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Review: EBS Classic Session 30
EBS Sweden’s latest product – the Session 30 – is the company’s smallest bass combo to date, and meant for practicing, recording and home use.
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The diminutive and lightweight EBS Classic Session 30 (current price in Finland approx. 169 €) is part of EBS’ Made-in-China Classic-series.
As its name suggests, the Session 30 offers 30 Watts of rms-power.
Its eight-inch speaker sits in a front-ported baffle. The stylish grille cloth is attached in a traditional way using velcro.
The combo’s back is fully closed. EBS have added a separate grounding point next to the power connector, which may come in handy in the studio for combatting mains hum.
The Session 30 weighs just under nine kilos, so it is very easy to carry around by its top handle.
The control panel comprises of four control knobs – with a peak indicator next to the gain control.
For practicing, EBS have added a mini-jack, so you can connect an mp3-player, as well as a full-sized headphones output.
A very rare feature in this price range is the combo’s balanced XLR-output, which makes the Session 30 handy as a studio DI-box with its own monitor. Using the Ground Lift -switch enables you to break possible earth loops safely.
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It would be completely unrealistic to expect a mighty roar from such a tiny bass combo.
But I must stress that the EBS Classic Session 30 really delivers the good in terms of its sound quality. This isn’t a murky-sounding piece of junk, but a great little tool – regardless of its very fair price.
This little ’un delivers genuine EBS Classic Series -tone at levels fit for tuition and home use. The bass register is warm, the mid-range tone clear, and the top end has a nice, soft silkiness to it.
The eight-inch speaker and small cabinet will show you the white flag, if the combo is taken to its limits, by vibrating and buzzing, but used sensibly, the EBS Session 30 holds its own nicely.
The combo’s XLR-output works great, and sends a healthy, pristine signal to your console or sound-card.
In my opinion, the EBS Classic Session 30 is a fine little practice amp and a handy tool in the small project studio.
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The sound bites were recorded by mixing the combo’s DI-signal with the sound picked up by a condenser mic placed in front of the speaker:
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EBS Classic Session 30
169 €
Finnish distributor: F-Musiikki
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Pros:
+ value-for-money
+ size
+ weight
+ sound
+ DI-output
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Classic Guitars, part 10: PRS Custom 24
In the mid-Seventies both of the guitar industry’s giants – Fender and Gibson – had lost their innovative edge and much of their corporate prestige. Both companies had been taken over by large corporations, and profit margins started to push quality control into the background.
Many discerning guitarists were starting to subscribe to the notion of ”They’re not making ’em like they used to”, which left the doors wide open to Far Eastern copy guitars, as well as to small boutique makers.
PRS Guitars, just like Hamer Guitars, took Gibson’s classic solidbody designs as a basis for their ”modern vintage” models.
With PRS Guitars it all started with a young Paul Reed Smith converting one spare bedroom at his childhood home into a workshop in 1975. By the next year he had already moved into a small workshop in Annapolis, and started attracting customers such as Ted Nugent and Peter Frampton. His first guitars were based closely on the double cutaway Gibson Les Paul Special, but featured humbucking pickups.
A few years down the road Paul Smith added fancy flame maple tops into the mix, and he managed to sell four of these guitars to Carlos Santana. Santana’s signature PRS models are still based on these original guitars.
But Smith wasn’t satisfied with simply producing refined versions of past Gibson-classics, so he set out to develop the ultimate solidbody guitar.
By 1985 Paul Smith had finalised his vision and started his own production facility. At the NAMM shows of 1985 Smith unveiled the PRS Custom 24 – the model that has defined the whole brand to this day. The new guitar ingeniously combined the best features of a Gibson Les Paul Standard and a Fender Stratocaster, as well as including many of Smith’s own improvements – not least the smooth and reliable PRS-vibrato and his own (Schaller-made) locking tuners.
The PRS Custom 24 combines Gibson-style materials and construction with a Fender-like outline, balance and (in most cases) a vibrato bridge. Added into the mix are a middle-of-the-road 25-inch (63.5 cm) scale length – about halfway between the softer Gibson (24.75″/62.9 cm) and the harder Fender (25.5″/64.8 cm) scale lengths – as well as two PRS-humbuckers with coil-splits.
Originally the Custom 24 came equipped with two knobs and one mini-switch. The knob closest to the bridge pickup was (and still is) the master volume control, with the second knob actually being a five-way rotary pickup selector, and not a control pot. The mini-switch was called the Sweet Switch, and served in lieu of a regular tone control, by giving you a set tone with rolled-off highs.
