Tone Report Weekly Issue 106 | Page 36

From the humble beginnings of a drum shop owner and instructor, Jim Marshall is known today is the Father of Loud for his incredible contributions to the world of rock n’ roll and his subsequent solidification in the pop culture lexicon. Behind many giants of the six strings you will find his last name emblazoned in white across walls of speakers. The Marshall amplifier was originally conceived when Jim Marshall thought he could make a cheaper and more reliable version of the expensive American amps Fender was making across the pond. Marshall and his partners started out with a Fender Bassman circuit, and tweaked it until they reached what we know today as the Marshall sound (not surprisingly, many of the early Marshall amps were almost identical to the Bassman!) Many guitarists at the time were not satisfied with the tonal and volume constraints of the current offerings of the amp market, 36 TONE TALK // and Jim Marshall’s offering of volume and a “new sound” very much appealed to them. That new sound was his very first amp, the JTM45 (named after Jim and his son, Terry Marshall). With loads of midrange and a fat, almost syrupy attack, the Marshall amplifier reverberated throughout concert halls and arenas across the world from its inception in 1963, and arguably drove rock n’ roll from teeny bopper to full-on testosteronelaced rebellion. (The British Invasion was driven by Hiwatt and Marshall, their tonal character is at the heart of some of the most coveted tones to this date.) Until this very day, Marshall amps are found on almost every backline across the world, still fueling some of the biggest and most powerful bands across almost every genre. Users of Marshall amps: Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Rory Gallagher A People’s Guide to the Gear of the British Invasion