| Visit Our Catalog at SteelGuitarShopper.com |

Post new topic Marshall amp for pedal steel?
Reply to topic
Author Topic:  Marshall amp for pedal steel?
Dave Zirbel


From:
Sebastopol, CA USA
Post  Posted 2 Jun 2022 6:44 pm    
Reply with quote

Just curious if anyone uses a Marshall, like an ‘80’s JCM Lead in particular, and what your thoughts are about them. I have very little experience or knowledge with them. I did use a backline Marshall amp for steel at a battle of the bands show back in the ‘90’s (at the Cactus Club in San Jose California) and thought it was a little too crunchy, but that may have been because of the speakers…
Thanks
_________________
Dave Zirbel-
Sierra S-10 (Built by Ross Shafer),ZB, Fender 400 guitars, various tube and SS amps
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Richard Sinkler


From:
aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 3:44 am    
Reply with quote

I played through a Marshall stack once, don't remember the model, but it was the full stack. Only played one set through it, and it was horrible. Couldn't get a decent undistorted tone out of it. But again, I only had ~45 minutes to play with it.
_________________
Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, Recording King Professional Dobro, NV400, NV112,Ibanez Gio guitar, Epiphone SG Special (open D slide guitar) . Playing for 54 years and still counting.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
K Maul


From:
Hadley, NY/Hobe Sound, FL
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 5:15 am    
Reply with quote

Bought a 50w tube head. I tried it. Hated it. Don’t like playing through a Boogie either.
_________________
KEVIN MAUL: Airline, Beard, Clinesmith, Donner, Evans, Excel, Fender, Fluger, GFI, Gibson, Hilton, Ibanez, Justice, K+K, Live Strings, MOYO, National, Oahu, Peterson, Quilter, Rickenbacher, Sho~Bud, Supro, TC, Ultimate, VHT, Williams, X-otic, Yamaha, ZKing.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Ethan Shaw

 

From:
Texas, USA
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 11:25 am    
Reply with quote

I've tried it a couple of times, and it sounded super thin and terrible. That was with a fender, though. Also, back then I didn't utilize the tone control very much. Maybe if you rolled it way down.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Dave Zirbel


From:
Sebastopol, CA USA
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 12:20 pm    
Reply with quote

Thanks guys…I guess it was kind of a dumb question, especially since no one talks about it here and I’ve never seen anyone using them! 😂 I have an opportunity to get a head and half stack real cheap…
_________________
Dave Zirbel-
Sierra S-10 (Built by Ross Shafer),ZB, Fender 400 guitars, various tube and SS amps


Last edited by Dave Zirbel on 4 Jun 2022 6:17 am; edited 1 time in total
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Steve Lipsey


From:
Portland, Oregon, USA
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 12:27 pm    
Reply with quote

Only one thing to say...and yes, I played one for years on guitar, and you do have to crank it to at least 8 and hit it hard to get the tubes to sing, and it is a different amp than when played quietly...and I suspect a volume pedal on partway would compromise the tone...


_________________
https://www.lostsailorspdx.com
Williams S10s, Milkman Pedal Steel Mini & "The Amp"
Ben Bonham Resos, 1954 Oahu Diana, 1936 Oahu Parlor
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Ian Rae


From:
Redditch, England
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 2:41 pm    
Reply with quote

A steel amp needs to be clean, and unless I do them a disservice, I don't believe that Marshalls were ever intended to be anything but dirty - in a good way Smile
_________________
Make sleeping dogs tell the truth!
Homebuilt keyless U12 7x5, Excel keyless U12 8x8, Williams keyless U12 7x8, Telonics rack and 15" cabs
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Joseph Napolitano

 

From:
New Jersey, USA
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 5:38 pm    
Reply with quote

I have a 1972 50 watt Marshall I kept from my youth. I've never used it for steel on a gig. I have tried it at home. By jumping into both channels , I can get a really good sound for steel. Ch I is very bright ( lead ?), and channel II is so bass-y that I always thought it was unusable. But by jumping into both channels, I can EQ really nice tone. Also , this amp is very loud with plenty of headroom.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Dave Mudgett


From:
Central Pennsylvania and Gallatin, Tennessee
Post  Posted 3 Jun 2022 7:43 pm    
Reply with quote

There was a recent thread on Marshalls for pedal steel - https://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=376867

As stated on that thread - if you're expecting a blackface/silverface Fender-style sound, most Marshalls just aren't gonna do that. It's a different sound - more full-range, less scooped-mids, more like the larger tweed Fenders, but not quite the same. But I think some of the older Marshalls can be set up for loud and clean very nicely. 60s and earlier 70s amps, unadulterated, had no master volume and if they were set up clean were almost too loud to use for club gigs. US models, from the early 70s onward, used 6550 tubes and were very loud and clean if left stock. So much so that a helluvalot of guitar players retubed with EL-34 power tubes. If they didn't re-bias them for the EL-34s, they got hot. So many of these cool amps were butchered by hacks, and that's why they can sometimes get a bad rap.

Of course, the 200-watt Marshall Majors were ridiculously loud and definitely could stay clean if set up that way. JCM 800s came in different flavors. Some of them had no master volume, others did, and some were optimized for max distortion, while others weren't. But a lot of hard rock and metal players love the louder JCM 800s specifically because they can get so loud and still stay tight. Of course, these guys are mostly pushing them into distortion, but there's good distortion and lousy distortion, and set up correctly, they can have a lot of clean headroom available.

