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Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo

Summary
Price New Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.gibson.com/
Features 6.0 (28 responses)
Sound Quality 9.1 (31 responses)
Reliability 8.6 (18 responses)
Customer Support 7.8 (10 responses)
Overall Rating 8.6 (30 responses)
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Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $425 used
Submitted 01/28/2006 at 09:42am by gillyzoom
Email: gillyzoom<at>hotmail dot com

Features : 6
* Amp was manufactured in 2004.

*I find this little screamin' demon to be very adept and versatile at playing killer overdriven funky blues and old school punk but as for clean tone styles this is not the amp you would want to use as that is not really the point of this amp.

*It has one chanel and 2 inputs, input 1 is the high input and input 2 is the darker low input probably has a resistor or cap in the circut to help dampen and darken the tone so I guess that you could really consider these as features as well.

*The only feature that I would have loved for this amp to have would have been a normal 1/4 inch speaker jack out so that you could plug the little sucker straight into other cabs etc. Whatever possessed Gibson to go with the arcane and slightly eccentric vintage vibe of an RCA connector is beyond belief. Maybe they thought that we would all like to plug in our vintage reverb tanks there (HA! HA!).Apart from this one small niggle I tottaly accept the simplicity and the spirit of what this amplifier is aiming for, if you want more features from an amp then don't buy this. As DEVO like too say use your freedom of choice,it's not like Gibson sales reps are threatening you at guitar stores to buy it , or else you'll be sorry.

*I mainly use this amp at home for noodling and practice but I also take it to rehearsals for the jump blues band that I play in.I find it plenty loud enough at rehearsal for Louis Jordan style swing etc., I just add my Ibanez AD9 analog delay and I'm good to go.I have'nt used it to record with yet but all that is about to change very soon as the pyschobilly band that I play in are about to record our debut CD in my home studio.I have also gigged this amp with a Gretsch Dbl Anni 6118 in a duo with the piano player from the jump blues band playing an upright panio unmiked in a small intimate piano bar style setting and the amp performed quite well in this situation, with the piano player asking me to turn down on several occassions.So if you think that it's too small to gig, think again , just remember though it's horses for courses. You could'nt play a stadium with it but in the right setting it can be quite appropriate , for god's sake just use your common sense.

Sound Quality : 8
# Guitars that I currently use with this amp are as follows in no particular order 1 x Gretsch Dbl Anni re-issue with stock Filtertron humbuckers,1 x 1987 Gibson Les Paul Jnr with single P-90,1 x Tokai Love rock Les Paul Jnr dbl cut with a single vintage alnico p-90,1 x 1968 Tele with maple cap board loaded with a Texas special pickup in the bridge and finally a Gretsch 6121 re-issue Round -Up retro fitted with recent DeArmond Y2K single coil pick-up's.

#See above for how this amp suit the styles of music that I play.

#Noise is more than acceptable for a class A tube amp or class AB for that matter, I read quite a lot of reviews here that said that the amp is to noisy etc.Sometimes I wonder what people expect out of their amp's,maybe it's time to step up and learn a little bit of basic amp maintenance. Pretty soon you could be well on your way to solving many nasty little noise gremlin problems etc.But always remember this there are always so many variables when it comes to amp noise, it could be your pick-up's.Or, maybe it's a dirty power source, are you sharing the same power circuit as your fridge or maybe the fluro light's.Is it the crappy stompbox you're using that's causing the problem, do use $%^&@# cheap leads , basically the possibilty's are infinite.

#Yes the clean channel disorts beautifully at higher volumes (what do u mean there's only one channel)

#Finally how brutal is the distortion well I dont think ya will be playing any death metal with this sucker in the near future but as far as vintage blues distortion goes this amp has it it spades.

Reliability : 9
#I have gigged it quite a few times without a back-up and have had nothing but excellent results on each occassion.

#So far so good touch wood,no breakdowns to speak of just yet. As for neglect,well what can I say I'm a born tinkerer so I take care of general maintenance issues including re-valving,pot cleaning etc.

Customer Support : 5
# I've never had to deal with Gibson in regards to warranty's etc.,so I guess I'll have to put that in the future file and see what happens. If it ever does come to crunch time I guess then I wil find out.I guess the warranty is for one year I could'nt tell you for sure because I purchased this used on EBAY.

Overall Rating : 9
#I have been playing for over 20 years and own heaps of other gear including drum kits,a DAW by Korg ,various mics,several amps etc.

