Doing Things Wrong

Amplifiers

North American house wiring

Tube amps lend themselves more naturally to distortion than solid-state. When overdriven, tubes produce more of the nice-sounding even harmonics, while transistors produce more of the odd harmonics, which don't sound as good. Early solid-state amps distorted very un-musically. Bass is generally played clean and requires a good deal more power, which would require a very large, heavy, expensive, and delicate tube amp, so solid-state became a good alternative for bassists.

Of course, things have changed a lot since the 1960s/1970s. Nowadays, most venues have their own sound systems, no need to bring a truckload of amplification with you. And electronics have progressed tremendously. A good solid-state modeling amp is indistinguishable from tube. Modern distortion pedals have come a long way from their primitive ancestors as well. Most players hear with their eyes though, and will insist they hear differences that can only be seen, and only a giant tube amp will satisfy them.

Brian May of Queen uses an old transistor car radio to achieve his distorted tone in the studio. It runs on batteries. So much for solid-state not sounding good. One downside of real tube distortion is that you generally have to crank the amp up so loud that someone will call the police. Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top turns a tube amp all the way up and places it in a soundproof enclosure with a microphone. That's kind of crazy when you consider all the good distortion pedals on the market. I wonder how many amps he blows up in a year?

I like a nice old tube amp sometimes. I like that the wiring diagram fits on one page, and I can actually understand what is going on and even make repairs and modifications. Small tube amps have made a resurgence as the need for huge power has gone away. They give an old-timey fun feeling, and they glow inside, but are they really better anymore? I doubt it. In this day and age, for bass I would go with solid-state - much less problems.


Audiovox Gibson-style Bass
Audiovox 736 Replica Bass
Audiovox Gibson-style Guitar
Audiovox Danelectro-style Bass
Audiovox Fretless Bass
Audiovox Electric Upright Bass
Audiovox Strat-style Guitar
Audiovox 12-string Guitar
Audiovox Ukulele Bass
Audiovox Mandolin
BC Rich "Osprey" Bass
Brownsville Violin Bass
Cowbell Bass
Danelectro Pro-1 Bass
Danelectro "Super-63" Guitar
Danelectro Silvertone 1457 Rescue Guitar
Danelectro Longhorn Guitar
Danelectro Silvertone U-1 Guitar
Danelectro Companion Guitar
Danelectro Silvertone 1443 Bass
Danelectro '67 Hornet Guitar
Fender Jazzmaster Bass 1
Fender Jazzmaster Bass 2
Fender Jazzmaster Bass 3
Fender Stratocaster Bass 1
Fender Stratocaster Bass 2
Fender Stratocaster Micro Bass 1
Fender Stratocaster Micro Bass 2
Fender Stratocaster Fretless Bass
Fender Stratocaster Bass VI
Fender Stratocaster Bass IV
Fender Stratocaster 12-string Guitar
Fender Stratocaster Uke Bass
Fender Squier Stratocaster Guitar
Fender Telecaster Bass
SX Precision Bass
Gibson Fenderbird Bass 1
Gibson Fenderbird Bass 2
Gibson Reverse Fenderbird Bass
Kubicki Bass
Schwinn Stingray Bass
Mosrite Bass
Rickenbacker 325 Guitar
Rickenbacker 325 Bass 1
Rickenbacker 325 Bass 2
Rickenbacker 325 Bass 3
Rickenbacker 4001 Bass 1
Samick SG450 Guitar
Danelectro Pro-1 Guitar
Danelectro Silvertone 1448 Guitar
Danelectro '63 Guitar
Danelectro Silvertone 1457 Guitar
Harmony H617 Bobkat
Danelectro Silvertone 1450 Guitar
Harmony Silvertone 1478
Danelectro Silvertone 1472 Amplifier
Danelectro Longhorn Bass

The new slideshow

A while ago, I took a look at the database tables, and realized that about half of the database was due to the slideshow plugin MetaSlider. MetaSlider crapped out thousands of entries across multiple tables. What bothers me is not so much the waste of storage space as the incredible inefficiency of having to retrieve all of that bit by bit from the database server. I did my best to minimize that kind of inefficiency, while the writers of MetaSlider did the opposite. In computer programming, more is almost never better.

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