From John Drumbo French
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"My theory with guitar amps was to concentrate on hearing yourself onstage and nothing more. Basically, everyone ignored me for the most part. The Magic Band did one tour where we used tiny amps miked through the P.A. It saved a lot of backs. The guitars came through the monitors with as much volume as each person desired, and was blasted out to the crowd through the P.A. The drummer didn't have to pound to be heard, and the sound man, but increasing or decreasing the drummer's side wash could control a bit how loud the drummer had to play. It beats going deaf like Pete Townsend" John French
During his final years, Jeff Beck was on a mission to teach proper volume techniques. The legendary guitarist had his fill with massive ear-shattering volumes, which he used willingly and joyfully during his time with The Yardbirds and in his initial solo career. But as he aged, Beck became more interested in refining his technique and finding the perfect sound. It was then that he came to a revelation: you can still fill up a room without actually having to crank up amplifiers.
“By using the P.A. to act in the way it was designed – which is play at low level and use all the distortion and whatever else you need, but make sure you don’t come out louder than the side-fill monitors or the front wedges – you can blow the house down, and I’ve done it,” Beck told Guitar Player in 2010.
“I’ve done a whole tour with a Fender Twin when Stevie Ray Vaughan was going through about four billion watts with a rig that looked like an amp shop,” he added. “He asked me, ‘What the hell are you using? Are your amps under the stage?’ I said, ‘Nope, that’s it right there.’ [Laughs.] But we spent quite a lot of time dialing in the sound and getting rid of the squeaks and squeals. We’d raise the level and then tweak it a little bit, and then we’d raise it a little more. You can’t believe what you can get out of a little tenor 20-watt amp.”
“I played with this powerful band that had 18 pieces, and I thought I’d need a Marshall for it, but I didn’t; I needed a Pignose,” Beck observed. “Even though the trumpets and the horns were blasting away, the difference in character of the guitar with that concentrated trebly sound just cut right through.“
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