#If financial circumstances allowed I would definately replace this amp if it were lost or stolen.

#I love the tone and the simplicity of the circuit I hate the fact that it has an RCA plug for the connecting it's speaker.

# I made no comparison's against other products, I bought this after I saw a Guitar Player review and had a total GAS attack.

#Finally if you' are like me and can't resist the look and vibe of small tube combo's, then this might just suit your needs.A lot of reviewers complain about the price versus feature's of this amp, well I ask this question. How much does a mint condition vintage Fender 'champ' cost these days? C'mon folks it's all relative, a brand new champ these days would more than likely have the same $599 retail/street $499 price tag if not more.And it all comes down to the fact of the costly and time consuming nature of point-to-point wiring and a more hands on approach.I noticed that one reviewer said that his was eating tubes, I have had mine for well over a year now and I use it more than any other amp in my collection(7 amp's in total) at this present stage.And mine still sounds as good as the first day that I played it and it still has the original El 84 in it, with virtually no noticable degradation within the overall tone, not to shabby if you ask me.PLEASE READ THIS BIT, WHEN I FIRST GOT THIS AMP I WAS'NT OVERLY IMPRESSED WITH THE GENERAL TONE BUT OVER TIME THIS AMP HAS GROWN ON ME LIKE A BAD RASH.NOW I JUST CAN'T SEEM TO GET ENOUGH OF IT. SO PLEASE FOLKS BE PATIENT AND EVENTUALLY YOU WILL BE REWARDED. I must say that overall I am very impressed with the collaberation undertaken by Gibson and mojotone and I must say what a cool sounding little amp they have come up with.The amp itself was put through many hours of testing according to Gibson litrature, special attention was given to the selection of a suitable speaker for this amp. Hence this was their reason for going with a ceramic magnet speaker as the litrature states, it kicked butt over all other contenders including several alnico speakers.So if you are like me and can't really afford a Mesa a Matchless or any other high end boutique model for that matter then maybe this is the amp for you.Last but not least because I bought mine from the USA I have to use a step-down transformer to convert it from 110 volts -240. It does however come standard with a jug plug of the IEC type making it an ideal candidate to convert to run in most world voltages so it's a nice easy fix for most reputable tech heads.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: 475 (an)
Submitted 01/24/2006 at 08:03pm by Stratojet

Features : 2
This is a 2005 GA-5. Bought from e-bay then resold to me. One volume. Thats about it

Sound Quality : 10
I own a Classic 20 Peavey, a Blues Junior fender and a Gibson GA-5.

The Peavey is good (and powerful) for rock things played loud. Clean is on the mid-rangy side. Blues Junior is a typical Fenderish clean. Very very nice (better than my hotrod Deluxe which has a tendency to boom in the bass).
The Gibson is a kind of a sweet candy. Very cute to look at and sounds quite rich for an 8" speaker. Sounds delightful with a Telecaster Deluxe (noiseless pickups). Excellent with my Guild Starfire IV. The GA-5 has a richer sound than the Clasic 20 when played softly. Very good for dirtier rythm guitar (CCR for ex). It also mates well with pedals (GFX4, Rotosphere and Wah).
My choices go like this:

1) Blues Junior: very versatile, good clean, excellent with pedals and can do a small gig. Good clean headroom. My favorite

2) GA-5 Breaks up very early and must be played with single coli to get any kind of clean. Excelllent for recording. Distortion is rich and not buzzy. The speaker in this little amp is amazing for an 8". One of the best amp I tried for recording. Very smppth response and not as harsch as many small amps (I use to have a Fender Superchamp: very peircing sound and boxy also).

3) Classic 20: tons of punch. more control on the sound (master volume very effective). Shines with distortion and sounds devastating when mated with a 112E extension cabinet. Mid boost is useless. Good for Zeppelin , ac-dc, 70 rock.

Reliability : 10
No problems sp far.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No need for it.

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing since 1967. I am a schooled musician and was a teacher for a while. I was not supposeed to buy it and was just curious about it and wanted to try it.

Do not do this.
A) The looks is irresistible

B) I don't believe in "10". But frankly, this little beauty has a lot of Mojo.

