How Marshall went to hell and back to create their first 100-watt amp.
Itās the stuff of rock legend: In the summer of 1965, Pete Townshend asked Jim Marshall to build an amp even larger and louder than Marshallās current JTM45 model. Marshall delivered with model 1959, sometimes called the JTM45/100 due to the fact that early models featured the JTM45ās distinctive front-panel. It featured four output tubes in place of the JTM45ās two tubes. The Who first used the new modelāwith a colossal 8x12 cabinetāsometime around November 12, 1965. Finally, the band had amplifiers loud enough to compete with Keith Moonās explosive drumming.
But thereās more to the story of the first 100-watt stack. Jim Marshall (who passed away in April 2012 at the age of 88) and his visionary colleagues, Ken Bran and Dudley Craven, had to surmount countless design hurdles and battle the technical limitations of available components. Itās a tale of ingenuity, dogged determination, and sheer lust for power.
But to tell it, we must back up a few years.
The Genesis of Crunch
It was probably just a matter of time before someone realized that rock ānā roll needed another voice for its guitars in addition to clean Fender amplifier tone. But who would have thought that someone would be a drummer? A drum teacher, Marshall began selling drums on July 7, 1960, at his new shop at 76 Uxbridge Road in Hanwell, a town in the London borough of Ealing. āAll the drummers used to bring their groups in with them, which is how I got to meet guitarists like Pete Townshend and Ritchie Blackmore,ā Jim later said. āThey kept pestering me to stock guitars and amps, so I decided to give it a go.ā As a result, Jim expanded to electric guitars, basses, and amplifiersāa wise move due to the booming rock ānā roll market.
In 1962, Jim hired Ken Bran as his repair engineer. Marshallās shop was selling Fender and Selmer amplifiers, but Fenders were expensive in the UK, and Selmers broke down too often. In conversations with players who came to his shop, Jim realized many were searching for a sound they couldnāt quite get from amps available at the time. āListening to what they were saying gave me a very good idea of what they wanted,ā Jim recalled. āSo, I decided to put together a small team to build a valve amplified with the specific sound the lads were after.ā As a result, Marshall and Bran discussed producing their own amplifier. Bran told Marshall that he was comfortable doing repairs, but could not create a complete circuit. He recommended Dudley Craven, an electronics apprentice then working at EMI Electronics. Craven, 18, was known as the āWhiz Kidā because of his youth and skill with electronics. He jumped at the challenge of realizing Marshallās vision of a rock ānā roll guitar amp. Ken Flegg also joined the team as an engineer who assembled the components on tag boards.
Marshall's 40th Anniversary JTM45/100 head and 4x12 cab reissues. Photos courtesy of Marshall Amplification.
Creating the First Marshall Amplifier
In the fall of 1962 Craven was living at 202C Uxbridge Road while working for Marshall. Behind the house was the tiny ham radio shack where Craven broadcast as āG3PUN.ā Here Craven conducted most of the original testing of the JTM45, Marshallās first amplifier. Friends would sometimes find Craven asleep at the workbench, exhausted from trying to keep up with amplifier orders.
JTM45 prototyping began in September 1962. In those early days Marshall would fabricate the aluminum chassis, preparing it for component mounting. Bran would obtain and install the bolt-on components, at which point Craven, the chief designing engineer, would take over the build, installing the circuit board, wiring everything, installing tubes, and setting the bias. The team produced about one amplifier per week. When a prototype was completed, Marshall would ask Pete Townshend or Ritchie Blackmore to demo the amplifier at his shop. After five prototypes, a sixth was chosen to become the production model. āAs soon as I heard it I said, āthatās it ā thatās the Marshall sound.āā Jim later remembered. āIt was the sound I could hear in my head based on what the boys told me they were looking for.ā This unit would become known as the ā#1 amp.ā Its circuitry essentially mimicked that of the 5F6-A Fender Bassman amp, though with some subtle departures that resulted in different gain, loading, brightness, and harmonic content.
By June 1964 the first Marshall factory had opened on Silverdale Road in Hayes. The 5,000 square foot facility was staffed by 15 employees who produced about 20 amps a week. Celebrities like Brian Poole & the Tremeloes and the Who would drop by, creating an exciting work environment.
Enter the Who
In 1965 Pete Townshend and John Entwistle of the Who were trying any amp that might be heard over Keith Moonās drums. They briefly used Vox amplifiers, though they were ultimately deemed unsatisfactory.
