![]() ![]() It has plenty of presence, and it holds its bottom end quite well. But this amp would have no problem with that. You desperately tried to clean up to tone enough to keep it from becoming mushy and falling out of the mix. Understand I come from the dark ages where modeling amps just gave you a range of eww to yuck. Everything from cleans to crunch, and yes, even metal where offered up and surprisingly believable. They aren't just: Metal, Nu-Metal, Grind Core, Heavy Metal, Metal-Metal. So I was somewhat limited to the preset to my review, and I am aware that the "presets always suck", but then there's the Marshall CODE. But that's why Mashall made these amp Bluetooth ready. Now we have a pretty little app to navigate instead of fidgeting There are 8 of them, and each one made me feel dumber than the last. From just a little poking around I was lost and then greeted with ear-blistering feedback. These amps do suffer from what all modeling amps suffer from, endless menus. Although, if you do want to fiddle with presets, you (kind of) have to download the app. It is very easy to tweak all the things that matter and there isn't any messing around with menus unless you absolutely have to. ![]() I recalled using a Marshall AVT 150 head with it's 24 knobs. I've seen plenty of pictures and I knew the specs, but nothing really prepared me for the simplicity of the layout. The next thing I noticed was the controls. The small frame is very misleading in the best way possible. It was loud! I had a fear that it would sound boxy, it didn't. I had to reassure myself that I was actually playing the 50 version and not the 25 watt 1x10. ![]()
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