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Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue

Summary
Price New Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.marshallamps.com/
Features 7.2 (74 responses)
Sound Quality 8.8 (82 responses)
Reliability 9.0 (65 responses)
Customer Support 5.5 (25 responses)
Overall Rating 8.5 (76 responses)
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Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: USD 900 USED
Submitted 01/12/2009 at 09:37am by Joel

Features : 8
My amp is from the early 90's. It does not have the effect loops that the new reissues have, and that is a positive fact to many. I can't say which reissue is the best the knew ones that are made today or mine. Because unfortunately I have not played a knew reissue. It's a pretty straight forward amp that you probably already know. It's perfect for blues/rock. It has four channels, the first channel is more treble sounding and the second has a more bassy sound. This amp is as simple it can get. Bass, Treble, Presence and Midrange thats it.

Sound Quality : 9
I am using a 2004 Gibson Sg standard with original humbuckers. I play Blues/Rock and the amp is very suitable for that. But it also have a very warm clean sound that works with many other music styles. The treble channel is very trebly. You really has to adjust your settings to get the tone you want, it can take a while. But when you get the settings right it sounds amazing. This amp, worth mentioning is that it's VERY loud. To get tube distortion you'll have to put the volume up to 6 or and that is not much overdrive, to really get the 60's marshall tone you must have the volume at 8 at least. and then it's LOUD. The you have tone!! Cream/Hendrix sounds. Also good for ac/dc. But if you are in a place were you can't cranke the amp i really recommend a pedal like the tube screamer or a power break. I did not give it a ten because that the amp is not handwired and there is a few other tweaks that has to be done to get the true master tone. But my economy couldn't afford a original 60's marshall or a handwired one.

Reliability : 10
These marshall amps is amp you can trust. My amp is 15 years old and it's not even a buzz from it. So I can't be happier.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have not used it.

Overall Rating : 8
I have been playing for four years. Have owned a Line 6 flextone 3. The tone of the marshall can not be compared to the Line 6. I have played many other amps and this one cranked just takes the lead. I am definetly going to buy more similar marshall amps as Jtm45 or other SLP. I love the look and the sound of it it is amazing. It is a shmae though that you have to play it so lud to get "the tone". It is not the ultimate marshall amp. A vintage original 60's marshall is the best or a handwired is better but i got it for very little money, and to get that tone for so litte cash. You can get the 60's tone if you handle it right. I am sorry if there is any bad english, Thank you


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/07/2008 at 08:29pm by k

Features : 8
2007 Reissue. I feel its versatile in the sense that it provides a great base to add pedals and construct an overall sound. Other than that, the fact that this amp is simple is what I love about it. Its not busy like many amps of today. Just the EQ and volume. Beautiful in my opinion. I give it an 8 because it doesn't do a bunch of different sounds, so you wouldn't exactly call this extremely versatile, but in my opinion it does what I need quite well.

Sound Quality : 7
Ok, SO, I give this a 7 because out of the box its really not happening. These amps all have the potential to be 10's, but they just need a little TLC.

I am a strat player who likes to do Hendrix style Blues. The bright channel on this amp will break your eardrums its disgustingly trebley. I actually removed the bright capacitor all together which was real easy to do and made a world of difference. The adding proper preamp tubes made this sound like a completely different amp - huge improvement. These amps are extremely sensitive to the quality of tube you use in them. Mullard Reissues are pretty good. I have a NOS RCA in the the first position which is great.

Many say to upgrade the output transformer which I plan on doing soon. I've played some boutique amps and original plexi's that have alot better tonality going on which is effected by the output transformer. You really hear the quality in an output transformer when youre pushing the amp hard. Harmonics and musicality are increased.

Speaker choice you use is very important as well.

So it gets a 7 because its not a plug in and instant tonefest. But, these amps have major Potential. Just needs some tweaks, and patience.

By the way, I paid a good bit less because I was an employee at a music store and got the discount. I wouldnt pay the full price for these amps, theres usually plenty of used ones and/or boutique knock offs which are already upgraded for equal or a lot less.

Reliability : 10
I've owned it for a little less than a year now but it hasnt seen gig duty. Its been cranked countless times and run for hours though and seems solid. No worries here.

