A Les Paul, 2 Marshall amps, 4 Marshall cabinets is the part of a well-balanced breakfast.
@Phoebedumplings5 жыл бұрын
The. Cornerstone of a nutritious breakfast, big kahuna!!
@racpa55 жыл бұрын
I’m not a big Les Paul fan, but dang, that sounded awesome.
@danrebeiz45985 жыл бұрын
One of the most full-bodied guitar sounds you’ll ever get is from that guitar/amp combo.
@phylliscuster10145 жыл бұрын
Boydstun,yes! That needs to be on a t-shirt or something!
@guitarplayer28465 жыл бұрын
After 33 years of playing guitar and hauling around a big ol JCM 800 head and 4x12 to and from gigs, some Marshall engineers built my dream rig. It's 5 watt head, a pair of cabs with Celestions, and they branded it Blackstar. It sounds fantastic and I use it every day.
@simonegatta91315 жыл бұрын
"If you want to move people you have to move air and what better way to do that then 200 watts of power and 16 4x12" The perfect recipe and one of the best quote of Rick
@RickBeato5 жыл бұрын
Totally improvised line :)
@time4anew15 жыл бұрын
Quote of the week, if not the month.
@greenchilaquiles5 жыл бұрын
16 x 4 = 64. That's a big ass wall of Marshalls
@RCAvhstape5 жыл бұрын
I know what's better: the above guitar rig next to a Rickenbacker bass played in stereo through a couple of Ampeg SVT's and 8x10 cabinets. Better yet use Sunn amps, if you can find them. Pretty sure that's what Geddy used back in the day. Orange AD200's will do the trick, too. That will pretty much force people to move whether they want to or not. Might set off car alarms or even make people puke if they stand too close to the cabinets. Making people puke from pure amp power should be your goal.
@tomandalbert5 жыл бұрын
Sound Pressure Levels to the max in the right mix!
@Unibabble5 жыл бұрын
There is something so iconic and powerful about just the image of a Marshall stack. Those stacks are the backdrop to so many incredible shows throughout the past 50+ years. And that sound is freaking great. Aggressive, percussive and powerful. It makes me smile just looking at those two stacks next to each other! Love it!
@aaaargl5 жыл бұрын
At first i thought it was a Johan Segeborn upload. Great tones! Its still a desirable sound.
@Don_of_the_Dad5 жыл бұрын
Ditto
@dochort215 жыл бұрын
Would love to have heard Rick say, “Let’s go”
@Felipe-pb9gu5 жыл бұрын
ajajajaja me too!
@Icepacalapse5 жыл бұрын
LOL......said the same thing, read down, and saw your post. Had to edit it to say something else.
@tungtobak5 жыл бұрын
Was just about to comment the same thing.
@MihaiSorohan5 жыл бұрын
If moving air is what you need to move people, you need a tuba, not a Marshall stack :D get a tuba and people will start moving. I know, because I did and the neighbors moved.
@MLFranklin5 жыл бұрын
Tubas rock!
@TexasGuitarist5 жыл бұрын
A tube, mic'd up with a distortion pedal... Maybe some delay 😂
@Jay-hq4lo5 жыл бұрын
I am going get a tuba!
@MihaiSorohan5 жыл бұрын
@@Jay-hq4lo That will be... you know... ALL METAL!!!
@CostasAn5 жыл бұрын
Plug the tuba on a Marshall and the whole neighborhood will move.
@GWGuitarStudio4 жыл бұрын
In a music store I managed back in the 1990s, I decided one night after closing, I’d check out what a Marshall stack sounded like dimed. That sound was incredible. The physical presence of the sound felt like the air in your lungs was being pulled out and your pant legs waving in the breeze. That was with just one stack. I can’t imagine two!
@HeresWhatIDontGetPodcast4 жыл бұрын
20 years ago, I had the opportunity to have two full stacks in my practice space. A JCM 900 and a VTM 120. I chained 'em together and turned 'em both to 10 with gains also dimed. I stood 20 feet away (as far as my cable would reach) and slowly rolled up the bridge pickup on my Epi LP Custom. The feedback alone was overwhelming. I hit that E power chord and it sounded louder than thunder! The walls rattled and I got a sudden wave of nausea from my insides vibrating. You could feel the sound more than you could hear it. It was wild, man.
@colinwallace52864 жыл бұрын
I have an old Ampeg SBT bass cab with two 15” Altecs in it. My brother -in-law used to complain about how heavy it was, but he commented once how cool it felt when I hit a low E to end a certain song, and you actually felt it tickle the back of your neck.
