OldTelecasterMan
Well-known member
I thought this again should be brought up. I just reread it and I got a good laugh.
skoora said:What I like about the V, having had one for 10 years now, is it can be whatever amp you want it to be. It also makes a killer power amp for my Quad pre.
rarebitusa said:skoora said:What I like about the V, having had one for 10 years now, is it can be whatever amp you want it to be. It also makes a killer power amp for my Quad pre.
yea no kidding, love the V and only recently slaved it's power section to my IIC+... wow now that really expanded the tonal options. However, I do not recommend it for those wanting to make progress on any sort of a personal task list... cause you won't want to do anything else but noodle and explore
skoora said:Check out setting the V on ch 3, extreme when using as power. It’s huge for the source preamp.
rarebitusa said:skoora said:Check out setting the V on ch 3, extreme when using as power. It’s huge for the source preamp.
you know I typically don't run extreme mode on ch 3 and didn't checked it out with the C+ as the preamp, but will.... thanks!
bandit2013 said:I believe my particular amp has some issues. I have tried newer one's and they sound way better than my Mark V. Unfortunately when I bought it I should have taken the dusty one I played though (same one everyone else has played through as it appeared). I asked for the super clean one in the corner stacked on top of other amps. I should have played through it first before buying it. Oh well. At least I have something to experiment with.... :|
OldTelecasterMan said:Here is my rant about the rants.
I continuously see the “Ice Pick” or “I just can’t get the tone” on and on. I’m going to be stinky here for a bit. The tone you want is probably in there. Dial with your ears not your eyes. Using a specific channel or setting because so and so told you it is what he uses is kinda, not smart. Trying to get your amp to sound like somebody else is completely fruitless. The Mark V or any amp for that mater broadcasts what your hands make it sound like. If your favorite guitarist played your rig it would sound like them, not you.
When I first got my Mark V I cannot decide if I was disappointed or frustrated, maybe a mixture. But with over 40 years on the fretboard all of the sudden I sucked. I sounded sloppy. Had the “Ice Picky” crappy sounding, no smooth tone everything I had was suddenly gone. So my immediate reaction was it’s the amp. So, I adjusted my pickups, tried different strings, I adjusted string height I did everything from talking to the guys at Mesa Boogie to posting here on this forum. After all that what I found out was, it was me. I was sloppy, I was not precise, my picking was not consistent in velocity. Having just parted with the cash to buy a Mark V head and two 2x12 vertical cabinets with 40 years of playing I humbled myself. I began to practice scales and really listening to the amp, listening to what my hands were making the amp do. Working chords so my picking velocity of each string was consistent. Word of advice, use a heavy pick. I use Mesa Boogie picks .88 you have feel exactly what you are doing to the string to get the string to sound how you want it to.
It’s not the amp. I play Telecasters, a Les Paul, a Warmoth that I put together with Tom Anderson single coil pickups all on the same amp settings night after night. I switch guitars with no amp adjustments and each one sings. No “Ice Pick” no overbearing lows, no shrill ear-piercing garbage. I get over the top sustain that continues as long as I want and I can back off the guitar volume and get a beautiful sparkly clean all with the amp, no pedals in front of the amp. I use lots of gain on the amp almost all of it. I control it with the guitar volume. Lows are not your friend and there is a tone control on your guitar that does stuff, use it.
Parctice, practice, practice, don’t play songs. Dust off the metronome, practice and listen, pay attention to detail. The amp is making what you do louder. Weather it is “Ice Pick” a wrong note or a miss fingered chord, you did it. It’s all the same.
About the amp settings, turn down the channel volume to about 9am or a little less and turn up the output. The Mark V output is not just a master volume. If you have the channel volume up too high you are shoving a big signal onto the power section and your tone will suck. Let the amp breath. I have played some very small clubs on the 90 watt setting and I get asked to turn up.
END RANT....
bandit2013 said:The amps that are more forward and less forgiving would include the Royal Atlantic..
iceman said:bandit2013 said:The amps that are more forward and less forgiving would include the Royal Atlantic..
Ain't that the truth, I feel like the RA is a few millseconds ahead of my playing :lol: Especially the clean channel.
neozeed_vs_shinobi said:PLAY LIKE YOU MEAN IT. If you want to play aggressive music, dig in, play with conviction, use high output pickups, and get those strings MOVING. Next time you want to play Metallica riffs through a mark and you’re thinking to yourself “why does my Mark V not sound like the IIC+ on Master of Puppets?” it means you need to go watch live videos of James violently pummeling his Explorer with his picking hand — force feeding his ludicrously high-output EMGs that are, in turn, pushing the input stage of his amp to the brink of oblivion. That is why some people think Ch. 3 on a Mark V “sucks”. Because there are some people out there who daintily strum their vintage Les Pauls loaded with PAFs and blame their amps on the lack of rock tones coming out of their speakers. You can’t make chili without some spice.
mace said:So, yes, he knows his Marks and he knows how to get great tone from his guitar and he is a heavy picker. Miles learned some things from Slash, pick the strings like you mean it (if I remember correctly).
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