Customer Support : 3
I had some issues with the brightness of this amp and noise, which was actually due to crap tubes and the bright cap. I didn't know about these things when I first bought it so I emailed Marshall. They took over a week to get back and did not give any productive input.

As some of you have read, Metropoulos Amps are a great boutique plexi amp and the website has a forum with lots of knowledgeable folks. In all honesty, buy from metro not marshall, unless youre getting a deal on the marshall, which you can upgrade as you go like I am doing.

Overall Rating : 8
The word about these amps is POTENTIAL. Huge potential. Just needs patience, knowledge, and tweaking. When you get it right you'll be extremely pleased. I dont think buying new is worth it, just buy used. Theyre easy to have work done on if need be, its a simple circuit. If you're considering one I'd highly reccomend it. By the way, volume is the obvious part of this amp. If you can't truly push the volts, get something lower wattage.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/15/2008 at 06:56am by Jase Frehley

Features : 10
This thing was made when that angel-devil guy got thrown out of heaven...man!

Sound Quality : 10
RAWK RAWK RAWK RAWK!!!! Teamed up with "Blackie" my '79 Custom Les Paul & 4/12 Orange box, this amp is some kind of menace!

Reliability : 10
With lord SATAN & the plexi on my side, nothings gonna get in our way!

Customer Support : No Opinion
never needed it

Overall Rating : 10
Who cares about me & what i've done! Go buy one & you wont be sorry!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/29/2008 at 03:07pm by SmokinPaul

Features : No Opinion
If you're checking this out then you already know...Mine is a 2003 with the effects loop.

Sound Quality : 10
Using this with 2 '94 Hamer Daytonas with Duncan Sh-10's in the bridge positions. First off, I have to say that this amp has to be used the right way to get the desired results. You don't need to change the trannys or the choke,etc. Hot Plates and Power Brakes just beat up your amp, create a lot of heat, and make it sound like a heaping pile of dross. As far as re-tubing, JJ E34L is the way to go.Tight, driving bottom,smooth mids and ripping highs. Also tried the JJ ECC83-S gold pin preamp tubes. Made a BIG difference. Anyway it seems to me the best way to use this amp is to install a post phase inverter master volume control. Also referred to as the Ken Fischer Mod. Because the tone network on these amps are so interactive, you have to use the volume controls for tonal adjustments as well. This mod allows total tonal control so that when you find the sweet spot, you won't lose it when you change the output level. Without it, turn one knob and everything changes. Then you're back to square one to adjust for the level that you changed. This way you can incorporate any drive/dist box into the front end, adjust the tone exactly the way you want it, and have complete control over your volume from bedroom to arena! Always get quizzed on how I get my tone. We play anywhere and everywhere. 150 at a pub and 2500 at theatres. My amp drives 2 1960a cabs on top and 2 GenzBenz g-flex 2-12's on the bottom as sort of sub-modules. The 1960a's fit on top of the Genz's perfectly. And with the connection options on the Genz's, I can run all 4 with my one Plexi head. The only way to describe it is God of Thunderchunk. For smaller gigs I just take 1 1960a cause casters make it easy.

Reliability : 10
Totally 100% reliable. It gets serviced every 6 months. No issues at all. But then again, you guys using those crappy hot plates might have a different story to tell.....hmm...........

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed it so I can't say.

Overall Rating : 10
Playing 34 yrs. My signal goes ( i'm probably gonna regret this ) Hamer Daytona> Boss TU-2> Dunlop Crybaby> SansAmp GT-2> Rocktron Hush> to front end to jack 1> jump 1 bottom to 2 top. loop send> Digitech MultiChorus> Digitech DigitalDelay> to return jack. I can't believe I just gave it away. There ya go kids. Sorry, no amp settings. (Find your own) Do some diggin' !! Oh, and if someone stole this, i'd hunt em down like the elk I got with my Uncle Ted. Yeah, that's right. THE Uncle Ted !!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/03/2007 at 10:02am by Blaine Herda

Features : 8
It's a tube amp with no frills. I believe you need to start with good clean power and what you do with it after that is your business - so this amp is perfect for me. I jump the 2nd to 3rd channel and play through channel 1.

Sound Quality : 8
I play with all the knobs fully open excluding the treble and intensity which I leave off. The treble on this amp is ear piercing. With these settings and a tube screamer it has a good vintage tube amp sound for the rock music I play. It does not have the buzz sound with the tube distortion that I hear in all the other new Marshall Amps that have one or more master volume controls.