At the time most amplifier components were rated up to 450 volts of direct current (VDC) and would fail at higher voltages. Said Townshend in an August 1996 interview with (now-defunct) British magazine Guitar, āFender didnāt go any further with it after the late ā50s. The theory was if you went any further, literally all the other components would melt because theyād been designed for much lower voltages.ā Marshall built a 50-watt amplifier known as model 1987 for Townshend, but it wasnāt loud enough. āI went back and said, āNo, I want it even louder, even bigger,āā he told Guitar.
Seventeen-year-old Dudley Craven in his tiny ham radio shack, circa 1961. Many of the Marshall JTM45 prototypes would be refined and tested here. Photo courtesy of Barbara Craven.
But the ampās unique harmonic characteristics caught the guitaristās ear. āI got very angry, very frustrated,ā he remembers. āI kept pushing them. I said, āYouād better [expletive] do thisāthereās something happening here which is really interesting. You get up to a certain pitch, and something happens between the pickup and the amp. The guitar kind of starts to sound like a symphony orchestra.ā
It was almost as if Townshend could peer into the future and see that overdrive would shape the new sound of rock ānā roll. āI knew that in distortion there was a music of a much higher harmonic order than anything that I could play,ā he said in the aforementioned interview. āSo I started that whole trip off.ā
Bigger and Louder: Model 1959
In mid 1965 Marshall asked Craven and Bran to begin prototyping what would become model 1959, also known as the JTM45/100āMarshallās first attempt at a louder amp. The design team increased the power by building up the JTM45 circuit, while taking pains to prevent the components from overheating. All amplifier manufacturers knew heat was the enemy of a reliable amplifier.
The first model 1959 prototype was totally experimental. It used one 5AR4/GZ34 rectifier tube, four 6V6 output tubes, and three ECC83/12AX7 preamp tubes for about 60 watts of power. They used a Radiospares āDe Luxeā output transformer, but it couldnāt handle the power. The windings melted.
The second prototype was quite different. This amplifier used two 5AR4/GZ34 rectifier tubes, four 5881/6L6 output tubes, and three ECC83/12AX7 preamp tubes. The amp used two Radiospares 30-watt output transformers, which together could handle the amplifierās power. This prototype reassured the design team they were going in the right direction.
Third Timeās the Charm
Craven perfected model 1959 with a third prototype in the fall of 1965. The design team had replaced the 5881/6L6 output tubes with KT66 tubes, which were easier to source in England. After testing with the dual 30-watt output stage, it became clear that heavier-duty output transformers were required. Craven selected a pair of Drake 50-watt output transformers (784-74), because at the time no 100-watt output transformers were available.
This third prototype of the Marshall model 1959, serial #6406, may be the first 100-watt Super Tremolo amplifier. These early 100-watt amplifiers incorporated a unique dual-output transformer design. There is no impedance selector switch.
Texas Instruments TS107 silicon diodes replaced the inefficient tube rectifiers, increasing power and changing the amplifierās sonic character. The mushy āsagā characteristic of tube rectifiers was gone. The bottom end was tighter. Highs were clearer. The response was faster. And there was an added benefit: The amplifier would never fail due to a bad rectifier tube.
The power transformer was a large military/industrial-grade model manufactured by Radiospares. Because this amplifier was used only for prototyping, the power transformer did not have a USA voltage tap.
The chart (right) shows the various voltages that can be obtained from the three taps on the power transformer in amplifier #6406āwhich is owned by the author and is one of the 12 original, dual-output 100-watt Marshalls.
Dual-Output 100-Watt Marshall Amplifiers
Dual-output Marshall amplifiers were manufactured for a few months in late 1965 and are extremely rare. Decades later, when Marshall conducted research for the 40th anniversary of the 100-watt stack, it was determined that a total of 12 dual-output amplifiers were manufactured, including the third prototype of model 1959. Ten of these 12 amplifiers were built with Radiospares power transformers with the USA voltage tap.
The dual-output model 1959 was available as a PA, bass, or lead model. These early amplifiers were built on aluminum chassis that are prone to warping and cracking under the weight of the transformers. The front panel is gold plexi, a look borrowed from the JTM45. (Thatās why some refer to the early model 1959s as JTM45/100s.) The PA amps received JTM100 gold plexi panels. The back panels were white with the āSuper Amplifierā logo silkscreened in gold. The first few amplifiers used square power boards, which would have trouble clearing several of the output tube sockets and the internal fuse. Eventually the power board was cut slightly to provide clearance for these components.
