Vox AC15 - All Kinds of Sounds - No Talking

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
  • In this video I run through a bunch of different sounds on my Vox AC15. I think this amp is super underrated. It can do warm sparkling cleans, crazy fuzz, classic rock distortion, and a lot more. The only thing it would need a pedal for would be metal. Speaking of, it's a great pedal platform if you throw it on the normal channel!
    00:00 - Normal channel
    00:10 - Reverb
    00:35 - Tremolo
    01:16 - Tone cut sweep
    01:37 - Top Boost channel
    02:10 - MUFF FUZZZY
    02:47 - Classic Fuzz
    03:00 - Playing with tone knobs
    03:55 - Warm crunch
    04:27 - Classic AC15
    05:12 - Adding warmth from the normal channel
    05:36 - There she goes
    06:07 - Favorite setting
    07:27 - We're here, why not?
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Komentáře • 12

  • @Ben_the_Ignorant
    @Ben_the_Ignorant Před 14 dny +2

    No talking is a big plus in demo videos, thanks. We all know what we avoided here. 😁

  • @liberioescriba6158
    @liberioescriba6158 Před 12 dny

    how did you not go deaf with the volume at max??

    • @TheBasementMusician
      @TheBasementMusician  Před 12 dny

      Yeah, for 15 watts, these amps get really loud! I use a Fryette Power Station to lower the volume to save my ears

    • @Da_Publick
      @Da_Publick Před 11 dny

      ​@@TheBasementMusicianDoesn't the Master Volume mean you can 'crank' the amp, but still keep it at bedroom levels?

    • @surfingraichu7594
      @surfingraichu7594 Před 5 dny

      @@Da_Publickthat only gives you pre-amp gain, power amp gain holds a lot of a tube amps magic

    • @Da_Publick
      @Da_Publick Před 5 dny

      @@surfingraichu7594 I don't get your meaning.

    • @NewPraetorianBlues
      @NewPraetorianBlues Před 2 dny

      @@Da_Publick Amps have two 'stages' where 'cranked' tones come from, if that makes sense. The preamp is the amplification at the input and the power amp is the amplification at the output (for layman's terms), and they have different sounds when 'pushed'. Preamp distortion is a lot like high-gain amps, its a little thinner sounding and lacks in girth and harmonics, but it sounds decent at low SPL (real-life volume). Power amp distortion is much more favored, and is more often what's being referred to when you say a 'cranked' amp, because it generates some really nice low end and has a much more pleasing distortion. Power amp distortion also has the tendency to cause harmonic feedback, where a note is feeding into itself, making a feedback in the correct pitch of the note - whereas preamp distortion will maybe feedback, but it'll be more of a stressed and unpleasant feedback, varying in pitch. Amps with a single volume control (per channel) have both preamp and power amp tied to the same control, like Fender and Marshall reissues. 'Gain' is synonymous with preamp gain particularly, where 'Master Volume' is power amp gain. It takes a very high SPL to achieve power amp distortion, and the bigger and badder your power tubes are - the higher that SPL will be.