ANSWERS: 5
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hey man this one is easy. you should deffinately get the spider line 6 2 or 3. i have the spider 3 and it has 400 presets from guitarists and all of the best songs . it was about 325-375 dollars and i love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! i play guitar also and im a huge acdc fan its got 4 presets just for ac dc
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I agree. The Line6 Spider would be great. A Roland JC55 is the best little jazz amp going in my book. It depends on how much you want to spend. I am totally old school. I play my Les Paul through a 15 watt Vox or Orange amp. Just plugged straight in, no effects or channel switching. That to me is the purest tone imaginable. Check out an Orange Tiny Terror. Don't let the 15 watts fool you. I gig with the little guy plugged into a 212 cabinet and it is plenty loud. You just have to learn to use it!
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There are three that come to mind. First off, I don't think you'll need a very powerfull amp. The amps are the Blackheart 53 watt, the epiphone valve junior(kinda loud) and the fender champion 600. For a small room I'de buy the fender. For a garage, the blackheart. The epiphone has great tone but is very loud and breaks up(produces gain like hard rock) from mid volume on up. these are all tube amps and they all have very good sound quality. Good luck.
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I recently bought a Roland Cube and a Vox 30. I love them both but I'm not especially amp savvy. Give them a try maybe.
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There are, of course, a lot of good choices, and you will probably get a lot of good answers. I would recommend one of two possible "categories." I'll leave the final choice up to you after you've tried some out. The first category are the new selection of low powered "Class A" tube amps, hand-wired if possible. Some of the ones I've tried are the Epiphone Valve Junior, The Fender Champion 600, and the Gretch Electromatic, which is an identical copy of the Fender now that Fender also owns Gretsch. There are some others in this category from Blackheart, Vox, Crate, Peavey, etc. They are not loud, and they don't have a lot of controls or features (usually just a single volume control and that's all), but they sound remarkable. You don't need a tone control because the tone is perfect without one. The other category option is to buy a collectable "vintage" amp, probably a tube amp. There are many to choose from. If you don't need a lot of power, the "blackface" (1965-67) Fender Deluxe Reverb is a good choice. The older "tweed" Fender amps are also popular, as are some of the older tube amps from Gibson, Gretsch and Supro. The nice thing about having an amplifier from this category is that it should never go down in value, and it might even increase in value while you own and enjoy the amp.
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