Marlboro Amplifiers
Amplifiers previously produced overseas during the 1970s and 1980s. Distribued by Musical Instrument Corporation in Syosset, New York.
Marlboro was a line of amplifiers imported to the U.S. They were produced in the 1970s and 1980s. When they were first introduced they were economy (budget line amps), and like then, that is what they still are today. They made a variety of models that were all solid-state and had various power outputs and speaker configurations. Almost any Marlboro can be found for under $100, and the smaller amps fall into the $35-$60 range, while the bigger models can push $100.
Transistor amp brand "PRINCE" who created such famous "Pignose" used by Clapton to his studio recordings.
Robust design, it presents primarily as a clone of the Blues Deluxe: the vintage look of the canvas, his pots, the vinyl coating "tweed", reminiscent of the famous series of Fender.
Two inputs (high / low) gain, volume corrections (trebble, mid, bass), distortion, reverb, and even a built-in tuner: A 440 (tuning frequency)
The distortion is not a second channel (no footswitch), it is a distortion that can be switched manually.
The power is impressive, but unlike Fender is linear: you can play 1, 2 or 3 volume for a clean sound without killing your ears! At 10 it's really hard!
Sound amps – Sound Electronics Corporation
Sound Electronics was started by John Dougherty an ex-Ampeg employee.
The amps are built very well with very good quality parts and sound like a cross between a Fender and an Ampeg.They were made Mineola, NY USA (on Long Island) in the 1960s.
Very good sounding, gigable amps.
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