October 2010 \ Reviews \ Amps \ Matamp Amplification MiniMat II Amp Review

Matamp Amplification MiniMat II Amp Review

Jordan Wagner

Matamp's lunchbox amp offers '70s rock tones with reasonable volume


Premier Guitar October 2010

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Matamp Amplification has quite a history. The tale begins with German radio engineer Mat Mathias, who fled Germany for England during World War II when he was just a child. In 1945, he joined a radio repair business called Radio Craft, and which he eventually purchased. Mathias developed the first Matamp model—the Series 2000—in 1964. Like many guitar amps of the day, it incorporated ideas from contemporary hi-fi circuits. The Series 2000 gained a devoted following after Peter Green used one to record Fleetwood Mac’s “Albatross.” In 1968, Matamp’s most famous product, the 100-watt Orange Matamp, made its debut. Over the years, Matamp products have gained cult status among collectors and players. Though Mathias died in 1989, the company continues to build tube amps in a converted mill workshop in West Yorkshire, England.

In 2005, Matamp joined the low-wattage amp party with their MiniMat head, and in 2007 they updated the original design with a valve-driven (rather than chip-driven) boost and a Master Volume, and rechristened it the MiniMat II.

Take a Tour
Even by miniature amplifier standards, the 12" x 7 1/4" x 6 1/2" MiniMat II head is diminutive. Sporting one Edicron 6V6GT power tube and two JJ ECC83S preamp tubes, the head delivers four watts of power.

The MiniMat’s front panel offers a single input and four controls: Gain, Boost, Volume, and Tone. The Boost knob lets you preset additional gain and turn it on and off with a footswitch. The rear panel provides 16- and 8-ohm speaker outputs, a footswitch jack for the Boost circuit, a mono RCA direct out, and a handy power attenuator that’s wired to the 8-ohm speaker jack.

After eyeballing the exterior, I couldn’t resist peering inside. Sliding the chromed chassis out from the head shell, I inspected the component layout and milling, and was impressed by the impeccable workmanship. Matamp products are all handmade, and the company’s attention to detail really shows with the MiniMat II.

Pint-Sized Punch
Plugging in a Gibson Les Paul Custom with Tom Anderson pickups, I began exploring the MiniMat II’s sonic palette. For my initial tests, I used a Matamp 112S cabinet, loaded with a single 25-watt Celestion G12M Greenback speaker. In short order, I was rewarded with superb, smooth tones reminiscent of several mid-’70s Orange heads I’ve had the pleasure of playing over the years. For those unfamiliar with that era of Orange models, the highs are very smooth and biting, and the strong, growling midrange is supported by a fuzzy, blooming low end. The MiniMat II captured this tone extremely well, though it lacked the thick, fuzzy lows. That’s not surprising, though, because you can only create that type of burly bottom by pushing a high-wattage amp through a speaker cabinet with several drivers. Because of this, the MiniMat II’s drive tone is compelling, but somewhat limited.

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Comments

(5 comments) display by
UsernameComment
Matamp America
on 10/16/2010
USA dealers wanted. if anyone wants to carry Matamp in their shop, please contact www.matampamerica.com if you want to buy a Matamp, simply go on that same website and it will be a pleasure to answer any questions you may have. The full current inventory is viewable in the eBay store http://stores.ebay.ca/g-spot-music Cheers "G"
p992
on 10/11/2010
G Spot Music is the US/Canadian distributor and will ship to your door.
Gavin
on 10/07/2010
I have to concur with Luke - this amp can do some great tones and is perfect for small gigs, home recording. I've used mine as a practice rig for home and going into a PA with bass at small acoustic gigs. This little guy will give you a great clean tone but it will highlight sloppy playing, it'll get you some great slightly driven 'break up' style cleans and a really great 70's Orange/Matamp tone - think Zepplin at bedroom levels! The Mini will drive a 4x12 and sound BIG. I feel the reviewer could have explored the tonal range of this amp in more depth and in failing to do so has missed the point of it's intended application. Why review a practice/recording amp and not look at its clean and 'break up' tones? The amp has a tube driven, footswitchable boost and there is no comparison in the drive and boosted tone It's a little disappointing that in a 7 minute review all we get is everything on 10 and then a volume rolled off clip. No direct recording clips? Sometimes it's good to consider what the application is for the reviewed product and then review based on that criteria. It appears that the reviewer has forgot he is reviewing a 4 watt amp and its not likely to be played in a live room with full kit etc. The written review was fine but was incongruent with the video demo. I'd welcome comments from Jordan.
Luke
on 10/04/2010
Are you serious? Maybe the amp would be more versatile if you backed off the gain, volume and tone knobs a bit... I have no idea what you mean by cant get a clean tone... if you're playing a humbucker equiped guitar with everything on 10 what do you expect... its a 4 watt amp... a perfect practice and recording amp... I doubt anyone would buy one with the view to playing it in a live situation... unless of course your gig had massive sound restrictions in which case you probably couldnt buy a better amp!!! The Attenuator is fantastic if you live in an appartment, and frankly leaves any "headphone" amp for dead... I'm absolutely dumbfounded by this review...???
Dono
on 10/02/2010
No dealers in usa stock this amp.



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