R
Rocksoff
New member
Ronnie's 3x10 Bandmaster was his main recording amp in the 70s, I don't know about the Champ.
Steve Rosen interview October 1976.
"The stage is free of pedals because, the artist maintains, they always "screw up". but in the studio he does use a Big Muff fuzztone and an Ampeg Scrambler (the former built into a heavy-duty box).
Ronnie's chosen amp for the past three years has been an old single cabinet tweed Fender Bandmaster with three 10" speakers."
Another interview from much later on in 2002.
"Well, one thing you ought to know is that the song almost didn't make it onto the album! (chuckles) We thought it was a "loser" track; just a little ditty that Sammy had written, but it was missing something. Then one day I was sitting with my red, double-cutaway Les Paul Junior, and a Electro-Harmonix Big Muff fuzztone, and the one amp I wish I'd never got rid of, a three-ten tweed Fender Bandmaster. I'd gotten it for ninety dollars, and when I bought it, it was covered with woodtone Contact adhesive paper! The Contact paper peeled right off; it didn't leave any residue and the tweed looked brand new. I used that amp so much I blew it up several times before I finally got rid of it."
Ronnie was using Marshall's live at the time (1976) and recording with the Bandmaster 3x10 and the Montrose album was the Bandmaster 3x10.
Steve Rosen interview October 1976.
"The stage is free of pedals because, the artist maintains, they always "screw up". but in the studio he does use a Big Muff fuzztone and an Ampeg Scrambler (the former built into a heavy-duty box).
Ronnie's chosen amp for the past three years has been an old single cabinet tweed Fender Bandmaster with three 10" speakers."
Another interview from much later on in 2002.
"Well, one thing you ought to know is that the song almost didn't make it onto the album! (chuckles) We thought it was a "loser" track; just a little ditty that Sammy had written, but it was missing something. Then one day I was sitting with my red, double-cutaway Les Paul Junior, and a Electro-Harmonix Big Muff fuzztone, and the one amp I wish I'd never got rid of, a three-ten tweed Fender Bandmaster. I'd gotten it for ninety dollars, and when I bought it, it was covered with woodtone Contact adhesive paper! The Contact paper peeled right off; it didn't leave any residue and the tweed looked brand new. I used that amp so much I blew it up several times before I finally got rid of it."
Ronnie was using Marshall's live at the time (1976) and recording with the Bandmaster 3x10 and the Montrose album was the Bandmaster 3x10.