C) If you try it with a good guitar, I am telling you , you'll end up with it. The same feeling as holding a small cute puppy in your arms; try to put it down after :)



Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $350 (new, but floor demo at GC)
Submitted 01/20/2006 at 06:04pm by Dave

Features : 9
The features of the Gibson GA-5 are well documented at www.gibson.com

Here's the deal. The Gibson GA-5 is a Class A, Single Ended, 5 watt simple practice amp with an 8" speaker and one knob: volume that goes from clean to overdrive, in a well built cabinet with high quality parts with a really cool retro look. It is not a high gain Mesa, Marshall, etc., it is designed as a pure tone machine, or a 50's reissue if you will.

Gibson considers this a practice amp and so do I. I can't imagine gigging with it unless the gig was a small blues/folk jam or something with no drummer or a very soft one.

I will say that I am impressed with the design and the quality of the workmanship and the components used. The only thing I wish it had was a decent quality reverb for a little "room" effect.

So based on what it was designed to do, I give it a 9 in this category

Sound Quality : 10
Sound/tone is where this amp shines. I am currently using a Gibson SG with P-90's, but will occassionally use a Les Paul or PRS with humbuckers, a Strat, or a Tele.

At low volume, below 9 o'clock, it is clear as a bell and delivers clarity on all stirngs/notes on the guitar. As you crank it, it does get loud enough to annoy anyone in the house, but the overdrive really sounds nice and complex ("buttery"). I have not maxed it out yet, but at 2 o'clock, the amp cranks out a real nice chuncky classic rock break up. Not cheesy distortion, but a pure tube Class A overdrive (I have both Class A and A/B Amps and yes, you can tell the sonic differences between the two. Not saying one or the other is better, there is just a difference).

For what I bought it for, it fits my needs and styles of music just fine. It also does well with quality effects pedals, even though classic tone buffs would scoff at that. In other words, add a Tube Screamer and you can go from clean to overdrive at the click of your footswitch, effectively creating two channels.

It does have the standard Class A Single-Ended humm. But you only notice it when the amp is sitting idle. Even at low volumes, the humm is not noticeable. And not as noisy as an Epiphone Valve Special (I have one of those as well. Nice for the money, but the Epi is noisy and the dsp effects are low quality).

The distortion on the Les Paul Junior Amp is not metal level. But a classic rocker can go from clean to creamy overdrive with the one volume knob. Overall, the best tone of any practice amp I have ever tried or owned. Lastly, it does respond well to your picking technique. Play soft and the amp is soft, clean and mellow...pick your guitar hard and you will get a nice edge and breakup, depending on how high you have the volume set.

For the way it was designed to sound, I give it a 10.

Reliability : No Opinion
Too new to judge. based on my expereince with other Gibson products though, Gibson makes good stuff. I have a couple Les Paul's, an SG and a J-45 and they have all been great guitars.

Given the simplicity of this amp and the high quaility components used, I hope to enjoy many years of trouble free jammin'

Customer Support : 8
I have only had one issue with Gibson Product ever and they took care of me. Also, I have the email address of a couple folks inside Gibson and they are always real responsive. So I expect that I will get well taken care of if I ever have an issue with this amp.

Based on my past excperience with Gibson, I give them an 8 (if they sent me free stuff I'd give them a 9 or a 10).

Overall Rating : 9
Well, I've been playing both professionally and just for fun for about 40 years now, so I think I am a pretty good judge of guitars, amps and tone. I have guitars from Gibson, Fender, PRS, Ovation, Takamine, Martin, etc., and amps from Mesa, Marshall, Peavey, Fender, Carvin, well just about everybody (I'm a gear junkie).

I play both for my own enjoyment now and with a few friends in a band and we do the occassional gig (we all have real jobs and families now). So for my own enjoyment, practicing, etc., this amp fills that need very well.

If it were lost or stolen I would somehow find a way to get another one. I have been eying these little "boutique" amps from Gibson for a long time, but could not bring myself to spend the average street price of $500 for one (and my wife would have killed me). So I tried ebay...no luck (I really hate ebay). Kept looking around. Finally, I called the guy at my local Guitar Center who I believe always sells me stuff at fair prices and asked him to give me the bottom line price on one I had seen in the store for a while. He offered to let it go for $350 out the door for this demo unit, so I jumped on it (a month ago he was around $400, so waiting worked I guess).

As I said above, I wish it had reverb, but that would have added another $100 or so to the price I'm sure. So I'll just use my multi-effects pedal when I just have to have some reverb, echo, etc.