@kenwinston22455 жыл бұрын
Standing in front of a stack is a pleasure, and sounds like nothing else. It's always great live, it feels alive there's so much air moving around you, you feel it as much with your skin as your ears.
@ryanduray15 жыл бұрын
I bet this would sound quite a bit better on something other than my phone speaker
@1320pass5 жыл бұрын
Plug your Sony MDR-V6 cans into you phone ;)
@peterbustin26835 жыл бұрын
Ive put it through my Panosonic 80w TV sound bar - it sounds really good !!
@PooNinja5 жыл бұрын
😂it sounds amazing in my car even the lawnmower at the end😂
@nightwishlover89135 жыл бұрын
Well don't listen to music on a bloody phone speaker!!!!!!!
@PooNinja5 жыл бұрын
NightwishLover not even on 🚽🤳🏾
@Doosterify4 жыл бұрын
I see all the comments about hearing loss. I've never even played a Marshall stack or any stack. The loudest amp I've had was a Fender Twin Reverb. I played it for about five years in garages, basements, bars and my bedroom. It sounded great but here it is 30 years after I owned it and I'm paying the price. I can't blame it all on The Fender amp because I also went to lots of concerts from 1977 to around 1990 plus I work in the mechanical trades so that was a lot of exposure to noise also but to any of the younger viewers here who have not damaged your hearing, trust me, hearing loss really sucks. If you're going to play loud equipment, USE HEARING PROTECTION!
@Doosterify4 жыл бұрын
@@drewjohnson4794 Well like i said I've never played a Marshall stack so I don't really Know how loud they are. The bottom line of what I said is if you're going to play loud equipment, use hearing protection.
@calvinshepherd77133 жыл бұрын
No
@christopherkahn65225 жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head when you said: "It's easy to put your Helix or Kemper in a bag and go to the gig, but is that what rock 'n roll is really about?" My Marshall stack has the mojo and I wouldn't leave home without it.
@joemasse45685 жыл бұрын
Christopher Kahn Mojo is what was missing, when Cream had their reunion at the Royal Albert Hall, no Marshall stacks, no Gibson guitar, WTF!
@charles567375 жыл бұрын
Amen to that. Same herer
@bongofury59245 жыл бұрын
How do you fit Ed Kemper in a bag...?
@Skoora4 жыл бұрын
In the early/mid 2000’s I played full stacks in Seattle clubs for the very reason that it was a rock n roll band and I wanted it to look like a rock n roll band. Actually kept the stage volume lower than a half stack because the top cab was more at your ear level. So looked good and better stage volume control. The other guitar player and I would actually use each other’s bottom cab so that we could hear each other a little better. It was awesome. The thought of playing a live rock gig with just a self contained pedal modeler or a box that can fit in a glovebox is just horrifying to me. So glad this wasn’t a thing until after I stopped gigging.
@laurentfargues81134 жыл бұрын
I go to work every morning with my stack :) More seriously, I bought a jcm900 4x12 cabinet 20 years ago when I was at the university because we had access to an isolated music room and we could blast it until late in the night. I still have it of course
@dawnpoint5 жыл бұрын
I love it so much. It also puts in context why the Rockman blew everyone's mind, getting that monstrous sound out of a pasta box.
@SouvikRoyChowdhury5 жыл бұрын
One of the best channel on KZbin...who's agree with me???
@thomasmcgill69185 жыл бұрын
I cant agree more...
@voodoochild1975az5 жыл бұрын
Found it a few weeks ago... maybe we just have similar tastes in music, but Rick is giving me the music theory class I always wanted...
@fivewattworld5 жыл бұрын
voodoochild1975az Yeah voodoo!
@wesleyAlan91795 жыл бұрын
🤘😎🤘
@PooNinja5 жыл бұрын
If they don’t they need to wise up and get the Beato book ! And actually listen to Rick
@gho5t5045 жыл бұрын
I cracked up when he noticed:"Dave your volume's down", but then I almost died from a sip of coffee for the little moment with the cable.
@danwilson95305 жыл бұрын
This video made my day by bringing me back to being 14. In ‘82 my guitar teacher had a metal band with a few members that later went onto fame. They would practice in my teacher’s (poorly) sound proofed living room. Mike, my teacher, had two 50W JCM800 stacks, that when cranked with his Ibanez Rocket Roll V sounded like the tone of God. Yea Rick, this IS what R’NR is all about. Two cranked 50W Marshall stacks! Thanks for a great flashback. This is instantly one of my fave Beato vids!
@kentmains77635 жыл бұрын
That is rock and roll! Great to see and hear Dave shredding through that stack of goodness! Thanks as always Rick enjoy London and safe travels!
