|  | | 
05-01-2010, 07:21 AM
| | | | Smallest amp actually gigged with-your stories?
Sign in to disble this ad
DI boxes into PA's don't count
What's the smallest standalone amp you've actually done a paying band gig with (solos don't count)?
I've done two small tiki bar venues now with my practice amp -
a Crate 15 watt 8" combo. Oh, and with a 5 string bass! I've done a few sit ins and open mics with it also  .
First gig was two guitars (one acoustic, one electric) and me. Went fine except when we went to do White Rabbit....I use the B for the low part......and it sounded so anemic that the singer and guitarist started crackin up on stage  . *sniffle*. But the crowd didn't even notice!
Second gig was last night with the full band at another tiki bar.. talk about squished! There was one foot between the monitor and the bar stools.... The drummer used bass/snare/hihat/one crash and a hand drum as his tom. The electric guitarist was using his little practice amp (think his was only a 6" speaker) turned wayyy down. Drummer turned off his snare, and the venue loved it! We got told to turn down a couple times, but the bar was only about 5 feet from the PA speaker/drummer so it's understandable. I however got told to turn up several times  .
The only problem is the B string....my little amp can reproduce it, just not at any large volume. Couple of songs I had to octave up on the fly, but it worked out fine  .
If you're ever in that situation, one word: Chair. We put both little amps up on chairs, they ended up with about shoulder level. Had we put them on the floor, never would have heard them. Ohhh make sure the chair has a back or you tie the amp down. I'm so paranoid I tied the chairs to the railing  .
My next purchase is going to be a bigger practice amp  .  Anybody done anything similar?
__________________
zazzle.com/susanszoocrew*
| 
05-01-2010, 07:26 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2002 Location: Central Alabama | | | My amp decided to "back up and punt" the night before an outdoor gig. All I had was a Behringer BX 600 available. It got me through. | 
05-01-2010, 08:15 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Plano, TX | | | I used to play Adairs downtown with a BA112 and my EUB. It was just barely enough under the circumstances and it kept me from dragging my "real" rig off the house gig.
__________________
Who booked this gig anyway??
| 
05-01-2010, 08:22 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: Shakopee, MN | | | My first gig as a paid musician:
I was about 6 months into playing bass and I was worried sick. I was playing with people who had been together for 20+ years. I had a Behringer bx300 combo. We didn't even have a mic stand that would reach that low to the ground!
side story, same gig....
Everyone was supposed to learn the songs on their own and do a 10 minute practice the night before the show (bad idea). When we practiced for 10 minutes we skipped BEG because "everyone knows that one" (bad idea). So we were playing it at the show ad I was just barely holding down the roots. All of a sudden everyone stops playing and looks at me. "Oh fudge, there's a bass solo in this song," I thought to myself. About 4 bars later the rest of the band kicked in right on cue together and made me look like a total jackalope. | 
05-01-2010, 08:33 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Leeds, England | | | A 65 watt Laney RB-3. I have been using that for every gig until I recently just bought my GK 1001RB-II. Big step up. =]
__________________
English | Metal | Long Hair | GK 1001RB-II/Laney Nexus NX410
[insert witty quote here]
| 
05-01-2010, 08:36 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Atlanta, GA | | | In the early 90's my band did a couple of Dept of Defense sponsored tours of US military bases in Europe. The tours were about 6 weeks long. Great fun- but you had to supply all instruments, backline and PA. You could only have 20 pieces of gear and none could be over 70 pounds. It could be done easier now with class D and neos, but it was tough then. Anyway, I brought a GK 200RB. I think it was 100 watts into 4 ohms, so I was probably running about 60 or 70 into the 8 ohm 1x10" guitar cab I brought. The plan was to get that somewhere close to ear level as it put out next to no low end and crank thru the monitors. First week-monitor amp died. Rest of the tour-barely heard a note I played, as we were a rock band with a moderately loud drummer. Of course we didn't hear any vocals either. I had it better than the keyboardist, thigh-she was relying on monitors entirely, so she just had to watch her fingers the rest of the tour. | 
05-01-2010, 08:48 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: NYC | | | I've used my MB minimark on about one hundred gigs. Mostly duo or trio acoustic pop/rock-ish stuff. It's my main practice and rehearsal amp too . . . love it
I've played a few places so small where if I'd had a bigger amp it might not have worked
also used a 5'r w/ it for a while, and at relatively low volumes it was ok. would crap out every so often when we had a drummer.
I've semi-replaced this rig w/ a LMII and GS112 | 
05-01-2010, 08:50 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Tulsa , OK | | | I ran a Roland CB-100 for almost a year as my only amp. Direct line out to the PA and no worries. The guitarist ran a Roland Cube-30, mic'ed and all was good. Was playing a Yamaha TRB 6P back then, no trouble with the low B. 3 piece rock/pop band with a female singer, was a fun little group which I still miss.
__________________ Quote: |
That bass looks like a bee's orgasm - wow!
| | 
05-01-2010, 09:42 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: Nova Scotia | | | I used a Roland Bass Cube (60 watt I think) for a couple of gigs, with DI of course.