Reliability : 2
Terrible. I blew the output transformer in 6 hours. In 40 years of playing I have never had a problem like this before - was there any quality control and testing with this product before they put it on the market?

Customer Support : 2
Montreal does not stock output transformers so I must wait 1 month for the warranty part. Marshall loads the Canadian market with these amps but dosn't supply repair parts? Is this a good marketing strategy?

Overall Rating : 5
I like the sound when its working. There was another amp in the shop with a similar problem when I sent mine in. I hope Marshall is tracking this to see if it is a one off thing or a problem that needs to be addressed with the output transformers. I now have two of these amps (one for back up).


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/15/2007 at 08:03pm by JP1

Features : 2
This amp is a poor excuse for a Marshall, the reissue that is, obviously someone at Marshall forgot how they made their plexi heads and this reissue is a prime example!
I have an original 1965 Jtm45 100watt plexi head and a Marshall 412 cab w25 watt greenbacks and an original 1959 SLP Marshall, these two are tone and more tone I have not heard better sounding amps yet especially the Jtm 45, as rare as these are they were getting banged up from me gigging so I decided to retire them for home and studio use and got a 1959 Head and a 412 with Yes the Chinese Marshall celestion speakers, didn't know that at the time, anyway took the it home played tried to tweek the sound and still sounded like crap, then I played the reissue cab through my old 412 and it was a lot better but still not that great. So through process of elimination I tried both my head through the new Chinese Marshall Celstions and it was not even comparable to my cab, then I tried my heads through my cab and it sounded like music to my ears, did all kind of AB swithcing and the end resultis the 1959 plexi is basically a hunk of crap that's why people are selling them for dirt cheap on ebay if they find a sucker to buy them, folks I'm telling you night and day this sounds nothing like my 1959slp, not even close, it seems they forgot to make the amp that they made that made them fame and fortune, and many great players play the originals and they sound amazing, talking to a lot of people who are experienced there is a total dissappointment with Marshall amps and they're cabs, I also have a Canadian Version of the JCM 800 1982, and a friend of mine bought the reissue, not even close.
Is it mass production, is it the chinese offshore thing(they are assembled and brought in from offshore or oversea's???
THEY ARE MADE IN CHINA! now was that too hard!
Marshall speaker cabs they say are made in england and assembled in China, well whatever they're doing they don't sound the same anymore.
I AB'd a JCM 800 412 from mid eighties to one of the chinese ones 4 or 5 years old and there was no comparison hands down the 80's one took it by a long shot.

I believe Marshall had a superior product in the 60's 70's and 80's,but they have lost a lot of credibility from many a player, thus players going to boogie and all kinds of amp companies popping up offering point to point wiring, and building a quality product.

I mean it's pretty bad when Marshall reissues one of the amps they made originally and some guy in his little company duplicates a plexi and the little company's amp sounds closer to the Marshall than the Marshall reissue does, pretty pathetic.
And believe me when I say I stand behind my older Marshall products 100% but some of the reissues man, not very good, A B them and you'll see what I mean, thus to say I sold my reissue head which may I add took a while, everone wanted it until they heard it,then no one wanted it, gradually someone did buy it, sold it for $600 Canadian thank god.

Chinese Marshall cabs? sell out or what it's all about the money, why do you think that for about $700 you could buy a brand new Chinese Marshall 412 cab, where as before they were around the $1000 or slightly over sure slave labour at $1 an hour if that.
I spoke with someone who is the president of his own compny and he gave me a comparison, he said if you paid 2 people in america $30 an hour the total of that will employ a whole factory of workers in China 110 people to be exact that's what this person told me and everyone is following suit to make more of the almighty dollar, but unfortunately for us the players who spend our hard earned money on costly equiptment, we deserve the quality and workmanship and a good product, I really don't care where it's made as long as it sounds good!

Sound Quality : 1
I mean I remember in the 80's were people were laughing at Japanese guitar manufactures " oh it's a Japanese Copy" and they would stay away, yet those same people are hunting down those instruments today because they were better than Gibson and Fender in the mid 70's to the early 90's.
Tokai is a perfect example, they made better guitars than the company they were copying was making.Their quality was A+ that's why.I don't think 10 years from now people will be saying oh is that a Chinese Marshall buy it that's worth a lot of money, based on the fact that the product is not maintaing the Marshall name and Legend enough said!