I have a totally different setup for recording and for playing live, but this amp is great for the reason I bought it: a small, high quality, simple ALL TUBE practice amp to rock on in my upstairs bedroom when the family won't put up with the noise downstairs.

If you want a great small, REAL ALL TUBE practice amp (the SS modelers are ok, but they are not tube) and want to keep it simple, this is a great amp that matches up, or even surpasses boutiques costing 4 times as much, you have to get one of these. Besides, it has the coolest retro 50's look ever! I love it!


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $450
Submitted 08/23/2005 at 02:15pm by rubess

Features : 1
It's got two inputs, one volume control, and an on/off switch.

Sound Quality : 10
If you're looking for a small 5-watt practice amp that produces beautiful EL84 saturated tone, this thing rocks! I went into the music store intending to buy a Badcat Mini-Cat, but the LP Jr sounded much better to me, and was less expensive as well. I love this amp! It is so much fun to crank up -- you just don't want to stop.

Reliability : 10
It's a beautiful, point-to-point, handwired musical instrument that's worth every dollar.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
Been playing since 1972. I've owned just about every make and model of guitar and amp out there. I currently favor Dr. Z, THD, and Reverend amps, and lower-output humbucker equipped guitars. I love playing through this amp as much or more than any I have ever owned, and would not hesitate to replace it if it were lost or stolen.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $500
Submitted 07/22/2005 at 10:33pm by Mark Lindner

Features : 4
Pretty limited features, but I guess thats the point. I guess this is supposed to be like an amp from the 50s. It's class A with one power tube and a preamp tube. There;s one volume knob and two inputs, one channel, one speaker... that's about it.

Sound Quality : 5
Wow, this thing sounds great when you crank it! But when you don't crank it, it sounds pretty average, honestly. I cant always play it loud enough for it to sound really good, but it probably isn't really loud enough to compete with a full-on band. So I guess it's a practice amp for players who can practice really loud.

Reliability : No Opinion
It's a Gibson, so it ought to hold up. I've only had it for a few weeks/

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with Gibson, their guitars are excellent though. Musician's Friend says they'll take it back in 45 days, so..... y'know.....

Overall Rating : 5
I play mostly classic rock (ZZ, Allmans, Eagles, James Gang) wih a Deluxe Strat and and SG faded. Like I said before, if you turn this baby up and it pretty much rips, but if you can't play at full-on max volume, it really doesn't sound that special. Maybe I'm an "ignoramus" like the other guy, but I think for this much money you should be able to get a good sound at ANY volume. If it got stolen, I'd take the insurance money and buy something else.. Cool retro vibe, but I dont think that it is realy worth $500. I've been playing for 11 years, so I haven't played every great amp or anything, but I was expecting more for my money. Maybe this is more for people who are interested in collecting them or something. I thought I'd be blown away, but I'm not.... at least not yet.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $499
Submitted 07/18/2005 at 02:35pm by Anonymous

Features : 1
This amp is really great at what it does, but it does pretty much one thing. I can think of several amps that do that one thing just as well, and also do a bunch of other things, too, thanks to tone controls and a master volume. I think this amp is for guitarists who already have a bunch of other amps that do the things this one can't. I play primarily Muddy Waters-style blues, and this amp can really deliver "that" sound, but if anything else is required, fuggettaboutit. You're stuck.

Sound Quality : 7
I've used this mostly with my ES 135 (P-90s) or ES 335 ('57 humbuckers), but also with a Tele Custom (humbucker neck/singlecoil bridge). It sounds best with the P-90s, but I think most amps do. I LIKE the way this amp sounds, just like evryone else on this board. When you crank it up it sounds AWESOME. But for this much money, it's too bad it won't do anything except one sound. Your choices seem to be "loud" or "quiet." Jeez, how about a treble knob to cut the brightness, at least?

Reliability : 9
I think it's solid and haven't had any problems with tuibes being loose. But it does make a lot of noise even when you aren't playing it. I don't think I would ever use this to record because of the hum. Maybe a "hush" pedal or something would help. It does seem very reliable.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Gibson? Puh-leeze.