The Sweet Switch was replaced by a regular tone control around 1989, and these days many Customs also feature a regular five-way pickup selector.
Over the years PRS have changed many details in the construction, harware and electronics of their guitars, but the Custom 24 still carries the essence of what PRS Guitars are all about – it is a beautiful, yet practical quality instrument. Or as Carlos Santana put it in an interview with Paul Reed Smith a few years ago: ”It’s a guitar that gives you no excuses not to play to the best of your abilities.”
Jeff Loomis meet and greet @ Sound-Shop.fi
Today shredder-par-excellence Jeff Loomis took time out before his Helsinki gig to meet fans and sign autographs at Helsinki’s Sound-Shop store.
Jeff even signed one of Sound-Shop’s Schecter Jeff Loomis Signature models.
Review: Roland GA-112
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One of Roland’s many new products for 2012 is the GA-112 – a COSM-based guitar combo using the company’s modelling technology to come up with a sound all of its own.
The GA-112 – as well as its larger 2 x 12″ brother, the GA-212 – utilises a specially designed COSM-model called Progressive Amp. Progressive Amp promises to give you the full scale of possible amp tones – from ultra-clean all the way to bone-crushingly dirty – from a single digital amp model, using only the gain-control and the combo’s EQ.
The 100-Watt Roland GA-112’s (current price in Finland: 844 €) looks combine many features from older Roland guitar amps.
The front panel is somewhat reminiscent of the legendary Jazz Chorus combo, while the cabinet’s black vinyl cover, as well as the extremely sturdy metal speaker grille have been borrowed from the company’s long-running Cube-range.
The GA-112’s chunky plastic corner protectors are designed to withstand the rough life of a gigging amplifier.
This Roland is equipped with a fully-digital preamp section offering a whopping five channels – four user-storable selections, plus the current control knob settings in Manual-mode.
Regardless of all the digital circuitry inside, the GA-112’s front panel is very clean and easy to understand. All push-buttons are backlit, and all the knobs for storable parameters (meaning all, but the Master Volume) have been equipped with red position LEDs. This combo’s settings are easy to read even on a completely darkened stage.
Apart from its two input jacks, the front section offers two buttons – Boost and Voice, which adds a slight loudness EQ-curve to the signal.
The Progressive Amp -section’s oblong LED-indicator is a great way to keep you in the picture in regard to the character of the current amp channel/settings, by changing its colour according to the gain setting. A green light, for example, tells you that you are paddling safely in totally clean waters, while purple or white means you are sailing close to distortion meltdown.
The EQ-section is a three-band affair with an added mid-boost for fattening up your tone.
Before travelling onward to the Presence- and reverb-controls your signal can be send to either or both of the GA-112’s effect loops. Both loops’ on/off-status is stored channel-specifically along with all the other channel data, which means that changing channels also automatically switches the loops on or off.
The GA-combo’s only internal effect is its lushly-voiced digital reverb.
Roland’s GA-112 stores all changes to one channel’s settings automatically each time you switch to another channel, which makes the combo quite intuitive to work with.
The effect loops have been placed alongside all the other connectors on the back panel.
You can choose between a parallel and a series signal path for each loop, and set the correct nominal signal level (-10 dB or +4 dB) for your chosen outboard effects.
The back panel also gives you a tuner output and a line level output for connection to a mixer. You can also daisy-chain two GA-112s for large venues.
For full switching control on-stage you have to buy Roland’s own GA-FC-footcontroller, which allows you to switch channels, turn the boost on or off, as well as switch on/off the effect loops and the reverb.
It would have been a nice move, though, if Roland had included a simple up/down-footswitch for channel-switching with the amp.
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Roland’s GA-112 isn’t your traditional modelling amp, as it doesn’t feature heaps of different models of famous amps, vintage and new, or loads of different internal effects. The approach has been radically different here.
The GA-112’s main advantages are its healthy basic sound, as well as the Progressive Amp’s huge versatility and tweakability, giving you everything from totally clean to full-on metal.
The Roland isn’t about the authenticity of vintage amp models when compared to the physical originals from yesteryear. This is a modelling amp that isn’t modelling any specific amps, but uses it digital power to offer the guitarist a blank canvas with a large palette of colours.