@flawl3sslogic5 жыл бұрын
The main thing I got out of this video was that varying your tone in stereo makes guitar parts sound HUUUUUUUUUUUUGE! Thanks Rick.
@ZiddersRooFurry5 жыл бұрын
Rick being born the year Marshall was makes perfect sense. It's one of those things where the universe makes up for some of the suck it tosses at us.
@PaulMcCaffreyfmac5 жыл бұрын
Back in '69-'70 I used to go to the Farx Club in the back room of a pub in Southall in West London. The room held maybe 120 people, or maybe a few more really packed in. I saw Savoy Brown there with Kim Simmonds, Dave Peverett and Tone Stevens all playing through Marshall stacks. A localish band that I saw a lot was Stray a four piece with guitarist and bassist both playing through double 100 watt Laney stacks. Pretty much everyone in those days played through a stack or stacks. I admit there was a certain amount of ringing ear until a couple of days had passed but nothing then hurt as much as the big PA shows that came later. Those pub gigs were great - Led Zepellin at the Royal Albert Hall (twice in '69) were great as was Hendrix at the RAH (both shows in '69). By the time of Led Zepellin at Earls Court in '75 the PAs had taken over and that Earls Court gig was torture I have to tell you. I couldn't do it now but god bless the stack. I'm glad I did it way back when and I'm glad I saw so many great players do it
@peterbustin26835 жыл бұрын
3:35 The stereo separation is very clear to hear, particularly through headphones !! Awesome !! Thanks, Rick !!
@Swampster704 жыл бұрын
For me, the magic of a great sounding amp isn't that it moves a ton of air for the audience, it's that it moves a ton of air for me. It makes me happy and puts me in that happy place that makes me play so much better. It's music that you feel mentally and physically.
@steves7896 Жыл бұрын
There's a huge difference between artists who are truly enjoying themselves while playing live and others who are just going through the motions like an assembly line. I'm not a musician (couldn't be to save my life) but just a music lover and I've been to enough shows through the years to realize this. The joy of joyful musicians carries over to the audience, I wish this fact was on the table more in musician's realms, especially with young people.
@lamech0065 жыл бұрын
Simply pure joy. I love Dave's playing here. I love the demonstration of production choices. We have to remember what we're giving up on stage when we decide convenience and consistency have the highest priority. I wonder if Metallica is watching?
@therealjamesmarchant5 жыл бұрын
Marshall have a tradition of doing factory tours. If you're in the UK it's a good trip if you are a Marshall freak! My first proper amp was a Marshall and I was fortunate enough to be able to work there as an engineer in Jim's latter days.
@nickwilliams81565 жыл бұрын
Hey Rick, they used to do tours of the Marshall factory, you could just go up there and have a look around. I bumped into Jim Marshall while I was there.
@larryduke52365 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, this is one of my very favorite channels. I love when I can catch it live. Mr. Rick is a exceptional host and I admire the diversity of his subjects.
@Albee2135 жыл бұрын
A Marshall JCM 800 is like owning a classic muscle car, simple, bad ass looking and loud at any level set on the volume.
@billytrance68939 ай бұрын
Raw, Rock, Power....Take me back!!! Excellent video!! I remember those days well
@rossd0015 жыл бұрын
Living 50 miles away from the old Milton Keynes Factory I remember as a 21 year old kid my friend who was buying and selling Marshalls on ebay at the time was invited to the factory to collect one of the Jaguar Limited edition Marshall 2x12 combos. We pulled up outside the factory to be met by Jim himself who spent a good few hours giving us the guided tour of the factory and we chatted to him for ages. He was such a nice guy and had so much time for the people who played his amps. I met him again at a Music live event in Birmingham and he even remembered my name.. That guy must have met 1,000,000s of people in his lifetime and i was a nobody... Stays with me to this day! Keep fighting the good fight Rick with the copyright stuff, behind you all the way
@FinalResonanceTV5 жыл бұрын
rossd001 I met Jim many times at Namm and every single time he was exactly as you described, an amazing gentleman!
@julianc.2275 жыл бұрын
Has been my go to setup for the past 20 years. Love to hear them.
@wreckoningday5 жыл бұрын
I saw a popular youtuber talking about having just turned his amp up past 3 for the first time EVER and how great it sounded. I commented on the strange trend of people playing at super low volume and never cranking their amps. He said play some gigs and get back to me. All I could do is laugh. I've been gigging for almost 30yrs and have always cranked my amps whether at practice, home or a gig when its appropriate. How do you even take a guitarist seriously when they've never played thru a cranked amp. That is THE experience! Thanks for the cranked Marshall's Rick!
