Hey folks,
I've had a Mesa Boogie Blue Stripe Mark III since the early nineties, and I recently acquired a new Dual Rectifier. After having it for a few weeks, I was concerned that I might have made the wrong choice, and exchanged it plus a few hundred dollars for a Mark V head.
After a few weeks of using the Mark V, I came to realize that I really missed the recto, and that it seemed like my Mark III had a tremendous amount of overlap with the Mark V, even including the Extreme channel (yes, there have been a lot of improvements, and the Fat mode on the clean channel is great, but still...it felt like what it really is, an somewhat tighter revision of the amp I already have).
I called Guitar Center (the folks there have been really great and very patient) and asked if I could come back and exchange the Mark V for my recto, and they said it would be fine (I applied the remaining store credit towards the purchase of a few pedals).
Anyway, before I brought the Mark V back, I recorded a few samples, and then recorded the same parts played on my Mark III. Once I'd returned the Mark V I sat down and recorded the same parts using the Dual Rectifier.
So here is a clip of the Mark V (left channel) and the Mark III (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-mark-iii.
And here is a clip of the Dual Rectifier (left channel) and the Mark III (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-mark-iii.
Finally, for completeness, here's the Mark V (left channel) vs the Dual Rectifier (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-dual-rectifier.
I've had a Mesa Boogie Blue Stripe Mark III since the early nineties, and I recently acquired a new Dual Rectifier. After having it for a few weeks, I was concerned that I might have made the wrong choice, and exchanged it plus a few hundred dollars for a Mark V head.
After a few weeks of using the Mark V, I came to realize that I really missed the recto, and that it seemed like my Mark III had a tremendous amount of overlap with the Mark V, even including the Extreme channel (yes, there have been a lot of improvements, and the Fat mode on the clean channel is great, but still...it felt like what it really is, an somewhat tighter revision of the amp I already have).
I called Guitar Center (the folks there have been really great and very patient) and asked if I could come back and exchange the Mark V for my recto, and they said it would be fine (I applied the remaining store credit towards the purchase of a few pedals).
Anyway, before I brought the Mark V back, I recorded a few samples, and then recorded the same parts played on my Mark III. Once I'd returned the Mark V I sat down and recorded the same parts using the Dual Rectifier.
So here is a clip of the Mark V (left channel) and the Mark III (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-mark-iii.
And here is a clip of the Dual Rectifier (left channel) and the Mark III (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-mark-iii.
Finally, for completeness, here's the Mark V (left channel) vs the Dual Rectifier (right channel) http://soundcloud.com/dlpasco/mark-v-vs-dual-rectifier.