The Roland GA-112 makes a great job of offering most guitarists their sound with the minimal amount of fuss and a practically flat learning curve.
Warm Jazz-cleans or biting Country-picking can be dialled in in no time. Organic and dynamically rich Trad Blues and Seventies Rock can also be had. And the GA-112’s merciless Metal-riffing will have you headbanging until the janitor takes the main fuse hostage.
Roland’s two switching effect loops open up many interesting possiblilities for seasoning your tones.
I suggest you make a beeline for your nearest Roland-dealer, if you are interested in making the GA-112 your personal command centre on-stage or in the studio.
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Here are a couple of examples using the Roland GA-112 without any external effects:
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Roland GA-112
844 €
Finnish distribution: Roland Scandinavia
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Pros:
+ basic sound
+ extremely wide scale of gain
+ programmable
+ two effect loops
+ power
+ sturdy build
Cons:
– footcontroller optional
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Testipenkissä: EBS Classic Session 30
EBS Swedenin uutuus – Session 30 – on firman pienin kombo tähän mennessä, joka on tarkoitettu koti-, äänitys- ja harjoituskäyttöön.
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Pieni ja kevyt EBS Classic Session 30 (169 €) kuuluu valmistajan vintage-tyyliseen, Kiinassa valmistettuun Classic-sarjaan.
Session 30 tarjoaa nimensä mukaisesti 30 wattia lähtötehoa.
Kahdeksantuumainen kaiutin istuu refleksikotelossa, jolla on auko edessä. Tyylikäs etukangas on kiinnitetty perinteiseen tapaan tarranauhoilla.
Harjoituskombon takapuoli on täysin suljettu. Virtajohdon liittimen ja virtakytkimen viereen EBS on lisännyt vielä maadoituspisteen, josta voi olla hyötyä hurinan minimoimisessa, silloin kun vahvistinta käytetään studioympäristössä.
Session 30:n paino jää alle yhdeksän kiloa, joten kombo on todella helppo kuljettaa kantokahvallaan.
Kombon paneeli tarjoaa säätimiä gainille (jolla on oma Peak-ledi), bassolle, diskantille sekä volumelle.
Harjoituskäyttöä varten EBS on lisännyt Session-vahvariin minijakin mp3-soittimelle ja kuulokelähdön.
Harvinaisuus tässä hintaluokassa on pikkukombon balansoitu XLR-lähtö, joka tekee Session 30:stä myös kätevän DI-boksin omalla monitoroinnilla studiokäyttöä varten. Ground Lift -kytkimellä saa katkaistua tehokkaasti mahdollisista maalenkeistä aiheuttavan brummin.
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Pikkuisesta, kahdeksantuumaisella kaiuttimella varustetusta harjoituskombosta ei voi odottaa seiniä vavisuttavaa bassotoistoa ja äänenpainetta – se olisi täysin epärealistinen.
Toisaalta täyttyy korostaa, että EBS Classic Session 30:stä lähtee kunnon bassosoundi. Tämä kombo ei missään nimessä ole kumiseva leluvahvistin, erittäin reilusta hinnastaan huolimatta.
Pikkuvahvistin tarjoaa aitoa EBS Classic -sarjan soundia opetus- ja harjoituskäyttöön sopivalla volyymillä. Bassorekisteri on lämmin, keskialue siisti ja yläkerta silkkisen pehmeä.
Kun vääntää master volumen täysille – tai jo vähän aikaisemmin viisikielisellä bassolla – mukaan kuvaan astuu odotetusti myös kombon (ja kaiuttimen) pienestä koosta aiheuttuvaa resonointia ja surinaa, mutta järkevässä käytössä EBS:n pienokainen pärjää mainiosti.
Session 30:n XLR-lähtö toimii sekin moitteettomasti, välittämällä kombon laatusignaalia puhtaasti eteenpäin mikserille tai äänikortille.
Mielestäni EBS Classic Session 30 on mainio harjoitusvahvistin, sekä erittäin kätevä työkalu kotistudiossa.
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Seuraavat esimerkit on äänitetty käyttämällä samanaikaisesti sekä kondensaattorimikrofonia kaiuttimen edessä että kombon suoraa XLR-lähtöä:
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EBS Classic Session 30
169 €
Maahantuoja: F-Musiikki
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Plussat:
+ hinta-laatu-suhde
+ koko
+ paino
+ soundi
+ DI-lähtö
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