This Amp Is So Loud It's Painful | Vintage 100W Marshall Plexi

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2022
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    Thanks to Ford Fry for letting me borrow this amazing amp. Follow him on instagram @fordfry
    and a MASSIVE thanks to ‪@theBanalBrother‬ for getting me back up and running.
    In this video, we take a closer look at the legendary Marshall Plexi guitar amplifier. Specifically, we're featuring a 1967 Marshall JTM100, also known as the Black Flag.
    As anyone who's played through a Marshall Plexi can attest, these amps are known for their incredible volume and power. And the JTM100 is no exception - it's absolutely deafening! In fact, it's almost as loud as a jet engine.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @RhettShull
    @RhettShull  Год назад +295

    Now I want to mod my Plexi to sound like the old one.

    • @PhilRocks
      @PhilRocks Год назад +2

      How much the vintage one goes for? 🤔

    • @brianpierce6877
      @brianpierce6877 Год назад +1

      Rhett, when you started playing with the db meter on, I got chills

    • @bm7376
      @bm7376 Год назад +8

      I have a 76 100w and the 60's coned greenback cab it came with. The volume stops getting louder before 50% but it just seems to project so much more and fill a room so much more. But I use the marshall powerbrake so I still can hear some.

    • @lucistired
      @lucistired Год назад +8

      @@PhilRocks you can find them for less than $30,000

    • @kapstersmusic
      @kapstersmusic Год назад +3

      Forget using your 100 watt attenuator on those puppies if they are cranking out over 140! I wonder who makes a 150 watt attenuator?

  • @nycshelbygt500
    @nycshelbygt500 Год назад +547

    My Favorite quote from Nick Bowcott, who represented Marshall for years...."If you suck and play through a Marshall Plexi, you will still suck. But you will suck louder and cooler than anyone else on the planet"

    • @louiebee6745
      @louiebee6745 Год назад +6

      GRIM REAPER!!🤘🤘

    • @corneliuscrewe677
      @corneliuscrewe677 Год назад +1

      That’s an awesome quote 😆😆🤘

    • @stevestevens1457
      @stevestevens1457 Год назад +2

      Le wild SLO-100 *appears*

    • @troyjenkins578
      @troyjenkins578 Год назад +9

      Oh that is so awesome and true...lol. If I had the money to buy one of them I would be proud to let everyone in a half mile radius experience how little I know about playing guitar. LOL!!!

    • @texasflood3165
      @texasflood3165 Год назад

      That was me..

  • @LekkerDops
    @LekkerDops Год назад +897

    Notice how we all seem to play differently at massive volumes? All of a sudden you forget how to play, it's intimidating

    • @RhettShull
      @RhettShull  Год назад +315

      It’s legit pretty scary.

    • @onlyfromadistance7326
      @onlyfromadistance7326 Год назад +76

      Im a trucker and only get home about three weeks in the year. This is how i play every time im home. DAMN THE NEIGHBORS.... actually i do stop playing at night.

    • @matthewgonzales3970
      @matthewgonzales3970 Год назад +41

      It did change the way I played. Absolutely. After I got over the SHOCK of playing at high volume, I became much more in tune with my touch on the guitar.

    • @EnigmaEuslam
      @EnigmaEuslam Год назад +69

      I told an old buddy of mine one time, “you gotta practice at gig volumes to really be practicing for the gig!” I got a stern talking too from his wife about that the next time I saw her! 🤣

    • @floridaman7079
      @floridaman7079 Год назад +104

      It's the fear of having everyone on earth hearing you make a mistake

  • @bryanclarke1927
    @bryanclarke1927 Год назад +195

    As someone who gigged a jcm 800 for two decades its an actual art to play these things cranked. The amp and cab become an instrument in themselves

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Год назад +6

      Thats where the magic happens - and the guitar becomes a real beast 🤟

    • @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec
      @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec Год назад +2

      So true. And once you have become accustomed to it, it's frustrating and difficult to go back to anything else!

    • @1sttvbn
      @1sttvbn Год назад +1

      The 800 was another Marshall milestone.

    • @averyadrian1534
      @averyadrian1534 Год назад +3

      They play you at that volume level - nothing is cooler than playing through a 100 watt and a 4 12

    • @bread6085
      @bread6085 Год назад

      Do you have hearing loss? 🤣

  • @arnolddealiii4259
    @arnolddealiii4259 Год назад +62

    To think Clapton at one point had 3 full stacks going along with Jack Bruce who also had 3. One day they were playing so loud Clapton said he quit playing and Ginger Baker quit too, but Jack Bruce couldn’t hear them and anyway so he kept on playing. Clapton said it was that exact moment he knew he didn’t like what they were doing because it was no longer musicians playing together, it was soloist doing their own thing!

    • @jaconova
      @jaconova Год назад +10

      Haha imagine quitting your band with such an excuse: you guys are too loud!

    • @arnolddealiii4259
      @arnolddealiii4259 Год назад +7

      @@jaconova from what I understand Clapton stopped because the volume was so loud it hurt. In his book he claimed he was completely deaf in one ear but he attributed the hearing loss to 80’s synths!

