Can the Orange Bass Terror amp sound like this?

Started by hieronymous, August 12, 2014, 08:29:14 PM

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hieronymous

Not in the market right now, but obviously been following the Orange threads.

This is one of my favorite bass tones - looks like it's Fender P through an Orange amp from 1971:



Might not want this sound all night, but then again.. It's Miroslav Vitous, usually known for his upright playing, but I love his electric playing on this! I have the DVD, there's a couple of songs where he plays electric. Starts to pick up around 2:00 - they really get cooking at about 2:45!

So, I guess finally asking my question - can a Bass Terror amp sound like this on its own? It would be cool to set it up with a little less drive, then occasionally push it into this kind of territory.

Or maybe there's a pedal that can cop this sound? I don't usually chase after other people's sounds, I prefer to root after my own, but I just really like this one - of course, I really like the playing too, even though I can barely conceive of what he's doing harmonically...

Basvarken

Yes and No.

It may be able to come close to the sound.
But the dynamics, no way.

The Bass Terror that I tested a few back had zero dynamics. Wether I hit the strings hard or fondled them softly it all came out the same. Too harsh for my liking.

A full tube Orange will respond differently when pushed hard. It's more musical.
In my opinion the Bass Terror is just on/off. The sound is the same, no matter what you do on your bass.
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hieronymous

Quote from: Basvarken on August 13, 2014, 12:01:48 PM
Yes and No.

It may be able to come close to the sound.
But the dynamics, no way.

The Bass Terror that I tested a few back had zero dynamics. Wether I hit the strings hard or fondled them softly it all came out the same. Too harsh for my liking.

A full tube Orange will respond differently when pushed hard. It's more musical.
In my opinion the Bass Terror is just on/off. The sound is the same, no matter what you do on your bass.

Thanks for that feedback Rob - I have heard that before about these. At some point I'm going to have to check one out for myself.

Happy Face

#3
I have and gig with both an AD200 and a Terror 500. I really have not noticed that lack of response. But that does not mean it's not so.

But I will say that my bandmates and I prefer the overall sound of the tube head over the Terror. But they prefer the Terror when we are loading out at 1 am.  Wimps!

drbassman

Well, I agree there's not a lot of variation in the tone controls on my Terror 1000, but it is noticeable, and useable, from one extreme to the other.  As for the tone, I like it a lot.  It's not as tubby, that's for sure, but the gain does introduce that old school sound some folks are looking for.  For me, I like the sound as it is clean and clear enough with the gain down a bit that my hollow bodies don't sound like indistinct growling Beowulves. As for response,  it's much better than my Mesa Prodigy and I like the quickness of the attack.  So far, I could gig with it exclusively.  A nice amp at a very competitive price.
I'm fixin' a hole where the rain gets in..........cuz I'm built for a kilt!

dadagoboi

If you're looking for serious tube tone from a Class D amp, the Genz Streamliner is the nuts.  Three 12 AX7 preamp tubes and 3 gain stages, 900 watts in a 6 lb package.  From super clean to major tube saturation.  Some guys switch out one or more of the  JJ premium 12AX7s but I haven't felt the need.  I wish I still had a pair of 8-10 cabs for it to push

Aussie Mark

Quote from: dadagoboi on August 21, 2014, 12:22:34 PM
If you're looking for serious tube tone from a Class D amp, the Genz Streamliner is the nuts.

Or the Markbass TTE-500.  I own both.
Cheers
Mark
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