@RickBeato5 жыл бұрын
You’re welcome!! You gotta krank um’ haha!!!
@Mark958764 жыл бұрын
Does a good attenuator get you close?
@VMX12k4 жыл бұрын
So glad that you did this one Rick, thank you! We still play and record with 8 Marshall cabs. Half the fun is in mic placement and cranking the valve heads aiming for rich cab resonance and power tube distortion. We intentionally avoid DAWs though and no quantisers or autotune. Our end result isn't very polished (maybe one day!) but its honest and when we get a good take out of acoustic drums or cranked amps we really feel we have achieved something. It started because I have worked in IT all my life and I didn't want to stare at a monitor during my hobby. So, as much as possible we avoid using computer screens in our music and this although slower approach his helping us as musicians. Our timing as a band is improving as is our ear for picking frequencies to boost or cut. Its a load of fun. Thank you for your fantastic content and insights :)
@kibagami254 жыл бұрын
this is my dream rig as well. With the guitar that he is playing as well. Love the Les Paul and Marshall sound.
@knotchbass5 жыл бұрын
A old hippie musician once told me "Never be so lazy that your sound suffers" so I bought a Ampeg V4 with a 8x10 cab. I hauled that around for years. A few years back I decided to go for a more hi-fi modern tone so I got a Mesa Boogie Strategy 8:88 tube head and the Power House 4x12 bass cab. It's a little bit lighter bass rig but still moves some serious air. Down Side I am my own roadie LOL
@gimmickmusic88275 жыл бұрын
Man, digital emulation has come so far in the last decade, but it is still so far from emulating that sound. It’s so huge.
@clanwaddell56284 жыл бұрын
I have a tube simulator as my distortion pedal. It has a setting for a mic'd Marshall cabinet. On my little 20 watt amp it sounds cool. But then you here Rick recording these 2 beasts just blowing air. This is the sound of rock and roll
@cflowers694 жыл бұрын
Love this channel. And seriously, you always had the feeling that Angus and his brother wrote everything around the Marshall sound, and not the normal way of writing riffs and stuff. AC/DC IS Marshall.
@dcp102005 жыл бұрын
That fuzz tone at the beginning is super violent sounding! Also the attack of the overdrive tone is incredible
@LouieSimonedi4 жыл бұрын
Marshall amps are awesome... I've seen just about all 70's, 80's and some 90' bands live... And mostly up close to stage... and nearly all of their guitarists would have these amps on stage.
@druwk5 жыл бұрын
Being in the presence (front of the stage) at speaker level, moves your insides, and actually strikes “fear” into your body! The tone is so Rock! Remember having a guitarist setup, tune up and hit the first chord at full volume in a small club. I immediately stuffed my ears with wet paper napkins. I could only hang up front for the first three tunes...which were awesome! After that, I had to enjoy from the back. Seeing these kinds of shows in small clubs has given me permanent tendinitis. I also play, and have custom attenuators in whenever I play or see a show. Being in the presence of this awesome naked tone is amazing (frightening?). I love value amps turned way up. Although, I’m more of low/medium gain kind of guy (Fender Tweed), I have a soft spot in heart for a cranked Marshall! I agree, there is a physiological difference to just hearing a gained up tone, to being in the presence of what REALLY makes that tone! Thanks for the recording tips as well
@standingeightmusic5 жыл бұрын
When you step on that fuzz and turn it off, ahhhh, there is the sound in my head. The fuzz is cool for that special song or passage, but not an "always on". I did my first gig this week without my 100 watt head and cab, and while I missed the roar, it made for more manageable stage volumes, easier for the sound man and....easier to sing over, not competing with the amp because floor wedges have a hell of a time keeping up with a roaring amp. In the end, that made for a better FOH mix, and while making myself happy is fun, a good FOH mix is what counts.
@paulmcdevitt20384 жыл бұрын
Some great British music documentaries and one that covered Marshall, with Pete constantly driving for more volume.
@hearpalhere5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely killer sounds Rick! Dave's playing was fire too and I loved the ACDC riffs too. I really dug the stereo mixes - they were so huge!