    • @UToobSteak
      @UToobSteak 2 месяца назад

      Look at Angus Young's wall. There are way more than 3

  • @Rainyman63
    @Rainyman63 Год назад +6

    A volume reading of 129dB gives the expression "killer amp" a whole new meaning. If there were any small animals in your basement, they are probably gone by now.

  • @Cajundaddydave
    @Cajundaddydave Год назад +24

    That Marshall "thump" is an iconic piece of the late 60s tone and is still very desirable. A trusted amp tech explained to me that it was a combination of the amp, speaker choice, and cabinet design that worked together to make it happen. Yes 125 db is crazy loud and used to get us kicked out of a lot of clubs back in the 70s. "Turn it down or pack up and go home" was a familiar phrase from bar owners who were attempting to contain the mayhem in their place. EVH chose a variac to lower the source voltage into his Plexi and reduce the volume when his amp was dimed. This science experiment contributed to his brown sound.

  • @mark.guitar
    @mark.guitar Год назад +34

    A plexi through a full stack is something to experience. I had the priviledge of playing through one at a festival in the eighties. It was a once in a lifetime experience... never again...

  • @Gearhart_Music
    @Gearhart_Music Год назад +132

    I had the opportunity to play a large concert venue a few years ago(it was a local event and my singer knows people involved with the venue) and I have to say, I fully understand now why they needed that much power back in the day with so many cabinets and amp heads. It's crazy how sound just disappears in an outdoor venue. Also I'm used to only needing 20 feet of cable at any given time. But I found myself reaching the end of my cable rather quickly and I still had another 30 feet of stage in front of me. It was nuts!

    • @schmoemi3386
      @schmoemi3386 Год назад +3

      Thank God we have wireless today 😅😅

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 Год назад +1

      I only got to crank mine at a farm house, but your right. I can't imagine playing through a wall of them.

    • @adrianguggisberg3656
      @adrianguggisberg3656 Год назад

      Transmitters are your friends my friend.

    • @localbod
      @localbod Год назад +3

      @@schmoemi3386 Angus Young was using wireless back in the late 70s.

    • @reykas1000
      @reykas1000 Год назад

      Tantos geniales músicos con daño auditivo severo, a cuidarse los oídos muchachas y muchachos!

  • @imacmadman22
    @imacmadman22 Год назад +35

    I've watched Navy fighter jets (F-14, F-18, EA-6B & F-4 Phantoms) take off and land on aircraft carriers, I saw Deep Purple in concert, I've played my Fender Bassman 50 watt amp at full volume. I know loud and there is nothing quite like 100 Watt Marshall amp at full volume and yes, I've done that too. What made this video for me was that you played "Ten Years Gone" my favorite Jimmy Page riff of all. Great video, Rhett!

    • @thomasvincennie3910
      @thomasvincennie3910 Год назад

      If you ever heard a F-35 that would be next level - much louder than almost any other jet....I have been on the ground at the local airshow a few times and seen and heard plenty of jets - the warnings over the public address system in advance of the F-35 went on for an hour warning that it was much louder than the other jets - this monster shook the ground like nothing else.....

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 6 месяцев назад

      I worked on Navy aircraft, and with double hearing protection, they are almost unbearable. I have a plexi now, and it can get loud as hell, but no comparison. Maybe if the jet engine was at low power.

  • @herringbone72
    @herringbone72 Год назад +36

    That Plexi and that Lester were made for each other. Insane tone man. Love it.

  • @zeroboyrick1717
    @zeroboyrick1717 Год назад +65

    Once again Rhett not afraid to play iconic songs so we can compare the sound of the amp in context to these songs we all know and love. Cudos.

  • @Phil_Hayes
    @Phil_Hayes Год назад +23

    These old Marshall was great when I was 14 in 1974! However, my ears were fried by the time I was 16. The wind that this would push was like no other. Great Video Rhett nonetheless! Brings me back to the 70’s and the great times I had! Thanks for a stroll down memory lane!

  • @Paul_Lenard_Ewing
    @Paul_Lenard_Ewing Год назад +36

    In '71 I played one every day for about 3 months that I rented while playing in London UK's West End clubs in the Prog band Tallis. They really are too loud, lol. So, I bought the 50 watt. Two less EL34 's and much more gainy with better sustain. Still too loud. I now use a antinuator and keep it at 95dB. Since you asked I'm 75 :-)

    • @50Something
      @50Something Год назад +1

      It's cool that you still own the amp!

  • @danepaulstewart8464
    @danepaulstewart8464 Год назад +45

    The Ghosting is TOTALLY INTEGRAL to the Marshal sound generated by those few amps.
    I remember being in my studio and having one of those AND a Fender Bassman AND a Jazz Chorus AND a big Peavy monster all being fed AT THE SAME TIME from a servo-driven splitter, each mic’d up for blending.
    Walking in the room was SCARY because you could feel all that electrical potential in the air!
    Fook yeah those were the best sessions ever.
    🤘😆🤘
    And that’s why we love them!

    • @martinpickr9582
      @martinpickr9582 Год назад +4

      Where may I hear the recordings

    • @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec
      @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec Год назад

      Love that aspect of a Marshall. Gives it so much character.

