playing a halfstack on stage with traditional wedge monitoring blasting sound. The inspiration, the energy, the involvement with the crowd, the guitar feeding back as soon as you open the volume pot, the feeling of the palmuting on the back when the amp chugs, etc... It's all part of the magic energy of rock and metal. Take that away and sure, everything is more controlled and the FOH house sound is much more clear and balanced. But is that what you really want in a rock show? On my opinion the energy and inspiration is way more important. Unfortunately I can't really smile and feel inspired when performing in this new modern trend. It absolutely does NOT feel rock and roll.

  • @ojaiandrew
    @ojaiandrew Жыл бұрын

    Yup, I agree with everyone. I tried digital - lots of cool sounds but I always felt something was missing. Much happier with my various tube amps.

  • @SlyRyFry
    @SlyRyFry Жыл бұрын

    I love the new era of tone capturing given how much more versatile and affordable it is. But I've played on a dual rectifier with a matching mesa halfstack and it is hard to match the magic you can make with one of those through a plugin alone. At least with my experience using them so far, you're just not gonna get the feedback you want as consistent as a tube amp will. But even with a Bugera v22 infinium just as accessible and ready to go, it's so much easier to hop on my pc to have a much better tone at a quieter volume for home play and prevent unneeded heat. Even for band practice I'm considering just upgrading to a neural dsp QC instead of trying my luck at building the perfect setup. It's definitely a goal, it's just not practical with the advancements in technology being at such a competitive price. Edit: plus I'd rather have a bunch of nice guitars than a bunch of nice amp heads. Storage would also be a pain.

  • @GreatWhiteLionSnake
    @GreatWhiteLionSnake Жыл бұрын

    For the average part-time player, it's definitely a possibility. I have played both and can tell the difference. There is fuller warmth from the right tube (not all), especially when you get into the plexi amps. I think both have a place and a purpose. It's why I have both.

  • @CFChristian
    @CFChristian Жыл бұрын

    Hmmm what do you think will happen to a speaker cab UI then? Will it just be represented as waveforms? Kinda weird to consider that!

  • @TheFuzzFunk
    @TheFuzzFunk Жыл бұрын

    Started playing out live again, doing cover gigs, and for the last year I was only using my kemper, and had no complaints about my sound really, outside of inability to quickly add effects or changes on the go, but this last month decided to take the combo amp and board out since my drummer and bass player have real kit and amp and.. I ain’t going back to the kemper or direct in unless the venue is smaller than what we’ve been playing. Having that amp on stage to push air and really feel and hear a secondary sound outside of my in-ears immediately helped me find my feel easier in the mix and be way more confident in my playing. So until I guess I’m playing arenas (hahaha) the amp is coming with me no matter how bad it kills my back.

  • @retroquest3579
    @retroquest3579 Жыл бұрын

    I was drawn away from the big heavy amps back in the early 2k years with the Zoom 9002. I made me sound like an actual rock star and I just couldn't believe how much better it sounded then my Crate and Marshal amps. Here, 23 years later, I still use powered speakers and DSP's like Bias FX2, Polychrome DSP, and the Neural DSP's. I will never go back to just a boring old guitar amp...

  • @channtastic

    @channtastic

    Жыл бұрын

    Your problem was your amp choice.

  • @curtpozzi5527

    @curtpozzi5527

    Жыл бұрын

    I also have a Zoom 9002 I got back in the early 90's. Love to sounds and I still have it. But I love the sound and response of good tube amps. EVH amps definitely do that. But hang on to that Zoom! A little of both worlds is a good thing to have.

  • @woolyfuzzy
    @woolyfuzzy Жыл бұрын

    Rather than die out, I think amps, like the Revv’s, will start to shrink and merge with modellers and effects units. They’ll be the high-end option.

  • @GuitarsAndSynths

    @GuitarsAndSynths

    Жыл бұрын

    correct in fact Diezel new flagship amp the VHX combines tube power amp with digital modelers. Same with Revv amps.

  • @BikesandGuitars
    @BikesandGuitars Жыл бұрын

    Great video man. As an owner of many tube amps I completely agree with what you are saying here. Lately just using my Kemper...