Overall Rating : 5
I think this is a good amp, but it obviously is very limited in it's sound and therefore it's overall usefulness. I wanted a small amp with natural distortion and REAL tube tone, not something modeled or emulated, so this is perfect for me. HOWEVER, when the only thing you can do to affect the sound of an amp is turn it up or turn it down, you aren't going to get much variety in your sound, so you either have to really like the sound the amp makes or get pedals to change it. Picking harder or softer only goes so far. I've been playing for 19 years and have had several Fender amps (Twin Reverb, Deluxe Reverb, Blues Junior), and one Traynor (20 watt all tube, dosn't remember the model). I wanted something smaller and lower-watt. I've never had anything but tube amps and I never will. If I could afford two amps, I would definitely keep this one, but I think this one is destined for eBay.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $399
Submitted 07/05/2005 at 07:57am by RL

Features : 9
There is only one feature on the amp; there are two inputs one being to curcuit and the other that is buffered providing a slightly darker tone, my preference for practice. USA Built, hand wired Baltic Birch ply cabinet, not pressboard.

Sound Quality : 9
I have heard the amp with P-90's at thr store where I purchased the amp and was impressed, however, I just walked away from the amp and after a week or so of not getting that sound and clarity out of my head I took it home. I have only one electric, an LP Faded with 490/498 pickups. The drawback is there is a humm to it, not too bad and Gibson said the humm was normal in a class A tube amp. It is not bad and my Fender Frontman makes a variety of noises that are bothesome as well. The good, it is a fine sounding amp, very sweet and warm tone. The amp deliveres clear tone that I can listen to all day long, it nails the 50's early 60's sound that I was looking for.

Reliability : No Opinion
The amp is too new and my contact with Gibson was mentioned above. I play this thing both quiet and loud, no rattles. The amp seems pretty tight to me.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Again the amp is just to new. I have owned it for about a month.

Overall Rating : 9
There is nothing that I do not like about this amp, except the humm mentioned above. I would not mind a more convenient AC plug location and a line out, neither feature is a real concern. What you see is what you get, a volume knob and two inputs. IMHO It is for those of us that want something simple and clear.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $330+trade
Submitted 06/28/2005 at 08:07am by lefty

Features : 9
Made in '05. Everyone knows the features, couldn't be any more simple. Its got an on/off switch and volume knob. Don't buy this amp if you are a tweaker, you will get bored with it quick, get yourself a line 6 ya dumb ass. However it is made with high quality components, hand wired, well made and an attractive looking amp. I base my rating on the fact that it accomplishes what it is designed to. Not that it doesn't have a million stages to suck out and water down the tone.

Sound Quality : 10
I play an 04 Les Paul Standard w/ burstbucker pros, a Suhr Classic, American Standard tele and strat. I play primarily classic rock and blues, with some rockabilly, country and basic jazz thrown in. As you can see, I have some high quality guitars and this amp is simply fantastic with them all. It breaks up early, with my Lester I start to get breakup at 2, with my single coils at about 3 or 4. However you can keep it relatively clean by easing up on your pick technique. Its funny how you can do that with a high quality valve amp, regardless of its size. I get no hum or extraneous noise from my GA-5. The overdrive is creamy and thick especially for a little guy. No need for a pedal unless you want to play some Korn or some other throwup music. I want to emphasize that this amp is sensitive to your technique. It is for plug and play types like me, that rely on your hands and dynamics for your sound variety. It is relatively forgiving amp as an amp. It is loud for 5 tube watts, and sounds at its best cranked (use guitar volume and tone knobs to adjust). I do get decent bedroom level sounds out of though by keeping the volume down and diggin in to get my distortion. This amp will comply with what you want if you learn to operate it without the tone circuits found in most amps.

Reliability : 8
Well I got one new in box brought it home fired it up, and sounded like a blown speaker (go figure, on a nib amp). This was on a Friday evening when I was looking forward to playing it all night. I was a little ticked to say the least as the dealer I got it from was an hour away. Well, I got up Saturday morn and returned it. They gave me another nib one and this one was perfect. Sweet as honey. I haven't had it long, but so far so good.