    • @siriplaydopethrone8973
      @siriplaydopethrone8973 Год назад

      I just realized my Marshall 3310 is ghosting at high volumes even tho it's a Mosfet amplifier. It's kind of annoying honestly😢

  • @jeremywilliams703
    @jeremywilliams703 Год назад +10

    I was poor as a kid. I made my first guitar amps out of old valve radios or record player amp-sections. My first real valve amp was a SoundCity 120R, circa 1975. It sounded sublime, amazing, it really moved me, literally, when played through a quad-four cab. I owned that for about 30 years and sold it because it was just too heavy to lift. Over all those years I never got to gig with that amp in the sweet spot. It was just too darn loud. I miss the sound of my SG with humbuckers playing AC/DC, The Sweet and Bad Company etc. LOUD, man. ✌️❤️🙏🇦🇺

  • @matthewgonzales3970
    @matthewgonzales3970 Год назад +17

    Even with a master volume, my '72 100 Watt was brutal in small venues. I loved it, and a few soundmen who knew what they were doing would tell me to open up. LOL
    It was GLORIOUS!

  • @JonTorrence
    @JonTorrence Год назад +46

    This video was SO cool. I definitely know that intangible percussive “thud” you’re talking about. It’s incredible when I think of what my Dad and his band played through in the 70’s, when they had no idea how much meaning it would have 50 years later!!

    • @rustymacneil3227
      @rustymacneil3227 Год назад +11

      Having started in the late 60's as a drummer and playing with these either in my right or left ear for 5yrs, my standard answer for how loud they were, " WHAT" ????

  • @kellyswoodyard
    @kellyswoodyard Год назад +26

    When Richie Blackmore toured Australia with Rainbow, way back when, I worked for the concert hire company who provided pretty much everything for the Perth gig. 4 x 100 watt heads, and 8 x quads. One of the guys I worked with is a good guitarist, and he put his 335 onto this monstrosity, down in the workshop. It is something I'll never forget. You felt this thing in your soul. No hearing protection in those days, balls to the wall. I also worked for Rose Tattoo and AC/DC as audio crew, Marshall's everywhere. Yeah, I know what a Marshall can do.

    • @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec
      @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec Год назад +1

      Oh yeah! I saw Richie with Deep Purple back in the early 80's in Melbourne. He was so overwhelmingly loud it felt like putting your head in a vise. But damn, it was so good!

    • @SynZ777
      @SynZ777 Год назад

      Angus eats Plexis for breakfast... almost literally lol. He goes through them like a pair of shoes.

    • @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec
      @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec Год назад

      @@SynZ777 Happens when you are so short, he needs to take longer steps so he doesn't wear them out so fast.

    • @jamesnewlyn1803
      @jamesnewlyn1803 10 месяцев назад +1

      Actually, Blackmore used the Marshall Majors. They were 200W heads.

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 6 месяцев назад

      One in your house is as loud.

  • @jeffjfindley4802
    @jeffjfindley4802 Год назад +3

    There's no way to understand that kind of raw power without experiencing it, like getting kicked in the chest by a bronco. Insane. Love your work as always!

  • @artreno5135
    @artreno5135 Год назад +9

    There were so many great guitarists using multiple Marshall Plexi Heads and cabs … my favorite album covers featured that look .. Cream Live Vol. 2 , Rush All The World’s A Stage , and so many others .. just made you want to crank it up and ROCK !!!!

  • @Danilo8208SS
    @Danilo8208SS Год назад +6

    I owned a 1969 Plexi for a while. I never cranked it once while I owned it because it was like an ice pick to the ear but in a good way. My amp tech told me it was one of the ones that had the “wrong” resistor in it somewhere that made it super bright. I guess it was a common mistake that produced the best Marshalls.
    The day I sold it, I decided I HAD to experience that amp at 10. I was not prepared for how unbelievably loud it would be. I think I got to 4 or 5 before I tapped out. I didn’t have earmuffs so I was trying to raw dog a super lead 100. Either way, it was an awesome experience to blast that thing at least once.

  • @robinjgill
    @robinjgill Год назад +7

    Rhett's LZ repertoire through a vintage Plexi. Sounds great. Loved this video.
    I have to thank you Rhett for getting me into fuzz. Since your video on 5 different fuzzes my pedalboard has shrunk considerably because instead of drives I just use a fuzz face and a boost and it sounds killer.

  • @1Rockstok
    @1Rockstok Год назад +6

    I had both 100 watt and a 50 watt Plexi in the early 70s, along with a top “metal handle “ slant cab, a bottom plastic handle cab AND an 8-10” cabinet. They were in the shop ALL the time. Speakers in the 8-10” blew a lot. Repairs were tough to pay for in my teens and early 20s. I was never sure what impedance to set them on. The music changed and I got rid of all of them a got a Peavey Vintage 4-10”. That amp was bullet prof.

  • @ronswinford4952
    @ronswinford4952 Год назад +8

    The part where you are talking to the amp is hilarious, because everyone can relate to doing something like that when we have run out of options for the day. Good vid, and hope you and Tilly and the entire family have a great Christmas, once you get the amp fixed again that is.

  • @Liam_Sims
    @Liam_Sims Год назад +3

    i absolutely loved the addition of Twice as Hard by the Black Crowes when you were riffing, that was actually the first riff i ever learned 5 years ago. Extremely nostalgic for me, so thanks for that :D

  • @dennismcmahan632
    @dennismcmahan632 Год назад +2

    Agree with your evaluation the older Marshall had that bottom end that was sweeter and can’t know that until you put them side by side. Great video!

