espresso said:I've yet to see guitarists from the 60s/70s generation playing Mesa Boogies.
Mesa/Boogie was introduced in 1970, that could be why you don't see many musicians playing them in the 60's :lol:
espresso said:I've yet to see guitarists from the 60s/70s generation playing Mesa Boogies.
now take the bands playing boogie during the late 80s (mark ivs/IIC+) and 90s (rectos) and those are the bands to me who inspired todays musicians. especially in the metal scene that emerged in the late 90s-early 00s, it was like everyone was using a recto and that sound was (and still is) all over popular rock radio... just my .02
meursault said:interesting question... i'm 34 and i really don't know why i have this mesa "fantasy" since teen age...
maybe because of kim gordon from sonic youth, but she's a bass player !!!! :?
maybe swervedriver ! i really don't know where i saw the first time the words "mesa boogie"...
most bands i heard when i was young used weird unknown amps or usual stuff : vox, marshall, fender, orange...
the funny thing is that i was really not into metal stuff... more noise (sonic youth) , noisy-pop (my bloody valentine, ride, slowdive...), punk...
now i'm listen to some "prog-metal-sludge" stuff : melvins, pelican, isis, blablabla... or math, experimental things... anyway ! nothing to do with mesa...
i don't know... the feeling i have is that in the 90's mesa was "in the air", some kind of legend gear even if it's less old than the above mentionned brand... there was something "indie" with mesa !!! but god **** too expensive !! :mrgreen:
secretsoundz said:I'm into a lot of the same music you are (sonic youth, melvins, my bloody valentine, ride, pelican). You never really see anyone in the indie/alternative rock world playing Mesas. I think it must be a cost/brand image thing. I play a lot of Sonic Youth / My Bloody Valentine sounding stuff and my Stiletto Ace does the trick with a good analog delay and fuzz pedal on the Fat Clean mode...
meursault said:now take the bands playing boogie during the late 80s (mark ivs/IIC+) and 90s (rectos) and those are the bands to me who inspired todays musicians. especially in the metal scene that emerged in the late 90s-early 00s, it was like everyone was using a recto and that sound was (and still is) all over popular rock radio... just my .02
why not ?... so they are both influenced by recto (main stream radio stuff) and pre-recto (metalica)...
i think you're right on this point : today's bands are most of the time influenced by "mtv-metal-rock-pop" where we see everywhere rectos (avril lavigne, gnagnagna...) :lol:
i'm not a fan of the recto series (except the blue angel maybe)... think the pre-recto have more personality...
maybe the rectos are more popular because they are more similar to the other popular brands... i don't kow...
I think when some people think of Mesa/Boogie they think of METAL. But really most Mesas can handle just about any kind of music.
meursault said:since i have my mesa, my poor big muff stay alone in the corner of the room... don't need it anymore...
espresso said:phyrexia said:you don't mean like Carlos Santana or Keith Richards, do you?
Keith Richards plays through Tweed Twins doesn't he?
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