@ThrashRoC5 жыл бұрын
Back in the 90s i owned a Marshall JCM 800 Lead Series 50 W 1x12" Combo ..it was a KILLER Amp !! The Only Amp that comes near the Marshall is my Dirty Shirley 40 Watt Combo from Dave Friedman ..(Pushed for Leads with the OCD Pedal, it´s KILLER ) MAN these Two Stacks together is the ABSOLUTE Marshall OVERKILL ..OMG it sounds AMAZING!! ..and it´s the BLUEPRINT for ALL Friedman Amps and other Boutique Amplifiers too (Bogner , Soldano etc.) Those where the Days when Marshall Amps are the HEART od Rock n Roll ..i LOVE these old Marshall´s very much Once i was i Frankfurt on the Music Messe (Music fair) and i shake hands with the Old Jim Marshall ..i couldn´t believe it ..i SHKE HANDS with Jim , and he was SUCH a NICE and GREAT Man !!! A Rock Guitarist without minimum a Marshall amp is Senseless :-D,
@backspin66985 жыл бұрын
"If you want to move people, you have to move air" Damn, that was deep man, I hear "watt" you saying. Great video Rick. I love my amp sims, but nothing beats a real amp.
@nicholasorthodox4 жыл бұрын
I love this video, You jamming through the real gear is so awesome! It's not often gear demonstrations touch the classic gear! Thanks Rick and crew!
@nibblrrr71245 жыл бұрын
Not a fan of the fuzz... has this weird "puking" effect on loud parts, where the signal approaches white noise. EDIT: I really dig the tone at 4:19 and 5:20 though.
@AlexKenis5 жыл бұрын
Glad I'm not the only one. I also like the blended sounds you referenced, but not the left-channel alone... it has that 'blatty' squashy old transistor sound that some people love, but I just can't dig. It sounds pretty scratchy in the high freq too, but that ends up fine when blended. To each their own
@Explorer7665 жыл бұрын
Exactly. All that gear and effort and it sounded like sizzle-schmizzle until 4:19.
@jollyvoqar1955 жыл бұрын
I'm not a fan of the tone being shown here either - alone at least. I especially dislike it for leads. It probably sounds a lot better blended with a band like the AC/DC-ish examples. There definitely are tones I do like thru Marshals and the onslaught of power is there either way. As someone who uses a Helix, these are the kinds of tones I never dial up. :P
@youpeopl_music32205 жыл бұрын
When did the fuzz come back into popularity? I can't STAND fuzz tones! It sounds, to me, like one of my batteries are dying! Annoying!
@Dressagevids5 жыл бұрын
Totally agree sounds horrible with too much distortion through Celestions which are dirty to begin with. Sounds better without pedals as it should, otherwise too dirty and lacking in definition, which is why Rhoads took out the Celestions and swapped them for Altec's
@glennk19314 жыл бұрын
These are excellent videos Rick. Been playing for about 46 years off and on. Just enjoy your sharing of your past experiences, and demonstrations. Thank you.
@timjonesguitar5 жыл бұрын
Nothing better than playing ACDC riffs through a Marshall stack!!!
@ZedChuva5 жыл бұрын
A lobotomy with a rusty nail comes to mind.
@timjonesguitar5 жыл бұрын
To each his own my man!
@4through6strings5 жыл бұрын
@@ZedChuva So you have done this ?
@Icepacalapse5 жыл бұрын
Yeah....but he missed the high strings on the Jailbreak riff.
@fredriksvard26035 жыл бұрын
Tim Jones - Saddlebrook Music cannibal corpse through a triple rectifier stack...
@richard667545 жыл бұрын
The last 50 watt Marshall Plexi I had, just roared. I ran it in church with the volume on about eight with the cab in an iso box. With my LP with 50s wiring, it really cleaned up to beautiful shimmery tones with just the volume knob. The Jeebus approved.
@tunaXonXtoast5 жыл бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed this one because it hits so close to home with me. Hopefully AC/DC won't block this video from the riffs (for those about to rock and jailbreak)
@davidjonorato35545 жыл бұрын
I tried to play them slightly different to avoid it...
@rcjward5 жыл бұрын
I have 2 early 50 watt JCM 800s and a ‘71 model 1959 Super Lead 100, and 4 model 1969 4x12 cabs with the old style woven grill cloth. The 2 slant cabs are loaded with 25 watt greenbacks, and the 2 straight cabs are loaded with 30 watt greenbacks, all 16 ohm speakers. One set of cabs was originally acquired used from Daddy’s with 4 of the heaviest 300 watt JBLs I ever carried. One set of cabs used to belong to the Boston band ‘The Atlantics’ back in the 70s.
@gmccrarygm5 жыл бұрын
the true presence and bonechilling tone from big quality amps/cabinets can never be recreated digitally....ever!
@doublea70545 жыл бұрын
This is what the guitarists i used to jam with sounded like! Marshall straight up! Love the tone!
@Kisarazu995 жыл бұрын
Wow! Pretty amazing when the “sound” even comes through on a phone.