  • @richarderiksen5210
    @richarderiksen5210 Год назад +1

    You are extremely correct.
    As A drummer I love this amp. It cuts through everything. Great job.

  • @cdbrown30
    @cdbrown30 Год назад +3

    Good video Rhett! The more I understand about amps the more easier to choose what amp actually suits my playing needs or whatever.

  • @OldStreetDoc
    @OldStreetDoc Год назад +4

    I’ve never owned one of the big Marshall heads or cabs. Only a couple of smaller Marshall practice amps. I’ve played a few times on a vintage Marshall that a buddy owns though. He’s always described vintage Marshalls as being “like a family member. They’re lovely and important to you. Your memories are filled with the experiences you have shared with them, as well as with all the things you’ve learned & discovered together. Being like family… you LOVE them & can’t imagine one day not having them in your life. And like family… sometimes they also make you angry as all get out & wanting to toss them in a wood chipper.”
    Still though… we all want one. And if we have one… we likely want another.

  • @jamesgrobertson8024
    @jamesgrobertson8024 Год назад +2

    Superb test dude, well done & great playing as always

  • @j.f.brunet6218
    @j.f.brunet6218 Год назад

    Great, great, GREAT video Rhett. I’m a Marshall guy, I own a few. Your qualitative descriptors are so well chosen, they articulate the sound you hear and feel so well, that I could’ve watched the video without sound, with closed caption of your description, and I would’ve understood the sound. The video sounds don’t do the amps 100% justice, but your description does. Well done.

  • @rudolphpyatt4833
    @rudolphpyatt4833 Год назад +9

    Listening to live Cream recordings you can feel the Marshall power.

    • @gregdolecki8530
      @gregdolecki8530 2 месяца назад +1

      and hear the power tube compression.

  • @bluzzjazz
    @bluzzjazz Год назад +7

    I played through a 70s Ampeg V4 w/4x12s and imagine it was similar to the Marshall experience. Such a glorious sounding amp.

    • @CatDieselPwr
      @CatDieselPwr Год назад

      Love the sound of those old Ampeg's. I have the old Gemini20 combo that has two 6L6GC's and is only a 2x10 but it is friggin' loud! And sounds amazing with its' Baxandahl eq. Takes pedals fantastic and has lots of harmonic magic.
      A great example of those old Ampeg's is The Rolling Stones concert footage on here from Texas 1972. With Mick Taylor doing "Dead Flowers" and "All Down The Line". Sounds absolutely killer. Both Mick and Keef rocking them.

  • @caramanico1
    @caramanico1 Год назад +7

    LOVE Marshalls - owned a half stack and a gorgeous '05 Les Paul before life intervened... One of the craziest things from back in the day - big fan of Deep Purple, saw their reunion tour in 1985. Great show. However... it was so loud at times that I actually could not make out what they were playing! Seriously, at those times it was just a tidal wave of incoherent sound crushing me. My buddy sitting next to me tore the filters off a couple of cigarettes and - with trembling hands - stuffed them into his ears.

  • @bjhale542
    @bjhale542 Год назад +1

    I played a half stack in small venues all throughout my time of playing out alongside a loud as hell drummer, but we consciously asserted our dynamics. I had to play the amp to the room, in the band context, sometimes with poor or no in house sound. House shows were the best.There was a distinct, resounding punch in the chest, kicking with percussive elements permeated all around, a fantastic vibration standing with that cab leveraged squarely behind...a synergy achieved alongside the fantastic beings I loved creating music with. I only wish I had savored those moments more carefully. I still play through these leviathans. Though not as loud composing and writing from home. Great video. 4x12 cabs, yes please. Merry Christmas!

  • @Bloodbvzzed
    @Bloodbvzzed Год назад +3

    I once played a gig with a 100w marshall jcm900 and an ac30, both completely dimed at full volume. One of the most insane sounds I’ve ever heard, couldn’t hear correctly for a week.

  • @seanbaines
    @seanbaines Год назад +49

    144 watts. I like how he said every Marshall 100 watt they test comes in at at least 140. And Jim Marshall used to soup up the ones he built for Ritchie Blackmore! How Deep Purple didn't blow people out through the back walls of auditoriums, I have no idea. :)

    • @sohamsarker
      @sohamsarker Год назад +7

      Well they were the guiness loudest band in the world for a reason.🤣🤣🤣🤣 I believe people did pass out at some of their concerts. But what's really something that never gets talked about are Cream gigs, I believe they were some of the first groups to crank up Marshall Amps that too in small clubs. I can only imagine what each of those 100W stacks must've sounded like.

    • @ilmisxx2
      @ilmisxx2 Год назад +7

      Well, its's peak power for very short amount of time. Also amp wattage doest not equal volume, speaker efficiency is a much bigger factor to how loud it is. Wattage is more of an indicator to clean headroom than anything

    • @funkster007
      @funkster007 Год назад +6

      @@sohamsarker The Who were up there on the deaf-o-meter as well. I think Townshend was JM's first 100w client.

    • @misterknightowlandco
      @misterknightowlandco Год назад +9

      You guys have to remember that they had to do this because PA systems were such crap that without the stacks a stadium of people couldn’t hear the guitar.