Reliability : 2
Didn't have it for that long couldn't stand the sound.

Customer Support : 1
Tried emailing Marshall for some info as to why it didn't sound good , sent several emails and no response at all from Marshall, very poor customer support oh sorry NO CUSTOMER SUPPORT!

Overall Rating : 10
Gear I own:
1961 Fender Strat
1969 Fender Strat
71 Gibson SG
73 Gibson Les Paul
Gibson Flying V
Original 1965 Marshall JTM 45 100 watt head( Best head ever)
1969 100 watt SLP Marshall
1970 412 Marshall cab with real 25 watt Greenbacks(not the Chinese Kind)
Peavey XXX head
Koch Twintone head- These heads sound amazing!!!!!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: USD 999
Submitted 02/28/2007 at 01:39pm by nc

Features : 8
I have the version prior to Marshall adding an effects loop and raising the price by a grand (That's Just Criminal). Must have been made somewhere between 2001-2003?? It was on the showroom floor of G - Center for about a year and a half totally misunderstood by the staff and the teeny bopper high gainers. The features are basic; 2 channel volumes, tone controls, presence. I actually like bridging the two channels and getting the high / low set with the volumes on the two channels. Works out better for me. Run it through a 2x12 Marshall cab and more recently through a custom 4x12 cab I built and tolexed loaded with greenbacks. Sounds really great!

Sound Quality : 10
The good.....

The amp is the $hit. Sounds really great on chunky stuff.... kinda like the old testament God. Power chords are something akin to a freight train on a dark moonless night rolling through a crossing. Just awesome. It has some of the fender bassman sound, but thicker on the low end. I can dial in anything from Metallica to Joe Satriani to Robin Trower to Santana to Van Halen to a descent (not great but descent) warm jazzy sound. Overdrive tones and textures depend alot on what is put in front of it in terms of stomp boxes. Another thing I like to do is set the amp at a moderate volume then turn the volume on a pedal up. This helps overdrive the preamp tubes and sounds really rich as compared to just depending on the pedal for distortion.

It's not a one trick pony. Some compromises are made between clean and dirty tones. The best setup for me is to switch between amps. The marshall for dirty or bluesy sound and a Fender twin Reverb for clean.

I tried the AC/DC thing one time.... Man that just hurts. In my living situation (i.e. having neighbors) cranking the amp at those volumes is just not practicle. The setup I mentioned before (pedals and two amps) gives me the tone I enjoy at manageable volume.

I've played alot of guitars through it using both humbuckers and single coil. My personal style at this point is heavy blues on the one hand and technical skill / lead on the other. I've experimented with alot of gear and come up with some strange solutions. For example, I have a Warmoth guitar which I put together with Texas Specials. The pickups are wired individually to on-off switches with one volume and one tone. I turn on all three pickups and the guitar is just great for lead, Satriani, Van Halen, whatever. For the hendrix tone, it is my limited edition Strat with a quilted maple top and the neck pickup. For that David Gilmore dark side of the moon sound I switch to the middle position on a USA strat and put both guitar tones on zeroe. Chokes the crap out of the guitar and just sounds awesome!

Reliability : 8
The bad......

Crappy Marshall pots. Had the volume pots replaced because they were scratchy and extremely sensitive. Got the amp back home.... had brand new scratchy, extremely sensitive pots. That's just marshall.

Had the tubes re-biased but I've gotten alot of life out of the originals. I take care of my stuff too though. I don't slam the tubes with voltage until they warm up and I live in one of the more arid regions of the country which is easier on electronics.

I gigged pretty extensively through 2004-2005. Overall.... the amp hasn't given me any problems. I have faith in it.

Customer Support : 2
The ugly.......

O.k. so marshall makes a cool re-issue at a descent price (I got mine for $999). Then they add an effects loop and double the price. What a bunch of jerks!!!! Honestly, the company was supposed to be on the side of musicians (or they were back in the 60's and 70's). It's all about the money now. Would I buy another product from Marshall.... Not only no but hell no! Marshall has lost integrity!