Look closely at this internal view of #6406 and youāll see that the 1959T has an extra ECC83/12AX7 tube for the tremolo circuit. To the left is the tremolo circuit board, with the main circuit board in the center and the power board at the right. This early version uses a bridge rectifier with the robust Radiospares military/industrial power transformer. When most recently acquired, this amplifier was missing some original parts, but was restored using the most accurate possible replacements. Photo by Michael Brown.
In November 1965 the Marshall team completed several of the new 100-watt amplifiers ordered by the Who. The band dispatched their roadie to retrieve their new gear. He proceeded to throw each amplifier into his truck one after the other, just like firewood. āI canāt believe he just did that!ā Jim Marshall would later recall thinking.
Townshendās 8x12 and the Birth of the Stack
At the same time that Townshend demanded Marshall build him 100-watt āweapons,ā, he also asked for 8x12 speaker cabinets. Jim later shared what Townshend said when he warned him that theyād be nearly impossible to move. āI told Pete, āno problem, Iāll make a 4x12 with a straight front and then put an angled one on top.ā He shook his head and said, āNo, I donāt want that, Jim, I want all eight speakers in one cabinet.ā I told him that it was going to be too heavy and that his roadies were going to complain like mad. His reply was, āNever mind them, they get paid,ā and off he went!ā Townshend ordered four of the behemoths fitted with Celestion T652 12" speakers, which are similar to 15-watt Celestion Blue Alnico 12" speakers. The bottom half of the cabinet was closed, while the top half was partially opened.
YouTube It
In this clip of the Who performing at Londonās Fifth National Jazz & Blues Festival on August 6, 1965, you can tell that the bass and guitar sounds arenāt great, which could explain why Pete Townshend and John Entwistle donāt look very happy. At the 2:05 mark, a frustrated Townshend fiddles with switches on his Vox amps before taking off his Rickenbacker guitar and launching it over them. This was around the time he ordered 100-watt Marshalls for the Who.
At this gig in France, Townshend and Entwistle each use one 100-watt stack. Townshendās Fender Telecaster allows you to really hear the Marshall headās dynamics and how its GEC KT66 output tubes work in concert with the T652 alnico speakers in the 8x12 cabinet. The tremolo modelās two additional knobs and longer control panel distinguish it from the bass model.
At the historic Pier Pavilion (itās misidentified as āPear Pavilionā in the videoās opening screen) in Suffolk county, UK, Pete Townshend and the Who blaze through āIām a Boy,ā āSubstitute,ā and āMy Generationā before trashing the stage. Notice the battle-scarred 8x12 cabinets. Townshend and Entwistle each play through two full stacks, and the tone is wonderful.
Marshall presumably tested the first 8x12 cabinet using one or more of the 12 original, dual-output amplifiers. Though Marshall canāt corroborate which exact amp was used, an old masking-tape diagram on the back panel of #6406 shows where the output jacks were located and how each half of the 8x12 cabinet was 16 ohms, for a total load of 8 ohms.
The 8x12 idea didnāt last long for Townshend, though. As Marshall recounted, āA couple of weeks later, he came back and said, āyou were absolutely right, Jim, they are way too heavy, my roadies are furious!ā He wanted me to just cut the 8x12s in half but that wasnāt possible because of the way they were madeāwe werenāt using fingerlocked joints in those early days, so the cabs were butt-jointed. So I told him, āLook, Pete, I canāt do that because the whole thing will fall apart if I do! Just leave it with me and Iāll get it sorted out.ā So I ended up doing what I wanted to do in the first placeāa straight-fronted cab with an angled one sitting on top.ā Jim concluded, āthe stack was a combination of design ideas from Pete and myself. I donāt mind admitting that we initially built the stack with looks very much in mind, because a wall of them does make a fantastic backdrop on any stage.ā
A 2005 40th Anniversary JTM45/100 (left) head cabinet and chassis, complete with dual Drake transformers. The late Jim Marshall (right) with the first JTM45 head in 2011. Photos by Matt York.
40 Years Later
In 2005 Marshall celebrated the 40th anniversary of the 100-watt stack with a limited run of 250 full-stack replicas of the original amplifier and speaker cabinets. Finally, more guitarists could gain access to the dynamic tones of a dual 50-watt output stage. The 40th anniversary cabinets recreate the 8x12 look and sound via two 4x12 cabinets loaded with Celestion T652 alnico speakers.
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Many listeners and musicians can tell if a bass player is really a guitarist in disguise. Hereās how you can brush up on your bass chops.