    • @jeremywilliams703
      @jeremywilliams703 Год назад +9

      I saw Deep Purple at Festival Hall in Melbourne, Australia, some time back in the 70’s. My ears are still ringing. ✌️❤️🙏🇦🇺

  • @CompletePandemonium
    @CompletePandemonium Год назад

    Much love for the non master volume Marshall goodness. I don't get to crank up my 1987x as often these days but when I do it is absolutely glorious.
    Hope you can get your 1959hw to give you that thump you're looking for. It is magic when it happens.

  • @roncarter2188
    @roncarter2188 Год назад +1

    I played my 1973 100 watt super bass this morning and those old Marshall amps the real deal. So now you have christened your new up-and-coming studio.

  • @krisbeck319
    @krisbeck319 Год назад +71

    I have seen lots of people play a "real plexi" for the first time and its amazing how many will default to a Zeppelin riff. I have noticed you also use Slave which is one of my own go to test riffs. Nice stuff Rhett.

    • @jaconova
      @jaconova Год назад +1

      Probably because to get a shreddy sound you would need more gain (overdrive pedal, ala Yngwie), so you gotta play hard rock/clean stuff. If you try to play Yngwie or EVH with the amp's distortion you would fail miserably.

    • @ltxr9973
      @ltxr9973 Год назад +3

      @@jaconova A cranked 100W plexi (at least the standard one, not sure about the black flag) should do EVH just well. His plexi wasn't nearly as heavily modified as the rumors in the earlier years said. And I think Van Halen II was just a stock plexi anyway. But if you wanted more gain than that you'd probably need a tubescreamer or something, yeah. With a master volume model just having a Super Distortion (or similar) pickup can yield you at least a nice rhythm tone. I never tried the X2N but the levels of distortion it gets you even without a pedal must be insane.

    • @Rainyman63
      @Rainyman63 Год назад +3

      A lot of Page's riffs are about dynamics. There often is a clean, folk-y verse and a barking blues-y chorus. If you want to know how a dimed amp reacts to the volume pots of the guitar or your picking, they are incredible fun to play.

  • @brutalslam8443
    @brutalslam8443 Год назад +3

    This was really cool. Loved hearing the playthroughs and your impressions of the amps. I also thought the vintage Marshall superior.

  • @jimmyc5498
    @jimmyc5498 Год назад +1

    Nice vid. Toured with early 70s 100w and 4x12, then 1959slp reissue. These are a beast wide open but very directional so you can find a sweet spot on larger stages, small clubs you’re on everybody’s death list, especially house engineer. A Two Note (20db)drop with boss DS1 into the front end is a great option. Good luck with the studio!

  • @tyleraguilarphotography
    @tyleraguilarphotography Год назад +2

    Loved the “Twice as Hard” style riff at 6:12. Awesome video!

  • @lynncowden5740
    @lynncowden5740 Год назад +4

    The magic of the originals of that era were in the massive volume they kicked out. It wasn't just the head, it was the head/speaker/volume combination that kicked it into over drive. I grew up playing guitar in the 60's/70's and owned a number of what are now vintage amps. These smaller amps, with all their high tech gizmo's installed, just can't get it. What does get it is MASSIVE VOLUME where the speakers are pumping hard enough to do CPR with.

  • @lanceconnolly3954
    @lanceconnolly3954 Год назад +4

    I had one and played a 61 Les Paul (SG Style) and gigged with it regularly. 100 watt top and 2 4x12 celestions bottoms (greenbacks). IT WAS LOUD but beautiful!!

  • @TRCGA
    @TRCGA Год назад +2

    shoutout Acorn! I live across the street and have been super rad when I've needed last minute repairs

  • @zzettecarla
    @zzettecarla Год назад

    One of your most enjoyable videos. Oh brother, that 144W Black Flag Marshall really does go to 11! Also, so sweet of you to give a pep talk to the amp. Hilarious Rhett! Merry Christmas to you and the Mrs.!

  • @runabout76
    @runabout76 Год назад +3

    Love the sound of old Marshalls. I've had several 2203/4 models over the years and also a 1959RR and 1987X. The 1959RR I had tested by my amp tech, full output was 219watts. Absolutely punishingly loud.

  • @sambochen2010
    @sambochen2010 Год назад +4

    Wow, Good Times Bad Times, Ten Years Gone, and In My Time Of Dying on 1 single video? Rhett knows Zep is perfect for bringing out the best in vintage Marshalls. 👏

    • @MuneebChiken
      @MuneebChiken Год назад +1

      Isn't that hard to handle by black crowes right? Not in my time of dying

  • @stuartkenney5455
    @stuartkenney5455 Год назад

    Hello Rhett - been following you for a while now, and I have to say - that I really like how you go in depth, and really provide a nice/clear explanation of whatever it is you are trying to relay out to "us" your youtube audience. I've been hacking at guitar since I was 12, and now at 61 - still as interested in guitar as I ever have been, but just don't have time to devote to it since I'm not a professional muscian like yourself. So, all that to say I appreciate all that you have shared.....and, I wish you a very Happy/safe upcoming New Years!!!