What are the options.... there's alot of good options if you have a little patience and like to work on projects. Building custom cabinets that have better quality control at a good price is an option. Load em with celestions, Eminence or Jensen speakers.... poof.... a great sounding, great looking (if you take your time) 4x12 at 1/3 to 1/2 the price. The external hardware you can use is heads and tales above the plastic Marshall is putting out. You can also get your own nameplate if you want. Amplifiers? There are alot of kits out there, especially good are the ones from Metropoulos Amplification. He makes a great, straight forward kit with clear instructions for a Plexi or JTM-45 head. Hand soldered point to point construction.... done by you. They both sound killer and come with everything needed for assembly, including the head cabinet and handle. Metropoulos has great customer support and is very helpful with questions.

Marshall is an icon, but they've lost integrity. Quite frankly I think they've also lost touch with the common musician. The sad thing is that Jim Marshall is still alive and he's letting this stuff go on. What happens when he passes and the board of directors takes over?

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Great amplifier design which has stood the test of time. Not really sure the company has! Instead of making music, the company focus seems to be all about the money. Maybe someday they'll turn it around.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: european 3000.00
Submitted 02/27/2007 at 07:41am by some guy

Features : 10
bypassable series effects loop.
unlike the old ones...

Sound Quality : 10
To the reviewer below,
Firstly, JJ tubes have now been discontinued from Marshall because they are way too unreliable right now and are NOT the best tubes, you might like them but thats just like pushing a Mustang on someone who much prefers a GT, silly,
Secondly, the stock tube of the 1987x and 1959 re-issues are now winged C SED Svets. my favourite, and an excellent choice for old Marshall amps and extremely reliable right now.

Any old iron?? the trannies are quite good in the re-issue series amps I think, I changed mine to a custom wound and did notice a bit more grind but not a huge improvement.

PTP turret board???
Thats just going way too far,
It really sounds like you bought the wrong amp, for the money youve just gone and spent, you could have bough a boutique clone, with all that work already done, a metroupolis kit and build it yourself for alot less maybe??
I myself, could not be bothered with the amount of effort or money involved with any of your "mods"

Ive a/b my re-issues with the real deal and actually prefer the re-issue, that is after a few months break in.

These amps are actually copies of the "72/73" circuit, not the plexi era, they do have the look of a late 60's Marshall but have the innards of the more favourited metal panel Marshall's.


Reliability : 10
I still havent seen any problems with these amps, not one except for tubes and stupidity.

Customer Support : 2
Not very helpful,
basically non existant.
the wait on any part is a long one.

Overall Rating : 8


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: GBP # (900)
Submitted 04/28/2006 at 10:22am by Paul

Features : 10
Simple non master volume head. Jump the channels.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I gig and teach for a living and always wanted a kick-ass half stack. I play a strat all the time but when I'm using this amp it's for rock/groove/blues. Think Hendrix/Sly Stone/Stevie Wonder/Freddie King/Doyle Bramhall/Buddy Guy/Stones and you're there. The std version of this amp sucks, very bright, very harsh and can sound very thin. HERE IS WHAT YOU MUST DO IN ORDER OF COST!!

1. Replace ALL valves. the stuff that marshall use is pretty crap. Best new production EL34's are the JJ tesla EL43L's. You could go KT66, 6CA7 or even go all out for NOS tubes but ditch the std crap. You WILL notice a difference straight away but how much you spend is up to you. I put a selection of various NOS stuff in preamp and output sections of this amp and the improvement is HUGE.

2. Any old Iron? The Transformers make a big difference and guess what the ones marshall use are like...crap. I put a Metroamp Dagnall clone in after I did the tubes and it was like having a second cab. The amp 'felt' so strong and the sound was noticably bigger and much more authorative.

3. PTP Board. A hand built point to piont wired board from metroamp.com will put you in the same league as a real 69 plexi. I put in a 69 Superbass board and the sweet creaminess that I'd wanted when I bought the amp in first place was finally there. Georges stuff is so well put together and the quality of the components makes a big difference. You can choose the components to use depending on what sound/style you're after. I have nothing to do with metroamp other than I'm a very satisfied customer.

Reliability : 10
No problems, I built it myself.

Customer Support : 1
Marshall suck. I was trying KT66's instead of EL34's. The tech guy at Marshall hadn't a clue and actually gave me the wrong info that would have seriously damaged the amp and the tubes if I'd taken his advice.

