I've always wondered if I'd like a roadster, as I love my mark IV ,but does a roadster give me anything that I can't get out of my Mark IV?
I'm gonna jump back in for this because Dom is right as usual. Biggest difference for me 'artistically' is that Rectos, especially the big ones, don't fight you. My Tremoverb makes me feel like I'm cheating at guitar. Marks, at least up to IV... you gotta bring it to sound good but when you do it sounds *really* good.They are not only sonically different, they feel different. Both are inspiring, but they will take you down different paths, even in the same melody.
I have not played a Roadster, but I have had a Mark IV for years. This post is 100% correct about the IV. When I first started playing it, I realized pretty quickly how unforgiving the amp was. Every single mistake I made was glaringly obvious. I was disheartened at first, but after time I realized playing through the IV was making me "up my game" as a guitarist. Ever since that realization, I have come to appreciate what the IV offers even more.I'm gonna jump back in for this because Dom is right as usual. Biggest difference for me 'artistically' is that Rectos, especially the big ones, don't fight you. My Tremoverb makes me feel like I'm cheating at guitar. Marks, at least up to IV... you gotta bring it to sound good but when you do it sounds *really* good.
Wait, actually, another big difference. I have been playing IIIs for like 15 years but I find them really, really finicky in the room. First, there's no one-size-fits-all speaker solution for them like Rectos - just plug a Recto into V30s and it'll sound good in any room. Any speaker choice for Marks involves bigger compromises. And, when I have my Mark III plugged into a cab I feel like I have to tweak the EQ even if I move the cab in a room, much less take it anywhere. I don't think I've played my III through a cab in a couple of years basically for this reason.
There's this sort of user-friendliness with Rectos in general.
My Splawn is the same wayI have not played a Roadster, but I have had a Mark IV for years. This post is 100% correct about the IV. When I first started playing it, I realized pretty quickly how unforgiving the amp was. Every single mistake I made was glaringly obvious. I was disheartened at first, but after time I realized playing through the IV was making me "up my game" as a guitarist. Ever since that realization, I have come to appreciate what the IV offers even more.
+1 as someone who has had a Mark IV for a good 33 years now.I have not played a Roadster, but I have had a Mark IV for years. This post is 100% correct about the IV. When I first started playing it, I realized pretty quickly how unforgiving the amp was. Every single mistake I made was glaringly obvious. I was disheartened at first, but after time I realized playing through the IV was making me "up my game" as a guitarist. Ever since that realization, I have come to appreciate what the IV offers even more.
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