  • @JB_Eckl
    @JB_Eckl Жыл бұрын

    I’m all in on modelers from day one (Amp Farm, 1998), but I have four Boogies in here and MAN are they fun to play. I have a gig on Saturday and it’s Helix for effects, going straight into the front of a California Tweed at ‘pushed clean.’ Sounds like I’m playing through a hunk of butter. Glory hallelujah!

  • @proosow
    @proosow Жыл бұрын

    I tried some of the modeling stuff but found that it’s just not for me. I get analysis paralysis when there are too many options. I can certainly see the benefit of a full modeling board like a helix so you can have preset combinations at the ready. My needs are pretty simple though, and was greatly relieved and much happier going back to a more traditional setup. These days I’m not gigging, so it’s a couple of pedals running into my Bugera V22, which by the way, is one of the best tube amp deals out there. I got mine on sale a few years ago for like $350.

  • @davidririe4111

    @davidririe4111

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel the same. I'm sure there's great plugins that would suit my recording needs but with so many options and sub-options I may as well have no options. I don't like endlessly fiddling with an infinite number of sounds. And just for playing nothing beats the sound in the room of an actual amp and cab.

  • @anti_gravity8446

    @anti_gravity8446

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidririe4111 id say try the neural dsp plugins either the nolly or plini. They are plain simple and easy to dial. Both plugins offer only essential pedals and 4 amps and 4 cabs. Fewer options to deal with.

  • @based_circuit

    @based_circuit

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed man, I started with a helix for my first 3-4 years and I just survived on presets because the choices were too much for a beginner. It wasn’t until I got my first tube amp and pedals where things started immediately clicking for me. Turning actual knobs and patching cables helped me internalize more in a week than what I couldn’t for years. I’m the same way with synthesizers. I live on presets for soft synths but I have a bunch of analog synthesizers when I want to craft a sound. It’s a tactile thing for me. Not that one medium sounds better than the other.

  • @mysweetshadow747
    @mysweetshadow747 Жыл бұрын

    Literally sold all my amps and went to exclusively Headrush about 4 months ago. I was super picky about tone, no regrets here! Makes being my own roadie much easier on the back and it sounds consistently good every time. The options are endless and anything you could need is right there

  • @GuitarsAndSynths

    @GuitarsAndSynths

    Жыл бұрын

    wise choice I can get 90% of tube amp sound with my HX Stomp and Headrush FRFR powered cab. Free software updates get new effects, cabs and amp models as well. I save thousands as get Diezel, ENGL and Friedman sound in one small box. For travel nothing beats it.

  • @KevPezJALP

    @KevPezJALP

    Жыл бұрын

    I love the Headrush. Honestly, if I could play it through a guitar cab, I’d be perfectly content I think. The modelers nail the sound, but it never quite got the feel right for me.

  • @funkster007

    @funkster007

    Жыл бұрын

    I still have a few amps, but I love my Headrush Gigboard. Literally no tone or sound I can't get out of it. Perfect for recording too.

  • @Stratman5150
    @Stratman5150 Жыл бұрын

    I come from the old school age of playing tube amps and cabs. I do get the move to digital though. For those that play live and are using modelers/digitals etc.. I'm curious what you use for monitoring?

  • @262sasquatch
    @262sasquatch Жыл бұрын

    My thoughts on the video: 1. An issue with a digital is the lack of third party repair shops. There are more tube amp repair places vs digital amps. Will this change? Hopefully, because having a digital rig go down or be victim to intruding privacy concerns (quad cortex) will be an issue of urgency to get the unit back up and running without sending it back to the manufacturer. 2. I think for those who want tube amps will use a hybrid method. Tube amp into an IR loader that runs into the mixer (what my band does) 3. I think physical amps will still be around because if not, what are digital amps and artists going to base their tone or ideal tone off of? 4. Having a loud speaker amp sucks at home, but in a venue, there's nothing like the sound of a 4x12 pushing air, even if I'm wearing in ears! 5. Digital amps and plugins are on the technology curve of being obsolete. Example: The first Axe-Fx isn't looked at as amazing anymore, but a relic. While the block letter 5150 from the 90s is still being cloned and copied by digital amp sims and plugins since then.

  • @DadRockAndGuitars
    @DadRockAndGuitars Жыл бұрын

    Digital stuff sounds really really good these days and I use them all the time for practice, songwriting, and recording. But there is something very special about cranking up my tube amp and hearing it (and feeling it) in the room. Digital can not replicate that. I'd guess there are a lot of people these days that don't even know what that's like.