@jasometer14165 жыл бұрын
you 2 guys are a deadly combo....great playing, great production, awesome.
@demarchiordie5 жыл бұрын
"If you wanna move people, you have to move air" wisest thing I've ever heard
@transparent48475 жыл бұрын
Rick, I love your channel and especially the Morgan vs. your holy grail Vox (both stellar amps and near perfect). Man the beginning of this sounded super gritty. Around the 4 minute acdc riff it sounded more like the full Marshall sitting in my bedroom. Love your spirit and imho, although the amp sims sound great and are more practical for the average gig, there is just no comparison. The second half of the Marshall tones sounded like what we've heard and loved for the past 30 years. Nice job!
@skrowetortio36215 жыл бұрын
The air was gettin thick, the smoke was gettin thicker The judge read the verdict, said, "Cut off his head!" Well, they placed me on the altar, raised up the axe My head was about to explode when I noticed the Marshall stacks I noticed all the smoke machines, the cameras and the lights Some guy with a microphone running around dancing in tights And I noticed the crew and the band playing down below And I realized I was in a rock video
@Mark958764 жыл бұрын
An Alice Cooper rock video?
@BlakeBlackstone5 жыл бұрын
0:14 "You're volume's down". Every guitarist knows this moment. Your videos are so comprehensive. Thanks for going the extra 5 miles with the diagraphs, pictures, examples, etc. It helps me retain the information better.
@georgewilson14575 жыл бұрын
Went to a ACDC concert 22 years ago in Aberdeen, and yea my ears are still ringing, (tinnitus).
@bongofury59245 жыл бұрын
Deep Purple in 1973...ouch!
@aaronwinton70675 жыл бұрын
Man, I forget how great this tone sounds. Awesome. Best Saturday morning ever... I’m ready for my day... I am motivated Mr. Beato. Thank you both...
@JavyonVISION5 жыл бұрын
YEAH!! And that's why I just can't seem to part with my two full stacks, even though they have been collecting dust for a while now
@rorymcclellan37405 жыл бұрын
THIS is what makes Rick Beato GREAT !!!
@pulaski14 жыл бұрын
An American Les Paul and a British Marshall stack - the ultimate special relationship!
@maxsandison45744 жыл бұрын
Friends with benefits
@Man-dl9ml3 жыл бұрын
This might be my favorite video on your channel! Amazing tone, especially with the AC/DC riffs. Jailbreak sounded amazing.
@TheAgeOfAnalog5 жыл бұрын
I still believe the greatest guitar tone EVER, was Leslie West playing a Les Paul Junior through a SUNN Coliseum. Versatile, no. Epic? Hell yes!
@Pladderkasse5 жыл бұрын
I second that. I don't know if that's the rig he uses on Mississippi Queen or Nantucket Sleigh-ride, but it has to be one of the meanest sounds ever recorded.
@sicko_the_ew5 жыл бұрын
Ah, Marshall JCM 800 ... Three of us lived on a farm for a while, and the lounge of the farmhouse had just a small drum kit, a bass amp, and the Marshall half stack (no furniture, no curtains, and nice wooden floors to reverberate a bit). For hours on end, we'd grind away just making a lovely terrible noise of dropped D rhythm cum melody with some thump and low notes in there, and when we did, our neighbours 3km away could hear us. Got the tinnitus from that, I think. Totally worth it. Those were the days. (End of the story is I gave the Marshall and the guitar to someone with real talent who had crappy equipment to express himself with, and switched to plunking a dreadnought every now and then. That was also totally worth it - although I miss that half stack on a day like this.)
@goldiemusic83945 жыл бұрын
01:35 - when your parents aren't home and they ask you to feed the cat.
@lennyluzitano89205 жыл бұрын
my cat got so scared it ran up the wall in my studio.... i fondly remember
@TempoDrift14805 жыл бұрын
Yeah you cant describe the feeling of trying to get a jam in before Ward gets home.
@kahmhalen40945 жыл бұрын
Real Rock N Roll attitude right here.
@brpadington5 жыл бұрын
I have the Jubilee reissue with both cabinets. I love that thing. The jubilee really sounds best with Vintage 30s since that is the speaker is was designed for. I have heard good results with greenbacks and creambacks though. I bet mixing a v30 and t75 would work well too.
@joejoe54864 жыл бұрын
I own a ‘72 Marshall 50-watt lead head which I play through a late-‘60s Marshall slant cab with pre-Rola 25-watt Celestion Greenbacks. After having owned and played several other vintage Marshalls, this ‘72 has remained the undisputed King. I have since sold off all the others.
