Alembic Guitars Club
Connecting => Miscellaneous => Topic started by: David Houck on May 22, 2005, 07:43:21 AM
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At the gig I did last night, the guitar player had one of the new Traynor amps with the extension cabinet. Very nice!
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That's a name I haven't heard since my high school years. At the time, in my opinion, they had one of the better sounding tube bass heads.
Keith
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I was surprised. At every other gig I've done with him he's brought a Fender or a Marshall, usually both. His combo and extension had the wine red leatherette finish, which looked nice.
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proudly canadian too. they recently put out a new tube bass amp head with matching cab. looks very appealing.
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Traynor / Yorkville is one of the best kept secrets today. I have a small Yorkville combo and it is amazing. well constructed, great sound, reasonably priced and made in Canada. I have read great reviews of the new Traynor tube heads too. Definitely try a Yorkville if you get a chance.
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Traynor is a name from the past,but I have seen more and more advertising for them.
Back in the early 70's I played in a group where the 2 guitarists and keyboard player used Traynors..and they sounded real good,but they all switched over to Marshalls. I recall trying one of their amps and got a real nice Squire kind of sound.
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The new wine red Traynor (celestian speaker) is a thing of beauty - nearly bought one recently but opted for a Reverend Hellhound. Nice to see some other good options for tube amps out there.
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Just looked at the Yorkville site and they seem to have a pretty good waranty. Two years they fix it even if you broke it. Car accidents, acts of nature exempt.
Keith
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My bass player has been playing through his Traynor since he bought it new in 1976! It still works fine, though its sound improved quite a bit when he added an SF-2 a few months ago.
Bill, tgo
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One reason Traynors are getting more attention is because amp guru Dan Torres loves them, and has written some mods for them in his book. They deserve the attention: they sound great, are built like tanks, and are easy to work on. And they're genarelly fairly cheap, though this is changing rapidly.