  • @justmehere6094

    @justmehere6094

    Жыл бұрын

    I can crank up my Axe FX into a Matrix SS amp into my Xitone 2x12 and have the same visceral experience.

  • @greatlegioncommander

    @greatlegioncommander

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here, I just cant get the tube sound out of SS/digital.

  • @MorGuitarz

    @MorGuitarz

    Жыл бұрын

    I've got The FX, Helix and a dozen top-notch tube amps, from Friedman to Bogner to Marshalls...and even a PRS HX/DA based on both Jimi's favorite 50w head & Duane Allman's Superbass from Live at The Fillmore. I use the tube amps live and mostly the digital units for rehearsal...and there is NO WAY any digital unit is matching the punch & balls of a real amp pushing air. No way, no how... and if you think your digital unit does, that's more than half the issue right there. Will tube amps be around in 20 years? As long as music isn't homogenized BS there will be

  • @justmehere6094

    @justmehere6094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MorGuitarz Whenever someone makes statements like this, I know for a fact, they haven't actually used a 'digital unit' made for live use. Additionally, I doubt you have EVER tried an Axe FX.

  • @MorGuitarz

    @MorGuitarz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@justmehere6094 LOL... I've owned a few AxeFX units and still have one at our rehearsal space

  • @jeffkellogg76
    @jeffkellogg76 Жыл бұрын

    The ease of transportation and quick setup are definitely advantageous points for the modeling amplification. But there is nothing like an AC/DC wall of Marshalls lining the stage. It’s fucking loud before a chord is struck. That being said, yes my beloved tube amplifiers are going to be vintage collectibles soon. The technology to replicate the tones generated by tubes is very impressive. When I saw Black Sabbath’s THE END tour in 2016 they used a 4/12 on top of a 2/12 cab for a 3/4 stack and ran them across the stage . Definitely downsizing, but the visuals were there. I hate seeing a stage that has no GEAR on it. For show bars that have multiple acts every night , the front of house style does make a lot of sense, but arena rock , NO WAY

  • @therewasascene

    @therewasascene

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s funny, man. I love to ogle gear live - I mean it’s half the enjoyment for me - but shoot if they don’t have anything up there I’m not upset about it. And I love the interaction of gear/the quest for tone and all of that. The difference between our takes on it is intriguing to me. Thanks, YT comments section, for once. :)

  • @woof9408
    @woof9408 Жыл бұрын

    I remember so wanting to get a 5150 or JCM 800 but life just kept me from getting them. Be it cost or living situations, it just never happened. Digital has come very far and I just pulled the trigger on the Quad Cortex. It just make sense for my personal use. Now get me in a room with any of those tube amps I mentioned earlier and cranked up. Oh you betcha I will enjoy the hell outta them!

  • @Hamborghini_1
    @Hamborghini_1Ай бұрын

    So if you were getting started with these new boards Neural, Helix, etc - how would you start? I would love a Quad Cortex eventually but seems like too much rig for me just now. I play in the living room and eventually get to a garage or studio space where i can let it rip but very rare to do that.

  • @treewisemenllc7281
    @treewisemenllc7281 Жыл бұрын

    It's sad they'll never feel the air movement standing in front of a full stack, turned up to kill and rip a few riffs. There is nothing like it.

  • @mojoredfoot

    @mojoredfoot

    Жыл бұрын

    Bingo. It’s not a nostalgia thing. It’s that push

  • @eygerywazzup
    @eygerywazzup Жыл бұрын

    Agreed... Tube amps are somewhat unpractical nowadays. But... If you've never tried a decent one fitting your playing style, whatever it may be, you're missing out on a lot of fun. Most modern tube amps have really well working master volume controls, so there may not be the need for attenuation but of course, they sound best at a certain volume level. Though what really stands out when playing tube amps is the feeling and the emotion you experience when the sound hits you (I got custom ear filters, so I'm not loosing sound quality but keep my ears safe). You can't really get that from digital devices and I own a QC and a helix as well as I've tried lots of other digital stuff. The reaction of the real amp to your picking is just awesome. I still own several tube amps and there are more to come but as initially stated, I completely understand the necessity of traveling light when touring and you get decent tones out of a QC for example which for me comes closest to the real deal... A TUBE AMP!! 😂 🤘🏼

  • @flowride68
    @flowride68 Жыл бұрын

    Dude, I'm 55 and haven't played through a tube amp since 1987 when I bought a GK Stack. I haven't played through an amp since 1995-ish. 99% of my shows are fly gigs and honestly, the Pod Go that fits in my gig bag does just fine to FOH. Even the amps that I look at purchasing now? Solid state things like H&K Black Spirit 200 Floor or Blackstar AMPED 2 and/or 3. You can go direct OR run into the house cab, pack up your 100-200w amp to your gig bag when you're done and go home.