  • @FuzzImp
    @FuzzImp Год назад

    This is something I’m getting into. Going to build a bunch of my own Marshall’s this year. It’s truly amazing how right they got it that long ago

  • @kennethday9747
    @kennethday9747 Год назад +4

    Best clean sounds ever ! Better than any fender clean.

  • @jean-philippemorin1176
    @jean-philippemorin1176 Год назад +7

    What every guy does when the girlfriend and family is gone for errands, grocery, shopping etc and your alone at the house? Crank that marshall until the walls shake! :D

  • @canigetachannel
    @canigetachannel Год назад

    This is a really good video !
    Thanks Rhett !
    Peace !

  • @SurfZep
    @SurfZep Год назад

    You’re just like me, incredible gear, incredible opportunities, however we just do what we do. Life rolls on. Awesome video! What an opportunity! Keep it up! Love❤

  • @amalgamaudioLV
    @amalgamaudioLV Год назад +3

    It's called a 100W amp, but it actually puts out close to 200W cranked, at least the later ones with more filtering. And, wow, a black flag - love the tones and playing!

  • @youropionmattersnot
    @youropionmattersnot Год назад +3

    So glad you went to Acorn. Those guys are great! Need tube amp work near Decatur GA.? Acorn amps all day.

  • @doc_matter
    @doc_matter Год назад

    been waiting for this video!!

  • @pyroman6000
    @pyroman6000 Год назад +6

    Makes sense, Guys like Pete Townshend were always after Jim Marshall to make it louder. So, these were designed to be as LOUD as possible. I always wondered how the hell guys could stand to be that close to them- cranked wide open- night after night... No wonder so many of them can't hear shit today, lol.
    Thanks for making this! Sounded great, and it was awesome just to see the look on your face while you played through it. It's cool to experience what different animals amps become when you push them hard.

  • @formulajoe2
    @formulajoe2 Год назад +21

    The black flag is a more of a bass circuit like the JTM45 and 45/100. Less filtering than the 68 lead circuit and also shared cathodes on V1 like the JTM45. It’s really a transition between the JTM45 and what would become the Super Lead. Super cool amp!

    • @mykelc205
      @mykelc205 Год назад

      Yep. Love bass over lead.

    • @666kty3
      @666kty3 Год назад

      THAT SO FULL OF MISINFORMATION ITS NOT EVEN FUNNY.

    • @kevinwagner8497
      @kevinwagner8497 Год назад +1

      @@666kty3 ok so what is the circuit like then? if the above is "so full of misinformation" please correct.

  • @jasonrogers7318
    @jasonrogers7318 Год назад

    Great 👍 video Rhett! Happy holidays man. Cheers 🍻

  • @keenanpage9790
    @keenanpage9790 Год назад +1

    Just a perfect example of why they call it the Plexi even at full volume still so clean!!! 🤘🏾🤘🏾

  • @Shiznitt_
    @Shiznitt_ Год назад +4

    🤘the sound of rock and roll

  • @PhilipReevesMusic
    @PhilipReevesMusic Год назад +5

    I used to gig with an early 1970's Marshall 100 watt ... with volume on 4 had a great tone with punch and edge of crunch. Very loud. At club gigs, I used 1/2 stack with cab turned to face wall and covered with heavy blanket. Loudest I ever played it was on 6 with full stack which had the famous crunch full tilt at an outdoor gig. The police arrived and said they could hear the guitar from a mile away.

  • @bradh6185
    @bradh6185 Год назад +2

    I watched a great documentary on the Marshall amp the other day. The objective was to make the guitar loud enough that the drums didn't drown it out. This was back when the main purpose of a PA was to amplify the vocals. Fascinating stuff.

  • @JB-cx4bn
    @JB-cx4bn Год назад

    Great video, Rhett. Thanks.

  • @glennjames7107
    @glennjames7107 Год назад +11

    Imagine what it must feel like to be Jimmy Page, or Angus playing in front of a wall of these (and yes, i know Angus isn't dime-ing his amps, but he's got'em close enough), except theirs are a wall of full stacks !
    Of course for those two legends (and many others) it's just another day at the office. But it's not hard to understand why they have that look on their faces while hammering out a killer riff, like they are way above you mere mortals. Because of course that must be what it feels like to unleash such amazing, powerful sounds, capable of instantaneously melting the faces off of people !!!

  • @ricknagy1639
    @ricknagy1639 Год назад +5

    When I worked at a guitar store a customer brought in TWO full Plexi stacks for inspection. We cranked these after closing for the day and it's as close to a religious experience as I've ever had.

  • @donaldsmith188
    @donaldsmith188 Год назад

    When we used the loud amps like this, the PA was just for singers. No one mic'd the amplifiers. Outdoor shows is where the babies shine.
    Awesome video

  • @lexcallahan3055
    @lexcallahan3055 Год назад

    This was actually really cool to see! Also love to hear the 10 Years Gone

  • @luckyjak117
    @luckyjak117 Год назад +4

    Gotta love that sound tho

  • @matthewf1979
    @matthewf1979 Год назад +5

    If you want some speakers that absolutely nail the vintage Pulsonic cone Greenback tone, the Mojotone BV-25M-SP is it!
    Fantastic right out of the box. I bet Mojotone will sponsor a set.
    Vintage Marshall's used linear taper pots. Hence the sensitivity. It makes a huge difference to our ears. Electrically, it's the same, just at different points in the sweep.