As I wrote on the other thread, I've had quite a number of Marshalls over the years. I wasn't playing pedal steel for most of that period. But I do know that some of them were really loud and clean unless pushed real hard, to the point that I could rarely use them for guitar gigs.

We opened for Link Wray in the 90s, and we backlined him. I normally played Fenders with that band, but he absolutely wanted a Marshall specifically. So I brought my pretty well tweaked-out JCM 800 with a Mesa 4x12" cab loaded with some pretty heavy-duty speakers, and we both used it. It was a pretty good sized room, and we opened that sucker up pretty wide, and it sounded great. It was set to distort full-on, but cleaned up nicely by pulling the volume back a bit. I was playing rockabilly and surf guitar, mostly pretty clean, and it worked fine. With my 6G15 Fender Reverb unit for the surf stuff, it didn't sound all that different from a Showman.

Whether anybody in particular likes or dislikes the sound for pedal steel is an open question. My only Marshall at this point is an 18-watt hand-wired 1974. Not a lot of headroom, and quite different from the big Marshall 50 and 100 watt amps. But personally, if I found a really good deal on a JCM 800 in nice shape, I would just do it. They're getting expensive and if I can get into one right, there's no way I'm gonna lose. The good ones are classic guitar amps. Just my opinion.

BTW - British amps are not, per se, distorted. The loudest and cleanest amp I've ever owned/played was a HiWatt DR103. Unbelievably loud, clean, and full-range, to the point where it would shake the windows on 3. One of my buddies still has that one - it was too loud for me to use. But I do have a '66 Vox AC-50 with a Vox 15" bass cabinet with a coffee-can EV SRO in it. It distorts but if I wanna get into the Eric Heywood territory, it's perfect.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Ian Rae


From:
Redditch, England
Post  Posted 4 Jun 2022 11:58 am    
Reply with quote

All very interesting. I suppose I've only ever heard them being abused, intentionally or otherwise.. Smile
_________________
Make sleeping dogs tell the truth!
Homebuilt keyless U12 7x5, Excel keyless U12 8x8, Williams keyless U12 7x8, Telonics rack and 15" cabs
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Len Amaral

 

From:
Rehoboth,MA 02769
Post  Posted 5 Jun 2022 6:29 am    
Reply with quote

I had a Marshal 20 watt head (all tube) and 2-12 angled cab with Celestion speakers.
Not my type of amp for pedal steel or guitar. It did not produce a very clean sound.
I think these amps are a one trick pony and need to be turned up to get that driving classic rock tone.
_________________
I survived the sixties!
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Tony Prior


From:
Charlotte NC
Post  Posted 5 Jun 2022 12:52 pm    
Reply with quote

I did , for about a year, double duty, Steel and guitar.

JCM 900/50 watter , but thru a Fender 4 x 10 cab which had 4/25 watt 12" Eminence speakers . Marshall cabs generally had a some sort of Celestion speakers of which I never found my way with any of them.

Additionally , many Marshall amps are designed to run 16 ohms, but they have the 4 and 8 ohm taps on the OT, I changed the OT speaker out (JCM 900) to match the Fender Cab.

Tone wise, it was not bad for the Steel or the Tele, nothing like a Fender or PV, but not bad. It was friggin' heavy I will tell ya that.

I sold the JCM 900 , mistake, I should have kept it. One of two heads I let get away and regret. Sad

Nobody wanted the cab loaded so I pulled the 4 x 12 Emmy's and sold the cab unloaded for $50. I still have a couple of those 12's around here somewhere. One is in an ext cab I used on my pre Covid bi monthly gig for over 5 years .
_________________
Emmons L-II , Fender Telecasters, B-Benders , Eastman Mandolin ,
Pro Tools 12 on WIN 7 !
jobless- but not homeless- now retired 9 years

CURRENT MUSIC TRACKS AT > https://tprior2241.wixsite.com/website
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website
Donny Hinson

 

From:
Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Post  Posted 8 Jun 2022 6:36 pm    
Reply with quote

Quote:
Marshall amp for pedal steel?


Isn't that like using a Corvette to move furniture? Laughing

`
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Peter Siegel

 

From:
Belmont, CA, USA
Post  Posted 15 Jun 2022 3:35 pm    
Reply with quote

Hey Dave, I've been intrigued by the concept of steel through a Marshall for some time but, only for CRUNCH.
Never tried it though
It don't make sense to me to expect to use one for traditional steel sounding stuff.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail
Bob Hoffnar


From:
Austin, Tx
Post  Posted 16 Jun 2022 10:35 pm    
Reply with quote

You can hear the mighty Bobby Snell each and every saturday night at the White Horse in Austin. He gets a great country sound out of his Marshalls.

I got to play through an old Hiwatt at a studio a while back. It had an absolutely fantastic sound for the steel. Full rich and clear with a class A type response. My equipment compulsions led me elsewhere but those big British amps sure do have a thing.

I Europe I'll occasionally end up with some sort of Marshall for my back line amp. Some I didn't like and some had some real possibilities.
_________________
Bob
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website

All times are GMT - 8 Hours
Jump to:  
Please review our Forum Rules and Policies
Our Online Catalog
Strings, CDs, instruction, and steel guitar accessories
www.SteelGuitarShopper.com

The Steel Guitar Forum
148 S. Cloverdale Blvd.
Cloverdale, CA 95425 USA

Click Here to Send a Donation

Email SteelGuitarForum@gmail.com for technical support.


BIAB Styles
Ray Price Shuffles for Band-in-a-Box
by Jim Baron