  • @SixStringflyboy
    @SixStringflyboy Жыл бұрын

    Completely agree. Back when I played at church even just a few years ago, I had a Line6 POD HD500 hooked to the church PA via a DI box to the snake. The cab sim and effects were more than enough, no need for an amp at all. I recently bought a Boss Katana for home and it's all I'll ever need, and sounds CRAZY good. So good it's honestly hard to tell it isn't a tube amp. Solid state amps and/or modeling aren't the future. They're the now.

  • @dingalarm

    @dingalarm

    Жыл бұрын

    Can the Katana convincingly replicate the edge-of-breakup and mild overdrive tones of tube amps? 🙂

  • @DweedleDeeDweedleDoo
    @DweedleDeeDweedleDoo Жыл бұрын

    Oddly enough I feel inundated with a resurgence of buzz around tube amps, and it feels great. I'm only 26 and started playing at 10, but I grew up playing a Line 6 Spider (and still do unfortunately, long story) and I have always and will always dream of shelves upon shelves tube amps and a handful of cabinets...

  • @Rrouthmusic
    @Rrouthmusic Жыл бұрын

    I primarily use the axe fx but tube amps to me will always be king. Every time I go back to playing through a physical amp it’s like a breath of fresh air. Digital just doesn’t have the same feel although they definitely are more convenient.

  • @99thunderwolf
    @99thunderwolf Жыл бұрын

    I’ve never used in ears to play, how do you get the “feel” of the amp etc on in ears?? That’s why I’ve never tried them always thought it would feel like playing through a handheld speaker

  • @TheClicheGaming
    @TheClicheGaming Жыл бұрын

    Im 27 and just bought my first Orange Rockerverb stack along with an Orange Cab, definitely a milestone moment in my life. A whole new world , worth every penny.

  • @guidobandito4370
    @guidobandito4370 Жыл бұрын

    Tube amps will never go away. It’s impossible to replicate the feel of tube amps.

  • @mattg082

    @mattg082

    Жыл бұрын

    I’ve recorded even DI with IRs using everything imaginable. Even with headphones and my Sky King amp, which some may think is overkill for a DI writing/recording session…it’s a pretty big difference. 6v6 had a bite to it and smooth mid range, 6L6 has this big warm sound that gets more cracking as you crank and dial the eq back. I’m not really getting that depth even with a Tech 21 amp pedal. But most would argue in a big mix that’s compressed, EQ and all that you wouldn’t notice. I look back at tons of recording with a amp in a box and a tube amp. It def sits different and the tube amp still has a more lively polished sound to me. If you’re playing metal with nothing but gain..it would prob be harder to tell I guess in a mix. In this video he’s taking from a point of touring that many don’t do. For the masses I still think a HRD or Blues JR is cheaper, and better value in the end. Now if we could only get tube amp companies to hold up to higher standards! That’s one thing I feel even the “boutique” ones are not even doing these days. I’ve had a lot of recent tube amps almost all need a tech day one. But for me they are worth it! And I’m fine throwing money at it for upgrades, and upkeep every few years.

  • @thet740
    @thet740 Жыл бұрын

    I think these modelers and simulators can serve as gateways to get players into the sound of tube amps. I started on sims when I came back to playing guitar after many years. After using a bunch of different sims, I realized I love the sound of the Mesa. So, I saved up and got a used Mesa Dual Rec.

  • @MarcusW87

    @MarcusW87

    Жыл бұрын

    I did exactly the same thing, got back into guitar playing after graduating from the military academy and was using amp sims, only to find out I wanted a real 5150. I own a Marshall VS8100, JVM205H and Peavey 5150II now, through a 4x12 with V30’s. All of these amps sound good at reasonable volumes as well.