  • @roxtar38
    @roxtar38 Год назад +1

    It cracks me up when one goes to see a local cover/bar band and the guitarist has this or a similar 100w/412 set up (mic'd). I had "heartbeat tinnitus" for a couple of years after such an experience. Now I always take earplugs. That sound is killer.

  • @SabreAce33
    @SabreAce33 Год назад

    Thanks for the awesome text description of ghosting. I could clearly hear it, but the text helped me be certain I was hearing what you you were referring to.

  • @gotta56forme
    @gotta56forme Год назад +4

    Enjoyed the vid, and have a question... the amp tech was powering it at 121-122v. I find they sound better (more musical) if powered down at around 110v (their original design voltage). Rhett: Do you use any voltage correction when powering vintage amps? I find my Marshall, my plexi clone, and even a recent made AC15 sound better at lowered voltages. I'm not browning really low like EVH, just trying to get to design voltage. Keep the vids coming...

    • @verjason
      @verjason Год назад

      Marshall, being an English brand, would have been built for 240 volts?

    • @jamescornett6477
      @jamescornett6477 Год назад

      @@verjason Yes. ;-)

    • @gotta56forme
      @gotta56forme Год назад

      It's too much to write here but wall voltage increases occurred in both the US, and Great Britian over the passage of time, due to improvements and standardizations in power generation. Google searches show Britian went to 240v in the 70's, and it had been 220v before. The US went from 110 to 120 in a few different stages. Actually, wall voltages in the US can vary - 120 is not a guarantee. My house is generally 121-123vac. I've seen it has high as 125vac. A friend's home ranges from 126-128vac. A local practice space I was recently at was only 119vac.

    • @JimmyDevere
      @JimmyDevere Год назад

      Yes he should have lowered the voltage to 110. Likely the tubes were biased at a lower voltage and when he went home at 120 or 125v AC he redplated the tubes do to the higher bias values.

  • @fuzzingthewah
    @fuzzingthewah Год назад +4

    Like you said, how these guys back in the ‘60s - Clapton, Hendrix, etc. - used one or several cranked Marshall full-stacks on stage without any sort of hearing protection is insane. I’m not sure how they had any hearing left whatsoever, especially after continued and prolonged exposure.

    • @musicplaylists59
      @musicplaylists59 Год назад +1

      well apparently Hendrix had a hearing test at one point and they found he was almost completely deaf in one ear by then.

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Год назад

      @@musicplaylists59 Theres no logic in this - if it were due to the exposure to the volume of sound, both his ears would be shot. I know of many young people who suddenly lost hearing in one ear with no clear reason...

    • @musicplaylists59
      @musicplaylists59 Год назад

      @@tomasvanecek8626 well for some reason all the musicians i know who have hearing loss from loud volumes have it worse in one ear than the other, including myself haha (i blame the layout of the practice room with a band i was in about 10 years ago, our other guitarist's extremely loud amp was always pointed straight at one side of my head, and we used to practice really loud). im not saying that loud volume is definitely the cause of Hendrix's hearing problems though, but it cant have helped haha.

    • @tomasvanecek8626
      @tomasvanecek8626 Год назад

      @@musicplaylists59 I lost my hearing (only bass frequencies left) on left ear suddenly in 1987.. the one that was close to a cymbal in a small rehearsal room.. But the right one still had excellent score on audiogram - go figure ... Thats why I dont think it was loud music related, you know ? If the other ear was at least a bit shot, I´d understand it - but not this way.. My GF at that time had the same problem - and she never listened to loud music 🤪

  • @musicplaylists59
    @musicplaylists59 Год назад +2

    my favourite sound in this video was the clean tone with the strat playing Angel, those old Marshall JTM's with loads of bass and great clean tone are perfect for getting the Hendrix style strat tone where its clear but thick and not all brittle and thin like a lot of peoples strat tones

  • @bulletproofzest
    @bulletproofzest Год назад +2

    That kick is one of the reasons I’ve had a long love affair with higher wattage amps. Definitely love lower wattage stuff too, but my current gig favorites, the V4 & 2466, both have it in spades and they’re insanely fun to play.

  • @ColinDaviesGTR
    @ColinDaviesGTR Год назад +3

    One thing about vintage amps is how unforgiving they are. They give you nothing more than you put in.

  • @williamreedy3350
    @williamreedy3350 Год назад +8

    As an old analog sound man, I hated loud amps. There would be times when the amps were so loud coming off the stage I could not get a good balance between vocals and instruments. I even got fired for unplugging a bass players second stack after the sound check and before the performance. My goal was to make the band sound good despite the band members egos. I would tell all musicians get the tone you want at the lowest volume and let the PA and sound man do the rest😉

    • @3rdStoreyChemist
      @3rdStoreyChemist Год назад

      It’s not particularly difficult to make it work. Just if the guitarists and bassist want to be -that- loud: 1) get a loud drummer. 2) position the amps properly so they can hear them, not stood over them or off to the side and turning them up or adding silly amounts of bass or treble because they can’t hear it properly. 3) all the mids that Internet forums tell you to not turn down, that’s getting in the way of the singer, save all that for solos as that’s why boost pedals and Tubescreamers exist.
      Your job as sound engineer is then piss easy for the night and only reacting to changes in the acoustic volume. Getting a guitarist to turn down a mediocre tone is only going to make it worse, then you’ve got to get that to sound decent and try to get it to balance with the rest of what is probably a total mess to start with. Never experienced a decent engineer wanting a decent guitar sound turned down, unless it is genuinely silly as the work is already done.
      Forgot to add 4). No guitars in the monitors for anyone, if the band can’t hear loud guitar amps, there is clearly an issue and turning up more stuff isn’t the solution.