Overall Rating : 5
If you wanyt the true vintage tones of a Marshall, custom build your own, either from scratch or modify an existing amp. You could just save the hassle and buy one direct from someone like George Metropolous at metroamp. The next plexi i buy that's what I'm gonna do.

DON'T KID YOURSELF! Marshall aren't the slightest bit interested in giving you good tone. They just want to trade on the strenght of their brand and get you to hand over your cash.



Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $2500
Submitted 02/26/2006 at 05:53am by Mike Hawkisitchy

Features : 6
yeah, i bought this thing on advice from a buddy. I had an extra 3g's hanging around, and needed an amp to replace my 1968 version, which wasnt working. i sold it for 200 buck, and bought this one.

i cant compare the old one, cuz its been a while since the other one worked. Im only startin to pick up and play the guitar again. I bought the slant cab, and base cab to go with it, so i can imagine im jimmy henrix.

Sound Quality : 6
Wow, i didnt know this thing was so loud. My mom doesnt want me to turn it up too loud in my bedroom. But it looks cool on top of the cabinets. Oh the cabinets have celestions it it. (Hey look at me,,im jimmy hendrix)

I bet this thing wouuld sound cool cranked up.

Reliability : 5
i dont know about reliability. i hope it lasts longer than my original 68 one. Actually someone told me it may have been a fuse, or the tubes or rectifier (whatever that is) is blown on the 68. Oh well, and i probably could have got more money for it so i was told.
Darn. Oh well live and learn. Kinda wish i had it back now.

Customer Support : No Opinion
i never dealt with Marshall.

Overall Rating : 5
I bought this because it looked like my old one. I own a epiphone les paul flame top. I had the music store put it george lynch pickups in it. it sounds better now.

I wish i could turn it up louder. I guess i will need to play in a band or something somewhere , so i can get down to playing again.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1750.00
Submitted 02/24/2006 at 11:15pm by Billy Morrison

Features : 10
i have a 59slp 100 watt head. 2005
this head is AMAZING!! Maybe i got lucky and got an extra good one.
Thru 2 boogie 4 12's and a THD hotplate. Holly grail reverb thru effects loop, and a mod. wah. that's it, with sometimes the mxr micro amp. If your a real player, and don't cover up your sound with prossessed crap. This amp is all you need. RAWNESS and REAL.




Sound Quality : 10
i use a 1976 les paul standard, 1990 les paul standard.
But the 68' strat sounds the best thru this rig. roll back the volume alittle and you have the sweetest clean sound.

Reliability : No Opinion
haven't had it long enough to say how dependable it is.

Customer Support : No Opinion
don't need em

Overall Rating : 10
i have been playing for 20+ years.
and have had marshalls always. i still have my jcm's 900 & 800
and this slp blows them away.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 02/15/2006 at 02:07pm by Blazer

Features : No Opinion
1993 "Plexi" 1959SLP. It's got all the features it needs!

Sound Quality : 10
First off I love this amp! I had been searching for that old-school AC/DC-Thin Lizzy classic crunch for years. I've owned many (too many to keep track of unfortunately) Marshalls and other varieties, this is the best for classic tone. I say "best" because I don't think actually bringing a vintage Plexi-type Marshall to shows is very possible for most of us working musicians (most "real" musicians don't have the $$$ to do so anyways). Obviously the reissue isn't the real thing; however, it's close enough for my liking. I'm surprised how many people discredit this amp -- not sure why? It's definetely a player's amp, you can't "hide" behind a wall of distortion with it. That's the beauty of a non-master Marshall circuit in my opinion - if you can play this thing will demonstrate it.

I primarily use telecasters, one Am. Std modded w/a SD '59 in the bridge and the other is a '72 Deluxe with the big wide-range Fender hums. I don't drive the hell out of the amp, I personally like the bright channel with tone settings between 11 and 1 o'clock and volume 1 around 6 or 7, depending on what cab I'm using. I also use an Ibanez TS-9 (for a little dirtier sound & leads), Crybaby 535Q, Boss Graphic EQ (for slight boost), and a Guyatone tube tremolo unit. I then run the amp into a Weber Mass attenuator, then into either a 1960TV cab (w/greenbacks) or a 1936 2X12 (w/vintage 30's & modded semi-open back). The greenbacks really love this amp -- in my opinion this is the best way to go cab-wise, big and warm sounding.

