![]() A knowing that I would have to re-define my amp hierarchy. It was one of sadness, enlightenment, and a knowing. And my friends told me that my facial expression changed with the first note. Then I played the Two Rock Custom Reverb Signature. ![]() Since I have owned it, no other amp has caught my eye for permanent ownership. Fun to drive (and just really nice to look at too). My Brown Note DLite 44 is a lovely piece of work: my BMW of tone. So with my good friends, Paul and Charles we line up a few of these gems: a Two Rock K & M ltd, a Ceriatone, a Two-Rock Custom Reverb Signature, My Brown Note, a Two Rock Emerald Pro 50. The honest to goodness truth is that it really is a lot of fun! Now in case I am sounding like a geek, it really is simply part of the quest for great tone, to find answers to some serious questions that we, as tone junkies must know, the final verdict. The list of amps includes some of the finest boutique amps manufactured along with some industry standards. A group of us, avid amp/tone seekers, get together and rent space at a local rehearsal space in Boston called Jamspot, with the sole purpose of lining up a group of amps and doing comparison tests with different speakers, different cabs, guitars, and pedals. My obsession with Two-Rock amps started at a social amp-fest a couple of years ago. The list goes on and on and includes amps that are waaaay out of my price range. Through the years I have owned or tried a lifetime of guitar amplifiers: Fenders, Matchless, Ceriatone, Alessandro, Brown Note, Bludotone, Groove Tube, Boogies, Dumble, Seymour Duncan, Carr, Bad Cat, Top Hat, Acoustic, Yamaha, Vox, Pearce, Gibson, Silvertone.
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