  • @leel3813
    @leel3813 Год назад

    Great video. Nothing like experiencing VOLUME. Several years playing loud late 60s and 70s not taking precautions - yep, I have tinnitus

  • @brucekagan1810
    @brucekagan1810 Год назад +1

    Thank you! I used to work at a high end guitar parlour in Hell-A. One day I was asked to demo a vintage 100 watt super Tremelo vs a Bogner Shiva. Both into the vintage 4x12 that the super came with. Now the Shiva is a fabulous amp, but the Super was the best thing I've ever been lucky enough to play through. It's a real "macho" sound and feel, quite visceral. But yeah, it was loud enough to kill birds, but boy oh boy what an absolute rush.

  • @LiamNashMiller
    @LiamNashMiller Год назад +13

    Early Squad.

  • @everonlyallforthee
    @everonlyallforthee Год назад +1

    The THUD. Standing in front of a Marshall and getting the thud in your chest is such a great feeling. Even happens on high notes. If the cab is transparent enough to see the speakers, you can watch them twitch on the transient of every note. It makes you feel powerful haha.

  • @chad6284
    @chad6284 Год назад

    This is exactly the kind of video I want for Christmas!

  • @glennw3909
    @glennw3909 Год назад

    Rhett’s monologue to the amp. 😂 love it. Side note, I still use your Mythos ‘The Lark’ pedal, and love it. Merry Christmas!

  • @billylindsay5712
    @billylindsay5712 Год назад +1

    In the seventies when I still lived in the UK I owned several Marshall amps (not all at the same time), a 50W, a couple of 100W and a 100W bass, I played bars and clubs and I had the volume set at 6, I felt that was the sweet spot for me, I used 2 cabinets, a Marshall Slant 4x12 and an open back Vox 2x12. For a long time I used no pedals but eventually got a Morley Wah/Vol. I loved my marshalls and I used to lug them around in an old Ford Escort, the 4x12 fit in the trunk the 2x12 and amp in the back seat area and the guitar in the passenger seat.

  • @johnhuffman2993
    @johnhuffman2993 Год назад

    Between you and Beato I am such a fan!!

  • @SpecialTaco9
    @SpecialTaco9 Год назад +2

    Another Painfully Loud amp thats quite underrated, the Gibson GA-30RVS. I never see anybody talk about it and its one of my favorite combos.

  • @harshtruth9148
    @harshtruth9148 Год назад +1

    Rhett your videos and personality are shining through better and better each one. lol

  • @vintagetone22
    @vintagetone22 Год назад +1

    Bro in the 70s they needed these amps to be heard.nowdays 1 watts is enough anywhere.but if the speakers dont make winds.thats not rock and roll you have to feel your heart coming out from your chest .heck yeahhhhh.🎸🎸🎸🔥🎸🎸🔥🔥🔥

  • @joebro77
    @joebro77 Год назад +2

    I agree with that unique low end percussive thud. I only have an Engl Rock 20w combo, but with a Les Paul, a Plexitone pedal, a Klon Clone or Tubescreamer as boost only and a Wampler Compressor can reproduce that at acceptable noise levels of around 90-100db. I can only imagine what the real deal in room sound experience is, but I can fully relate to how you describe this unique punch

  • @chrisstratton987
    @chrisstratton987 Год назад

    fond memories of my ampeg 100w amp. so loud it sent my effects pedals dancing across the floor from the vibration. no greater therapy session.

  • @58BURST
    @58BURST Год назад

    Great video Rhett. Just wanted to add, that the DB level difference between those old 100 and 50 watters, was actually very minimal. In the single digit range. I'm 62, retired from professional gigging, and let my last old 50 watter go about 7 years ago. It hadn't been practical to gig with since the early 80's anyway, but there's sure nothing like the feel, and sound of one punching you in your back! 🎸

  • @jloewenheim
    @jloewenheim Год назад

    Great Vid Rhett!

  • @fuujinmugen
    @fuujinmugen Год назад

    Nicely done Rhett 🤘😎

  • @lowqualityguitarvideos
    @lowqualityguitarvideos Год назад

    Great video Rhett.

  • @chrisshaw6451
    @chrisshaw6451 Год назад +1

    I can remember going to see live bands in the seventies, Zep, the Who, Purple, Sabbath, Free, etc.. etc.. When we were on our way home after, everything in the outside world seemed REALLY quiet, and our conversations consisted of four or so people yelling really loudly at each other, lol! Glory days man, glory days! 👍❤️

  • @eddieholmes3236
    @eddieholmes3236 Год назад +1

    Great job Rhett. Really interesting to see it opened up. If folks are interested in vintage Marshalls please check on John Segeborn. He is *the* king! Happy holidays.