![]() This design choice offers very precise tone shaping potential, even if it is an unusual way to operate an amp of this type. There are 16 possible settings for both gain and volume, and 8 each for the tone controls. The controls are digital, supplying the first twist on traditional here: rather than rolling free through their ranges, each knob has discrete settings as you turn, and an LED readout to let you know where you are in the rotation. ControlsĪt first glance, the front control panel presents a traditional layout, with On/Off and Standby switches, Gain and Master volume controls, and 3-band tone stack of Bass, Mid, and Treble- the Preset control being the only unusual element. This makes tube substitution is as easy as it could be-a hefty bonus that makes it useful for yet another application, as a convenient tone-testing platform for various members of your tube collection. In addition to any of the several types of preamp tubes (12AX7, 12AT7, 12AU7, and so on), the octal tube socket also accepts 6V6, 6L6, E元4 and KT77 output tubes without the need for rebiasing. If you want to use it on stage, you can send the XLR direct to the board and use the speaker out for an onstage monitor, or use the unbalanced direct out into a clean power amp for a high-volume rig. In addition to a 4- or 8-ohm speaker out, it offers both unbalanced 1/4” and balanced XLR direct outs with an internal speaker load and speaker emulation, so you if you don’t want to hook up a cab and mic it, you can run it right into your interface. Ideally suited as a studio tool that can also serve as a practice amp with a low-power mode (for tube tone and a nice overdrive at bedroom volumes), the amp is essentially a digitally-controlled device with an all-tube signal path, and offers a great deal of flexibility in terms of applications. All it took was inserting a supplied set of JJ tubes-two 12AX7s, an EL84 and a 6V6- and it was up and running. I was able to get a number of useful tones from it right out of the box. Quite often, the phrase “feature rich” (especially when applied to amplifiers) is code for “complicated.” Happily, the ZenTone 7 from Backline Engineering, which sports an impressively long list of features for a small, 7-watt, single-ended Class A design, doesn’t fit in that category-at least not completely, anyway. Recorded in Sound Studio on a MacBook Pro using Digidesign MBox. I"m sure some of you digital modelling peeps will have some suggestions.Download Example 1 ZenTone 7 6V6, 1/4" direct out: Bass 5, Mid 5, Treb 7, bright switch on, Master 6, Gain 4 - single stage, then low-drive dual stage, then high-drive dual Fender Contemporary Telecaster, bridge S/C ĭownload Example 2 ZenTone 7 EL84 1/4" direct out: Bass 3, Mid 3, Treb 5, Bright switch, Gain 4 - first single stage, then low-drive dual Duesenberg MC Signature, first bridge humbucker, then neck P-90.ĭownload Example 3 ZenTone7 E元4, 1/4" direct out: Bass, Mid, Treb 9/10 Master 8 Gain 10, high-drive dual stage gain Gibson LP Studio, bridge pickup Any suggestions I can pass on? In particular, how about a powered FRFF speaker? She only has one keyboard onstage, so I doubt she'll need more than one input. Probably doesn't need any effects capability as the Kurzweil does it all. She'll never be able to manage one of those, nor transport it in her small car and might not even get the floor space onstage to use one. I've played with keys players that use larger Roland keyboard amps, but they are huge and weigh a ton. She wants to upgrade and doesn't know what to look at. She's using a small underpowered Roland combo - might even be a guitar combo - and it's not loud enough or decent enough to do the full frequency thing. The keyboard is some sort of Kurzweil with nice piano-weighted keys. The voice goes through a line array PA tower (very impressive sound from it). They play in pubs a lot, so the keys, guitar and bass use their own backline in that sort of venue. They're doing some instrumental originals, but mainly "Radio 2" covers with their own treatments/arrangements. 50% of the time one of the sax players sings instead of playing. My neighbour is playing piano/keys in an 8-piece swing/jazz band - drums, bass, guitar, keys, trumpet, trombone, 2 x sax.
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