@krispatel15 жыл бұрын
I'm doing the Marshall factory tour in a few weeks. Can't wait!
@alexmatthews23325 жыл бұрын
How was that experience?
@djjazzyjeff12325 жыл бұрын
I have a Marshall half stack and my other guitarist has one too. I have a JVM and he has a DSL, and sometimes when he's not around at our practice space I like to play through both of them and crank em up. Doesn't get a lot better than that.
@michaelskyrealm5 жыл бұрын
djjazzyjeff123 the jvm is a beast!
@jamesf29185 жыл бұрын
“If you want to move people, you have to move air.” YES
@Arkoudeides.5 жыл бұрын
PA also moves air.
@dustinmccrindle3435 жыл бұрын
@@Arkoudeides. was about to say the same.
@turolretar4 жыл бұрын
Ok I’ll just fart and people will run away so in a way they move
@rubievale5 жыл бұрын
I have succumbed to the modelling thing because I play covers, in a 2 piece tracked "band" for a living. Now, we take exceptional care about the songs we play and I write, program and produce every single note form every instrument because the available online stuff is shite. Anyway, I plug my 513 into my Line 6 then straight into the desk and it does an okay job. My main rig doesn't get used these days unfortunately. A Mesa Boogie Triaxis run in stereo out to 100 + 100 w stereo valve power amp into 2 4x12 vintage Marshall cabs with Celestion Blackbacks, one either side of the rack and when I crank that it becomes a spiritual experience and no Matt how much you spend on a modelling amp it simply won't do that thing, where the output tubes are pushed to clipping and the sound is absolutely magnificent. Most venues I play in would bar me for using it. It's not a rig that likes being tamed but I need to eat so I compromise. This sucks obviously
@powertuber4.0685 жыл бұрын
Damn, that is a big lawn for a tiny walk behind lawnmower.
@ApeLikeCreature5 жыл бұрын
LOL...thinking the same thing.
@bobboitt31265 жыл бұрын
Yeah but he dont have to hit the Gym when he's done....lol
@everonlyallforthee5 жыл бұрын
@@bobboitt3126 Get paid to mow a lawn instead of paying for a gym membership. We've been doing it wrong this whole time!
@TheJipino5 жыл бұрын
When he finally gets to the other side, the grass at the beginning will already be as long again as when he started.
@AnythingEvil785 жыл бұрын
Haha, that caught my attention as well.
@MutantSnowCone5 жыл бұрын
"If you want to move people, you have to move air"! Heart you RB! Rochester represent!
@IndySnowman4 жыл бұрын
I don’t miss hauling a stack around.
@w4shtrey3 жыл бұрын
I have the exact same 50w Jubilee head and slant cab I bought new in May of 1988 for $1200. I was a 20 yo kid. Thankfully I never gigged with it and kept in the same house for the last 30 years so it's still in mint/new condition. Awesome sounding half stack.
@midnightflyer75105 жыл бұрын
I am anxiously awaiting the return of my JCM800 from the shop! Going through withdrawal without it! Rick, I thought you were about to show us a tour of Marshall and then you ended it. Could be a good teaser episode for the tour though. Any possibility?
@rmcfee5 жыл бұрын
Too cool! Thanks Rick. You keep knocking it out of the park!
@Worshipcaster5 жыл бұрын
I see the thumbnail and think: "Today we gonna checkout"
@BenA7185 жыл бұрын
Man, the phase when you go mono ... stellar!
@allancrow1345 жыл бұрын
I was born in '62...lately my hearing is starting to go. I blame it on prolonged exposure to Marshall stack sound pressure. I have no regrets.
@goldenageofdinosaurs71925 жыл бұрын
Allan Crow Yeah, when I 1st started playing in a band, I had these great Paiste Rude 18” & 16” crashes. But, when I’d hit em, I could’t hear a damn thing for a second or two (I hadn’t learned to tape my cymbals, or wear earplugs yet). So, my guitarist & bassist just pointed their Marshall’s to either side of my head & turned em to 11. I’d put a fair amount of my hearing loss on that stupid behavior. There were also the many rock shows I saw, which often had Marshall amps pointing at me too. 🙂
@allancrow1345 жыл бұрын
@@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Sure was fun though. :)
@goldenageofdinosaurs71925 жыл бұрын
Allan Crow Absolutely!
@lanemendenhall76644 ай бұрын
Everyone goes straight to AC/DC riffs when playing this setup and I love it.
