
SwiftReason
Member
Here's the thing... I think the Blackstar Amped 1 is an excellent piece of gear — but it's often misunderstood.
Most of the time, that’s because players don’t know how to really dial it in. It’s not designed to be a full-featured amp modeler or a traditional tube head — it’s a modern pedal platform that thrives when used with your pedalboard, not instead of it.
That said, I’ve been using the Amped 1 as my primary amp, and after a lot of experimenting (plus a little help from AI), I’ve zeroed in on amp voicing + response combinations and CabRig settings that make a massive difference.
What makes it special?
This gives me a great Marshall-meets-Vox-style pedal platform, and with my pedalboard I can shape anything from shimmering cleans to gritty leads.
The full guide is too long to post so I will reply to this with the suggested starting points for amp emulations. If you're chasing specific amp tones, these are some tested Voice + Response + CabRig combinations to get you close quickly. My replies will cover Vox, Fender, Marshall and Matchless.
Most of the time, that’s because players don’t know how to really dial it in. It’s not designed to be a full-featured amp modeler or a traditional tube head — it’s a modern pedal platform that thrives when used with your pedalboard, not instead of it.
That said, I’ve been using the Amped 1 as my primary amp, and after a lot of experimenting (plus a little help from AI), I’ve zeroed in on amp voicing + response combinations and CabRig settings that make a massive difference.
What makes it special?
- It goes direct to FOH via XLR with CabRig, while still powering a real guitar cab at the same time
- It all fits on my pedalboard — light, compact, fast to set up/tear down
- It reacts beautifully to a well-planned pedal chain — especially overdrives, verbs, and modulation
My Setup (for context)
I need a rig that’s:- Dynamic
- Clear with ambient effects
- Capable of rich drive when needed
- Still mix-friendly for live FOH
Amped 1:
- Voice: UK
- Response: EL34
- Gain: 9–10 o’clock (Vox-like edge of breakup)
- Volume: 1–2 o’clock (Power amp saturation)
- Bass: 10 o'clock
- Middle: 1–2 o'clock
- Treble: 12–1 o,clock
- Cab: 2x12 Classic UK Combo (Open Back)
- Mic: 57 - Dynamic 57, Off-center (Axis button selected)
- Cab Level: +4.6dB
- Lo-Cut: 3.0
- Low: 0.0
- Low Mids: 0.0
- High Mids: -1.5 to -2.0
- High: +2.0 to +2.5
- Hi-Cut: 7.0
- Room Type: Medium Dampened
- Stereo Width: Wide
- Room Level: -2.5dB
This gives me a great Marshall-meets-Vox-style pedal platform, and with my pedalboard I can shape anything from shimmering cleans to gritty leads.
The full guide is too long to post so I will reply to this with the suggested starting points for amp emulations. If you're chasing specific amp tones, these are some tested Voice + Response + CabRig combinations to get you close quickly. My replies will cover Vox, Fender, Marshall and Matchless.
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