Customer Support : 10
I didn't have to deal with Gibson, but the dealer, Music Unlimited in Kingston MA. sure did. Hats off to them. They took the defective amp back no questions and gave me another brand new one. Good guys. I have made several purchases from the over the years. They are my favorite music store which is why I will drive an hour to them instead of 20 minutes to GC.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing 26 years with about a six year hiatus thrown in there. I traded my blues junior in for this and have no regrets at all! The blues junior is a fine amp, but I was no longer using it because I have better amps. I wanted to find a 5 watt all tube amp to replace the kendrick 118 (tweed champ clone) I had recently traded. I decided to give this a try based on price point compared to other five watt hand wired amps out there. I was pretty set on getting another tweed champ of some kind or another until I tried this. This is so much better than the tweed champ I had (not knocking that amp, its good, this is better). The distortion is much smoother on this amp, and it handles the Les Paul WAY BETTER than the tweed champ. I used to have the feeling the champ was going to explode when I cranked it with the Lester, the cabinet would rattle, speaker start farting, etc.. No issues with this amp in that regard. This amp loves the Les Paul. It also sounds killer with my single coil guitars as well. The only thing about the amp I don't like is the power chord gets plugged into the bottom of the chassis, not a big deal just a minor irritance. I also own a Headstrong Lil' King Reverb (PTP hand wired 64 Blackface Princeton Reverb clone), an Orange AD30 Head and matching 2x12 Orange cab, and a tech21 tm10. All great amps with great tone that serve a purpose. The GA-5 is my most played amp right now as I'm not gigging and I love low watt tube amps that you can crank the hell out of it and not blow out the windows in your house, although once the kids are in bed, I go to the tech 21 which is the best real low volume practice amp out there in my book. I simply love the amp. I also tried out a badcat mini cat and the GA-5 blows it out of the water. I also tried a Savage Macht 6 which sounds great (not better than the GA-5 imo), and had more clean headroom, and a 12' speaker but is also more than twice the price. You dont buy this kind of amp for clean anyways, its all about tube saturation. The GA-5 delivers it in spades. I have played and owned tons of gear and feel I know great tone when I hear it, a great buy when I see it, and quality when I evaluate it. You will not find a better 5 watt amp, all tube, handwired amp for $500 anywhere. With my Blues Jr. trade, I got mine brand new for $330 (including tax) out the door. I consider it the best amp purchase I've made to this point. Disregard the Ignoramus below that trashed this amp and obviously thinks this amp is supposed to be a line 6 or a marshall stack or something else other than what it is which is a kick ass class A 5 watt tone box. Try one and decide for yourself. If you know what good tone is, you will be very happy.


Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $400 Ebay used
Submitted 06/23/2005 at 09:45pm by Oscar the Grouch

Features : 1
Hmmmm... let's see now. Here's an amp that has exactly two tubes, one 8-inch speaker, one channel, and one knob. It's about the size of a breadbox. No treble control, no bass control, no gain control, no midrange control, no standby switch. No line out. No headphone jack. And it currently retails for SIX HUNDRED DOLLARS. Gibson, please feel free to give us a freakin' break.

Sound Quality : 3
Just because I don't want to sound like a spiteful, negative guy, I won't even mention the ridiculous amount of hum this thing puts out when it's idling. I'll let you figure that out yourself when you try to mic this "recording amp."

This amp makes three sounds: 1) Clean, low volume, utterly devoid of any particular tonal characteristics; trebly. 2) Louder, maybe a little breakup under hard pick attack, and overall pretty bright. 3) really loud, breaking up nicely, a little like the speaker is being driven to its max (it isn't, by the way). Not as bright as before, but hey, what are you gonna do-- there's no tone control whatsoever, remember? And that's about it.

Oh yeah. Try to ignore the irritating rattle of the EL84 power tube being shaken to death. The little retaining gizmo someone else pegged as the culprit isn't what's responsible, it's the elongated tube being hammered by the nearby speaker, which is quaking the whole chassis due to the volume you need to maintain to get that "trademark Gibson sound." Some advice: get to know the guy at Eurotubes, because you're going to be ordering up replacement JJ's at an alarming rate.

I'm sorry, but those who are giving this amp a "10" in this category must play in Chuck Berry tribute bands. For 50s-era "spanktone" this is your amp. For anything else, try anything else.