  • @based_circuit

    @based_circuit

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. I started on a line 6 helix four years ago. The issue for me was that it was option paralysis and as a newbie I had no clue how to adjust pedals/cabs/mics because I’d never used the analog version. I was surviving on presets. It wasn’t until I bought my first cheap $300 orange amp and some pedals that things started clicking. I promptly ordered a Revv 120 and now I can say I’m pretty confident in dialing in a tone I hear in my head.

  • @SnackPackBadHooker
    @SnackPackBadHooker Жыл бұрын

    Juicy topic Fluff! I think in the studio, physical hardware rules breathing unmatched human randomness from being able to really push it (and thus originality) and well, liberty (in that it is decentralized). No worry about software updates, compatibility issues or having your license or "investment" devalued with flash sales; look what Waves tried to do to it's legacy users. Think that won't happen again? I've replaced my computer and interface 5 times? Now I use BURL and very simple robust connection. In 20 years of use, I have never taken my Avalon VT737SP in for repair (which is just one of many examples). From a financial standpoint, software is also a horrible choice for a long term tangible store of value. Look at vintage cars right? They are like art and antiques; iconic piece of culture and history that commands a high price. I mean....anyone who wants to ship me their Rectifier Rev C, I will happily make an "even" swap of my Bogren plug-in for it.... How many flash sales do you see on Friedman heads or any other hardware for trhat matter? 90% off on Pultec EQM-1As or a IC Vac Rack? Let me have it! If you invest in the best tools you can afford, you can also sell them if you run into hard times. On the road, light weight, reliable recall eliminates a tremendous amount of stress but not all stress. It definitely wins though.

  • @Fisch_96
    @Fisch_96 Жыл бұрын

    I bought a Hughes & Kettner grandmaster deluxe 40 and this amp is a Killer. I have two different 112 boxes plugged in, one is more on the treble and the mids and it's a new Box and the other box is from Hughes & Kettner a GL 112 from 1992 with a beautiful sound and massive Bass. I am 26 and I never wanna change that feeling of playing music. It different with headphones on the PC. I play in a Band and there we use two Kemper Amps

  • @Rlyhyne
    @Rlyhyne Жыл бұрын

    I just saw The Gaslight Anthem in Nashville and they had about 12 Amps on stage, and they sounded flawless. to me that’s part of the show I think it depends on what kind of band you’re in.

  • @realgtrhero
    @realgtrhero Жыл бұрын

    I think you’re absolutely right, Fluff. As a guitar player and working audio engineer, a dialed in direct tone with a good speaker impulse is always preferred over a mic and cab. It’s just better. No stage noise. No mic placement issues and FOH appreciates not competing with guitar amps. Add in in ear monitoring and you have a recipe for amazing monitoring and FOH sound. The band and audience both benefit.

  • @assburg

    @assburg

    Жыл бұрын

    Amp sims sound TOO “perfect”. Its cool if you are doing some ultra obnoxious modern metal or pop punk mix, but trying to do anything actually interesting with your guitar tone is almost impossible with any Axe FX dogshit

  • @jarrodwhite3168
    @jarrodwhite3168 Жыл бұрын

    This conversation is the reason I love my Victory V4 Sheriff, a hybrid amp that runs off 1 x EC900 and 3 x CV4014 pre amp tubes, a solid state power amp, and two notes dynIR cab sims for the best of both worlds. Run it through an actual cab and its practically indistinguishable from the full size amp version. Run it DI with the cab sim and sonically its practically indistinguishable from an actual mic’ed cab. You can use headphones for practicing, run DI into an interface for recording, and it fits perfectly on your pedalboard. It’s a perfect win win for me and my rig needs.

  • @zoomzoom3950
    @zoomzoom3950 Жыл бұрын

    I have several rigs to fit the situation. From a Marshall JVM410 full stack to a Marshall Origin 50C to an Engl E651 Artist Edition to digital modelers, plugins and a Line 6 Catalyst 100 + HX-Effects with MIDI control and 4CM. My smallest rig fits in a small lunch box sized case, with wireless, in-ears and a wireless floor controller. I'm waiting for PolyChrome DSP plugin to have full MIDI control; I plan to build a laptop based rig around it with my KMI SoftStep2. My tube amps work great at home too

  • @dickdanson
    @dickdanson Жыл бұрын

    The neural and STL stuff sounds more than good enough for recording. Tube amps are probably less expensive than the modelers you see people using live though these days, so still a good option for that

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