Tone Report Weekly Issue 106 | Page 38

The Jennings Organ Company, or Vox as we know it today, was formed from the ashes of World War II. Dick Dennings (who would later invent some of the most endearing guitar technology for JMI/Vox), a backline guitar player during the war in big bands, approached Mr. Jennings with a prototype guitar amp that would become the Vox AC15. After having the AC15 out for a few years, like many music companies at the time, they were pressured to keep up with the louder and more powerful offerings across the pond from Fender. So they doubled the power of the AC15 and later added the famed “Top Boost” circuit, solidifying the classic design of the AC30 that we know today, and subsequently becoming another driving force behind the sound and power of the British Invasion. The AC30 went through very few changes throughout the years, although in the late ‘60s they opted for solid-state rectification instead of tube, which, among 38 TONE TALK // other changes to cut manufacturing costs, alienated some guitarists. However, Vox still remains to have a heavy-handed influence up there with Marshall and Hiwatt to sculpting the sound of the British Invasion. The Beatles, The Shadows, The Yardbirds, The Kinks, and countless other acts used and continue to use this amp, and many modern bands and artists inspired by the early sounds of the British Invasion such as Radiohead, Muse, and John Scofield continue to use and enjoy the AC30s. Not only was Vox known for creating one of the most endearing British amps, they are also credited with being one of the first suppliers of wah pedals in Britain, and almost every wah sound you hear on British records from the ‘60s and ‘70s were Vox branded wah pedals. Users of the Vox AC30: Camel, The Beatles, The Yardbirds, Hank Marvin & The Shadows, Peter Green A People’s Guide to the Gear of the British Invasion