Reliability : 7
It's handwired and damn simple. Carry extra tubes, and I can't see a problem. But the very idea of "gigging" with this amp is pretty much out of the question. Not to digress, but I honestly don't know what this amp is for. You can't record with it, because it hums so damn much and you have to drive it at max volume to get anything resembling a tone, but it's way too small at 5 watts to play out. I did take it into a music store once to show it to someone, and it was like the parting of the Red Sea: everyone stood back and went, "Ooooooh, that's a sweet li'l Gibson, buddy ... niiiiice....." So maybe that's what it's good for: impressing the wankers at the Guitar Center.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 2
It seems like HC has two kinds of reviewers: those who hate everything and those who love everything. I'm actually a pretty forgiving guy who looks for what's good in equipment, understanding that all gear has its shortcomings and that what one person craves another may despise. I don't have golden ears, able to detect the most subtle nuance of tone that you mere mortals are deaf to. But I have been playing for a long time (24 years) and I've owned a lot of good equipment and a lot of bad equipment. I like Fender guitars AND I like Gibson guitars. I like tube amps AND I understand that direct recording often demands digital modeling. I like some Fords AND some Chevies. (Ah, that's bullshit. I hate Chevies). Here's the deal, in my humble (yet correct) opinion: Gibson is totally capitalizing on the whole "class A" retro craze, and the magazine reviews that wax eloquent about this amp are their partners in crime. This is NOT a bad amp. But it's not worth 600 dollars. At the end of the day, knowing that your amp was "hand-wired" means nothing if you don't like the tone. Just give me an amp with a master volume, a bass, treble, and midrange knob, a standby switch, and I'll be on my merry way. There is nothing that this amp won't do that a Hot Rod Deluxe won't do, and the HRD does so much more. If you want something small for recording (which is how Gibson is marketing this), may I suggest a Champ or a Reverend Goblin, or hell, one of those Sans-Amp things. In any of those cases, you'll walk away with $200 left in your pocket for Skittles and beer. If you have enough money to spend six bills on an amp that does ONE thing, you're either too rich to be reading this, or you are seriously in need of gearjunkie rehab. It's cute as a button, though, isn't it? Even the color is all creamy, so the sound must be, too... oooh, look, Trixie, they make a "plexi" one that matches my iMac!

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Product: Gibson GA-5 Goldtone Les Paul Junior Combo
Price Paid: US $411
Submitted 05/12/2005 at 06:39pm by Texas Bob

Features : No Opinion
Well, it's hard to say much about "features" on an amp that only has one knob. IUt dies have two inputs, though, and a little red jewel light. And a cord. For those of us who like simple things like Fender Telecasters, it has all the features you need.

Sound Quality : 10
I use this exclusively with a Fender US Telecaster. I finally purged the collection and hung onto the one guitar that does it all for me. The amp makes the guitar sound even better--the pairing of that guitar with this amp is like some sort of magic DNA match or something. Here's what I do: I turn the amp up. Way up. I turn the guitar volume down. On the bridge pup it's bright and chimey; on the neck it's dark and round. The rythm tones are now covered. Now I turn up the guitar, and let this amp do its magic mojo thing. On the bridge pickup you'd never know it was a single coil, except it's so damn crisp-sounding. On the neck, it's just rich and full and the edges are all worn smooth. The distortion and break-up are entirely contingent upon your pick attack. Dig in, and it crunches like a beer can. Back off, and it sings. To be able to control this huge a variety in tones simply by turning the guitar's volume knob and pickup switch is beyong belief. I've never owned an amp that sounds this good in over 30 years of playing. No kidding, it's that good.

Reliability : 10
Seems very solid. Two tubes, hand-wired, point-to-point, single ended class A, with an 8 inch speaker doesn't leave a lot to go go wrong. The wood cabinet is actually WOOD. The tolex is blond with tight seams and glue. Oxblood grill like in the olden days. My ONLY niggle here is that the tube retainer on the power amp tube rattles a little bit at high volumes. I think I can simply squeeze it to make it hold the tube tighter, but I honestly haven't tried, nor does it bother me much.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have no clue

Overall Rating : 10
30 years as a guitarist, ALWAYS played Fenders -- I've had Twins, Pros, Deluxes, and Hot Rods. Love 'em. But in a small, simple, portable amp, I just have never played anything that compares to this. In fact, all things considered, I've never had an amp that plays this well. It's loud, but controllable. It totally nails the Tres Hombres Billy Gibbons thing, and it cleans up and rings like Mark Knopfler. It's got two tubes that always run at 100%, and you never have to re-bias the amp when you change tubes. For classic rock, blues, jazz, you name it, this is the one tool I can't do without. For recording, small gigs, and practicing, you won't find a better amplifier; it's a true "boutique" quality piece, and it delivers the tone you've always been looking for without floor pedals, modelers, or pods. Truly a serious piece of gear for the discerning rock guitarist. I'm blown away.

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