Was bass your first instrument, or did you start out on guitar? Some of the worldās best bass players started off as guitar players, sometimes by chance. When Stuart Sutcliffeāoriginally a guitarist himselfāleft the Beatles in 1961, bass duties fell to rhythm guitarist Paul McCartney, who fully adopted the role and soon became one of the undeniable bass greats.
Since there are so many more guitarists than bassistsāthink of it as a supply and demand issueāodds are that if youāre a guitarist, youāve at least dabbled in bass or have picked up the instrument to fill in or facilitate a home recording.
But thereās a difference between a guitarist who plays bass and one who becomes a bass player. Part of whatās different is how you approach the music, but part of it is attitude.
Many listeners and musicians can tell if a bass player is really a guitarist in disguise. They simply play differently than someone who spends most of their musical time embodying the low end. But if youāre really trying to put down some bass, you donāt want to sound like a bass tourist. Real bassists think differently about the rhythm, the groove, and the harmony happening in each moment.
And who knows ā¦ if you, as a guitarist, thoroughly adopt the bassist mindset, you might just find your true calling on the mightiest of instruments. Now, Iām not exactly recruiting, but if you have the interest, the aptitude, andāperhaps most of allāthe necessity, here are some ways you can be less like a guitarist who plays bass, and more like a bona fide bass player.
Start by playing fewer notes. Yes, everybody can see that youāve practiced your scales. But at least until you get locked in rhythmically, use your ears more than your fingers and get a sense of how your bass parts mesh with the other musical elements. You are the glue that holds everything together. Recognize that youāre at the intersection of rhythm and harmony, and youāll realize foundation beats flash every time.āIf Larry Graham, one of the baddest bassists there has ever been, could stick to the same note throughout Sly & the Family Stoneās āEveryday People,ā then you too can deliver a repetitive figure when itās called for.ā
Focus on that kick drum. Make sure youāre locked in with the drummer. That doesnāt mean you have to play a note with every kick, but there should be some synchronicity. You and the drummer should be working together to create the rhythmic drive. Laying down a solid bass line is no time for expressive rubato phrasing. Lock it upāand have fun with it.
Donāt sleep on the snare. What does it feel like to leave a perfect hole for the snare drumās hits on two and four? What if you just leave space for half of them? Try locking the ends of your notes to the snareās backbeat. This is just one of the ways to create a rhythmic feel together with the drummer, so you produce a pocket that everyone else can groove to.
Relish your newfound harmonic power. Move that major chord root down a third, and now you have a minor 7 chord. Play the fifth under a IV chord and you have a IV/V (āfour over five,ā which fancy folks sometimes call an 11 chord). The point is to realize that the bottom note defines the harmony. Sting put it like this: āItās not a C chord until I play a C. You can change harmony very subtly but very effectively as a bass player. Thatās one of the great privileges of our role and why I love playing bass. I enjoy the sound of it, I enjoy its harmonic power, and itās a sort of subtle heroism.ā
Embrace the ostinato. If the song calls for playing the same motif over and over, donāt think of it as boring. Think of it as hypnotic, tension-building, relentless, and an exercise in restraint. Countless James Brown songs bear this out, but my current favorite example is the bass line on the Pointer Sistersā swampy cover of Allen Toussaint āYes We Can Can,ā which was played by Richard Greene of the Hoodoo Rhythm Devils, aka Dexter C. Plates. Think about it: If Larry Graham, one of the baddest bassists there has ever been, could stick to the same note throughout Sly & the Family Stoneās āEveryday People,ā then you too can deliver a repetitive figure when itās called for.
Be supportive. Though you may stretch out from time to time, your main job is to support the song and your fellow musicians. Consider how you can make your bandmates sound better using your phrasing, your dynamics, and note choices. For example, you could gradually raise the energy during guitar solos. Keep that supportive mindset when youāre offstage, too. Some guitarists have an attitude of competitiveness and even scrutiny when checking out other players, but bassists tend to offer mutual support and encouragement. Share those good vibes with enthusiasm.
And finally, give and take criticism with ease. This oneās for all musicians: Humility and a sense of helpfulness can go a long way. Ideally, everyone should be working toward the common goal of whatās good for the song. As the bass player, you might find yourself leading the way.Fuchs Audio introduces the ODH Hybrid amp, featuring a True High Voltage all-tube preamp and Ice Power module for high-powered tones in a compact size. With D-Style overdrive, Spin reverb, and versatile controls, the ODH offers exceptional tone shaping and flexibility at an affordable price point.