@mrkrunch43405 жыл бұрын
Dsus2 _UMG enters the chat_
@Empathy375 жыл бұрын
Mr Krunch 😂🤬
@jasonschannel95265 жыл бұрын
I'm a sound engineer for a bar and grill this past year, and I've never had a single band show up with a kemper or any other fake amplification. I've had plenty of Marshall half stacks come through the venue though. Nothing else compares to the real sound of an actual amplifier when doing live gigs. I'm still learning tons about equipment, not only on my side for live sound re-enforcement, but on the instrument side as well. I've also started doing some live recordings, and posted one of the very first attempts I shot with a webcam and did a multi-channel recording to my PC for mixing later. I think it came out fairly well for my first attempt. Live mixing and DAW are two completely different beasts. Thanks for all the educational videos you post. I always learn something new with every video!
@JexiMusic5 жыл бұрын
Make sure you visit the Marshall factory in Milton Keynes!
5 жыл бұрын
THAT BUZZ! Lol. I've got a couple of 100 watts Marshalls, and my bass player has old 60's/70's cabinets with original greenbacks and celestions, you can imagine what happens next. Great video!
@BriBeast85665 жыл бұрын
I love using the SM57 to record speakers
@TheCjbowman5 жыл бұрын
"if you want to move people, you have to move air" -- love it! 🤟😆🤟
@MiltonGeorges4 жыл бұрын
Imaging gigging the NYC club scene with this setup - try getting these on the subway, lol :D
@Dan_Ranger4 жыл бұрын
Done that in the 80’s in London on the tube! All good fun especially when you get on the wrong tube! 😂
@shanegalang95 жыл бұрын
Super bad ass brother! Absolutely LOVE your channel and all you do for us!!
@mariocruz9775 жыл бұрын
More like this please... Great marshall's Tone!!! I realy enjoy watching your Videos
@tomandalbert5 жыл бұрын
Standing at the counter waiting for my Marshall Amp grill cloth at Don Wehr's Music City in San Francisco 1971 in comes Bill Graham and his driver to pay for the gear for a Fillmore West gig. Out comes the biggest rolls of $100 I had never thought existed. Well my knock off dog breath Marshal stacks grill cloth had to wait. I watched my heros pay for the biggest wall of sound of Marshall and electro voices and who know what was all on the list. I was a fly on the wall. I can only say thanks Rick for bringing back my youth.
@Slears5 жыл бұрын
I would choose an old Marshall Rig over any digital guitar technical prodigy ANYTIME
@johnmarshall39035 жыл бұрын
Right on Slears, I couldn't agree more.
@philcodeca4 жыл бұрын
I play a 1983 jcm800 1x12 combo and a Gibson Les Paul Goldtop. The combo is just unreal. Can’t imagine how loud this set up must be!
@vicesquadpunk5 жыл бұрын
Looks like you were in Clapham/ Battersea in SW London bro.....? My neck of the woods..
@adam8725 жыл бұрын
Love the sound of a cranked tube amp, even more with two of them. That said, context is important too. If you've got the studio or are playing in a live venue that can accommodate them at full volume then that's awesome. Most of us aren't in that situation and that's why the AXE-FX et al have become so popular. They're also amazingly consistent. A quote I heard from Devin Townsend said it best recently, which was to the effect of "I can do more with the combination of analogue and digital than either of them alone". Yep.
@Zlobas5 жыл бұрын
You guys should do a real amps vs Kemper blind test.
@PooNinja5 жыл бұрын
Like every thing else on the universe the real thing is better 🤘🏽
@bartnettle5 жыл бұрын
Been done and they have an Axe FX not a Kemper, but I get what your saying, profile those amps and cabs!!, but what hasn't been done is the effect of the room ratification on distance micing and or room mics, which hands down will beat any modeler/ profile .
@toofarpunk5 жыл бұрын
Poo Ninja not when the real thing causes a back injury. Or blows up at a gig. Or is too loud for a gig. Or you can’t switch from jcm800 or ac30
@PooNinja5 жыл бұрын
SoundsUnderground I agree I love just taking my pod but I prefer to take my 412 ....412 cause The Who’s roadies said these 812’s are killing us 😂 ooh my angry spine and what’s left of my disks
@Skiplives5 жыл бұрын
A big part of it is playing with 16 12” speakers behind you. You need hearing protection, but that much moving air is a physical experience that nothing can emulate. And yes, pair of Kempers driving the same stacks will give you a very similar experience. And yes, most spaces are either too small or too big for that set-up. But in a recording situation it’s really about getting the best performance out of the performer and getting the best sound down. And they do sound so nice.
@MarkPritchardGuitar5 жыл бұрын
Nice to see some old skool raw amp tones, great video Rick!!