The smallest I go now is my SWR amp an a 2X10 cab.
Normally I use the amp and a 4X10, and sometimes both cabs.
__________________
I kinda wish that there was some other kinds of basses besides Ps and Js so we would have something different to talk about. -Nobody
| 
05-01-2010, 09:55 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: rochester, NY | | | sansamp. | 
05-01-2010, 09:57 AM
|  | keepin' the beat since the 60's | | Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: Studio City, SoCal, USA | | | My MarkBass CMD121 12 incher has worked EVERY indoor gig we have played and even one outdoors! The output of that little box is not to be believed.
Part of the secret is to get it into a corner when possible so the room walls act as a giant horn. Guys were coming up asking to see my bass "stack" and were blown way when I showed them the little box on the floor. HA HA!
__________________
Growing OLD is inevitable, Growing UP is optional.
| 
05-01-2010, 10:17 AM
| | | My first amp was this little guitar amp and I played bass through it for gigs.
An amp that was intended to be a practice amp or a cheap beginner's amp. I would guess this amp to be around 5-7 watts. One control: volume, which also happens to have a switch built in it - pull it out and the power comes on.
Also, at a gig a few years ago, a tube in my Music Man bass amp blew during soundcheck. I had to play through a little Fender 5 watt Vibro Champ guitar amp and mic it to get through the gig. | 
05-01-2010, 10:17 AM
|  | curiously looking back at what once was beautiful | | Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Oregon | | I flew down to Mexico and did a festival a couple years in a row with my Gallien Krueger MB150S. The amp fit in my dufflebag (in a box, surrounded by clothes) and held up outdoors with drums, percussion, 2 guitarists, vocals, keys and horns.
For 11 years, that amp was my main workhorse for any occasion where the big rig wasn't needed.
Now I use a LMII head with an Acme Low-B1. That setup is slightly larger & heavier but sounds M U C H deeper. 
__________________ "My kids never had the advantage I had. I was born poor." - Kirk Douglas | 
05-01-2010, 10:25 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2006 Location: St Louis, MO, USA | | | SWR WM-10 combo, 80watts inot a nice sounding 10" speaker. covered quite a few gigs with this. I think it weighed about 20 lbs.
__________________
Lakland Skyline 55-01, Fender G Lee Jazz Bass, 1984 Squier P-Bass, Epi T - Bird Club Member #47, Peavey Firebass 700, Ampeg SVT610HLF Cab, Line 6 PODxt Live
| 
05-01-2010, 10:31 AM
|  | Freelance Theatre Musician Staff Writer: Bass Musician Magazine, Endorsing Artist: Please see bio | | Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Kalamazoo, MI | | | When I did a run of HAIR a couple summers ago, I used my Vox 25w 15" amp. I kept the volume at around 8-9 or so, but it held up the entire run without breaking up. Given that it was a rock show (keys, guitar, bass, drums and horns), I was pretty happy with it. It worked well. | 
05-01-2010, 10:36 AM
| | | | Peavey Minx 110. It was glorious at the time. Mic'd up it really didn't sound bad. | 
05-01-2010, 10:47 AM
|  | Registered User Endorsing Artist: see profile | | Join Date: Feb 2002 Location: toms_river.nj.us | | | I backed up an Acoustic Guitar / Singer a few times (including a radio studio interview / show broadcast live) on a 5 string with a Peavey Micro Bass | 
05-01-2010, 10:48 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: New York, NY | | | My first batch of paid gigs when I was 15 was with a Klesmer band me and some friends from school/temple formed. All I had at the time was a Kustom guitar practice amp (my bass practice amp had died just prior) with a 6" speaker, and at most maybe 15 watts. Up on a chair, the amp surprisingly just about cut it.
__________________ Quote:
Originally Posted by bergy9650 i broke my g-string and scratched my nut... | | 
05-01-2010, 10:51 AM
| | | Pssssst if you're mic'ing an amp, you're using the PA system speakers and not a standalone amp......doesn't count  . And DI'ing was already eliminated  .
Hrm, I should've said "post the watts and speaker size".......cause I don't know what size half these amps are!
Richland-how big is that little thing?! I can't even imagine trying to put a 5'er through that!
__________________
zazzle.com/susanszoocrew*
| 
05-01-2010, 11:53 AM
| | | Quote:
Originally Posted by nsmar4211 Richland-how big is that little thing?! I can't even imagine trying to put a 5'er through that! | I bought the 007 amp new in 1970. We did not have a PA to sing through. The guitar player used one channel on his amp for his guitar and one for a high impedence mic. Everytime he hit a string, the mic would cut out. I used that amp for gigs for about a short while and traded it in for a Kustom 150.
Here is more imformation about the 007 amp. It was small.
This is the inside of the 007 amp with the back cover removed. The speaker is about 6" or so. The output transformer is attached to the speaker frame instead of the chassis probably to use the cheapest possible chassis by constructing it out of the thinnest possible material.  | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |