The Champaign, Illinois, headquarters for
Analog Outfitters is part junk shop, part
audio monastery, and it’s staffed by a devout
crew committed to mastering all things
audio: If you’re planning a music festival,
they’ll supply vintage gear, lighting, a mixing
console, and even an engineer to patch it all
together and run your sound. They also specialize
in organ repair. Needless to say, these
guys are a resourceful bunch. Given the oldschool
parts (tubes, heavy-duty transformers)
used in so many old organs—and the fact
that old organs aren’t exactly the rage they
once were—it’s little surprise they’ve also ventured
into guitar amplification.
What’s doubly cool is that Analog
Outfitters has parlayed its expertise across
varied audio experiences and equipment.
Their Sarge amp is a 15-watt,
EL84-powered circuit that uses vintage
Hammond organ transformers and a
Fender Deluxe-style tone stack. Each amp
is handbuilt with slightly different aesthetics,
but uses the same basic components to
deliver unique twists on classic tones.
Old Parts, New Ideas
Much of Sarge’s immediate appeal is
derived from the unique enclosure. Once
home to scientific equipment, these heavyduty
aluminum boxes are tough and highly
portable. Each enclosure is slightly different,
but they all have roughly the same
pillbox-like design. On the back, three
holes yield access to an 8 Ω speaker output,
a fuse, and the power-cord jack.
The Sarge is small enough to sit on a
cabinet and solid enough to tough it out on
the floor. Inside, you’ll find three controls
affixed to a vintage embossed sign. The V
knob controls volume, and T and B control
the treble and bass EQ, respectively. There
are also power and standby switches, and
a red indicator light—it’s about as simple
a control set as you’ll find. Behind these
knobs lurks the Sarge’s ammunition—two
EL84s in the power section, two 12AX7s
for the preamp, and a 5Y3 rectifier.
Ah-ten-TION!
I ran the Sarge into a 4x10 cabinet where it
sat perched like a helmet on an armor-clad
mercenary—a singular red eye menacingly
surveying the dark studio, ready and
at attention. My Stratocaster was plugged
directly in, with volume around noon. At
15 watts, the Sarge saturates pretty quickly
as you roll the volume clockwise, but it
will bark with true field-sergeant authority,
too—easily hanging with a drummer and a
second guitarist. If you’re after a gritty tone,
Sarge does stand its ground.
With volume a little past noon, my
Strat’s single-coils produced a razor-wire
wall of sound—think punk-rock roots,
London, in the late ’70s. And just rolling
back the bass knob from my original
12 o’clock setting got me a tighter, more
striking tone to counter the humbuckerequipped
guitarist in my band. Later, I
added a Fulltone Fulldrive to the signal
chain, and it proved a great asset for lead
playing, revealing a lot about how pedalfriendly
this amp is—even with a fairly low
saturation threshold. It’ll happily handle
high-gain pedals and aggressive fuzz, too. A
Big Muff clone retained it’s boomy character
without getting mushy as many fuzzes
do with low-watt amps. But even without
the help of pedals, the amp’s natural sustain
is rich and distinctly vintage. In terms of
feel and tone, it has a very tweed Deluxelike
personality. You shouldn’t expect to
coax modern hi-gain compression at max
volume, but that famous tweed compression
is there in plentitude.
Switching to a humbucker-equipped
Gibson Sonex launched the output volume
through the roof. And kicking treble up a
notch made the Sarge even better suited for
lead duties without any pedal assistance.
I really enjoyed keeping the Sarge at high
volume and using the Sonex’s controls to
accentuate rhythm and lead sections, and
it’s easy to live out your Jimmy Page fantasies
once you nail this technique. Rolling
off your guitar’s volume knob is a great
way to lasso the Sarge’s clean capabilities,
though the volume decrease may make it
hard to achieve a crystalline sound with a
full band behind you.
The Verdict
The Analog Outfitters Sarge is a remarkable
amplifier dripping with mojo and fiery
furnace tone. If you love recording with
smaller amps, you’ll dig its multifaceted uses
and expansive personality. Those searching
for pure cleans—especially in a performance
context—should look elsewhere.
That said, at lower volumes you can achieve
real character and sensitivity with a softer
sting. Sarge also plays well with all pickups,
and great with fuzz boxes—delivering a lot
more range with effects than you might be
accustomed to from a low-wattage amp. It
may look like a piece of design gimmickry
to curmudgeonly purists, but it’s a practical
design—small enough to carry from the studio
to the stage, and tough enough to tour
with. Who says organ players can’t teach us
guitarists a thing or two about gear?