Fuchs Audio has introduced their latest amp the ODH Ā© Hybrid. Assembled in USA.
Featuring an ODS-style all-tube preamp, operating at True High Voltage into a fan-cooled Ice power module, the ODH brings high-powered clean and overdrive tones to an extremely compact size and a truly affordable price point.
Like the Fuchs ODS amps, the ODH clean preamp features 3-position brite switch, amid-boost switch, an EQ switch, high, mid and low controls. The clean preamp drives theoverdrive section in D-Style fashion. The OD channel has an input gain and outputmaster with an overdrive tone control. This ensures perfect tuning of both the clean andoverdrive channels. A unique tube limiter circuit controls the Ice Power module input.Any signal clipping is (intentionally) non-linear so it responds just like a real tube amp.
The ODH includes a two-way footswitch for channels and gain boost. A 30-second mute timer ensures the tubes are warmed up before the power amp goes live. The ODH features our lush and warm Spin reverb. A subsonic filter eliminates out-of-band low frequencies which would normally waste amplifier power, which assures tons of clean headroom. The amp also features Accent and Depth controls, allowing contouring of the high and low response of the power amp section, to match speakers, cabinets andenvironments. The ODH features a front panel fully buffered series effects loop and aline out jack, allowing for home recording or feeding a slave amp. A three-position muteswitch mutes the amp, the line out or mute neither.
Built on the same solid steel chassis platform as the Fuchs FB series bass amps, the amps feature a steel chassis and aluminum front and rear panels, Alpha potentiometers, ceramic tube sockets, high-grade circuit boards and Neutrik jacks. The ICE power amp is 150 watts into 8 ohms and 300 watts into 4 ohms, and nearly 500 watts into 2.65 ohms (4 and8 ohms in parallel) and operates on universal AC voltage, so itās fully globallycompatible. The chassis is fan-cooled to ensure hours of cool operation under any circumstances. The all-tube preamp uses dual-selected 12AX7 tubes and a 6AL5 limiter tube.
MAP: $ 1,299
For more information, please visit fuchsaudiotechnology.com.
Jackson Guitars announces its first female signature artist model, the Pro Series Signature Diamond Rowe guitar.
āIām so excited about this new venture with the Jackson family. This is a historic collaboration - as I am the first female in the history of Jackson with a signature guitar and the first female African American signature Jackson artist. I feel so honored to have now joined such an elite group of players that are a part of this club. Many who have inspired me along this journey to get here. Itās truly humbling.ā says Diamond.
Diamond Rowe is the co-founder and lead guitarist for the metal/hard rock band Tetrarch. Since co-founding the band in high school, Tetrarch has become one of the most talked about up-and-coming bands in the world - with several press outlets such as Metal Hammer, Kerrang, Revolver, Guitar World and many others boldly naming Diamond Rowe the worldās next guitar hero. Tetrarch has connected with many fans while performing on some of the world's biggest stages garnering spots alongside several of the heavy music worldās biggest names such as Guns Nā Roses, Slipknot, Lamb of God, Disturbed, Avenged Sevenfold, Sevendust, Rob Zombie, Trivium, and many many others. The Jackson Pro Series Signature Diamond Rowe DR12MG EVTN6 is based on Jacksonās single-cut Monarkh platform and is a premium guitar designed for progressive metal players seeking precision and accuracy.
Crafted in partnership with Diamond, this model boasts a 25.5 ā scale, Monarkh-styled nyatoh body draped with a gorgeous poplar burl top, three-piece nyatoh set-neck with graphite reinforcement, and 12Ė radius bound ebony fingerboard with 24 jumbo frets. The black chrome-covered active EMGĀ® 81/85 humbucking bridge and neck pickups, three-way toggle switch, single volume control, and tone control provide a range of tonal options. The EvertuneĀ® bridge ensures excellent tuning stability, while the Dark Rose finish with a new custom 3+3 color-matched Jackson headstock and black hardware looks simply stunning.
To showcase the Pro Plus Signature Diamond Rowe DR12MG EVTN6, Diamond shares her journey as a guitarist, delving into the inspiration behind her unique design specifications and the influential artists who shaped her sound within a captivating demo video. This video prominently features powerful performances of Tetrarchās latest release, āLive Not Fantasize,ā and āIām Not Rightā showcasing the DR12MG EVTN6ās unparalleled tonal versatility and performance capabilities.
MSRP $1699.99
For more information, please visit jacksonguitars.com.