The great thing about these SLP's is that you can really mod them, if you like, to get exactly the tone your looking for; they're simple and straight-forward. Bright caps C17 & C18 have been removed from my reissue -- I would suggest this if you find the amp overly bright. Mine has also been modded with dual post-phase inverter master volumes, this allows me to run one wide open for leads and the other at 3/4 volume for rythym. Post-phase masters work very well on these, but you still need to drive the amp hard. I use them just because I hate not being able to hear my leads. The more you crank the masters, the less they're in the circuit (wide open they're not in the circuit at all). This set-up works very well for as a solo/lead boost. David Bray did the mod for me -- his work is great.

I can't understand how you could not like this amp. They are very, very dynamic -- just using the guitar's volume control and your pick attack these clean up real nicely. And the crunch is to die for, not harsh, not britle, not too bassy, but just right. The biggest thing I will stress is that you ABSOLUTELY MUST run a powerbrake, or hotplate/attenuator for practice or most practical purposes. The Weber Mass unit is very cool. These amps, as indicated by everyone who has ever played one, are super loud. You should (as with any tube amp) run high quality pre and poweramp tubes and make sure they're biased correctly for best tone. Running the bias too cold definetely makes these amps sound pretty dull. I'm running JJ's in mine -- they seem pretty good.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank -- very simple, not much to go wrong like most modern multi-pcb amps. Wish I could say this for all the Marshalls I've owned but....

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
Overall, I'm in love with this amp. I've been playing for about 14 years, and I've played many, many shows. I've owned or played shows/recorded with many amps including Marshall DSL's, JTM60, JCM900, SL-X's, Orange, Fender, and on and on... This is the best one if you're looking for old-school classic rock, Brit. crunch, blues tone. Like I stated earlier, it's somewhat of an unfair comparison to a true vintage late 60's-early 70's Plexi/metal face amp, but these sound pretty killer in their right. Plus, there are a lot of options that can be done to change the tone of these amps to your own personal preference, if you insist.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 02/12/2006 at 04:39pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion
1993 Plexi SLP Reissue. It has the features it needs to have -- simple & straight-forward.

Sound Quality : 10

I've owned over 20 different amps and played through countless others. I absolutely love this thing. I'd been searching for that pure blues rock, classic rock, old-school AC/DC tone until I finally bought my SLP.

The main reason I hadn't purchased one previously was because I needed an amp with a solo/boost/lead channel to get my leads above my four-piece band. There's nothing worse than watching a guy playing the hell out of a guitar and not being heard; an effect pedal just usually isn't enough for me. This is especially true for most smaller clubs where the sound guy sets your level and then lets it be at that. So, I had my amp modded with dual footswitchable post-phase inverter master volumes by David Bray - I highly suggest you check him out: www.davidbrayamps.com.

Post-phase inverter master volumes are the best choice for this amp. They sound very natural and when set wide open they are completely out of the circuit and don't affect the tone of the amp at all. I should note that the amp still needs to be pushed hard to sound good. I set one master wide open and the other at about 3/4 or 3 o'clock. I then run the amp through a power attenuator/hot plate and wow does it sound killer! I'm running JJ's in the power amp section, and Svetlanas in the preamp. Also, should note that bright caps at C17 & C18 are removed from the circuit.

My set-up is like this: Fender American Telecaster (with SD '59 humbucker in bridge) or Fender '72 Deluxe Telecaster(dual over-sized Fender humbuckers) >> Dunlop Crybaby 535Q >> Ibanez TS-9 reissue (for dirtier sound) >> Boss GE-3 Equalizer (for slight boost) >> Guyatone Tube-powered Tremelo >> Boss TU-2 tuner >> Plexi input 1 >> Weber Mass power attenuator >> 1960TV cab (w/greenbacks) or 1936 2x12 cab (w/vintage 30's & modded semi-open back).

I'm not going to knock anyone's opinion on here, but I really can't understand why people are bashing these amps. If you're looking for a warm crunch, dynamic, LOUD, sound for old-school rock you simply can't go wrong. This amp also has a decent clean sound when set properly, but the crunch is beyond anything else out there. As others have stated on this forum, you ABSOLUTELY have to have some type of attenuator/powerbrake/hotplate to use this thing. It is simply deafening without one and one most stages it's way, way too much power. I personally like plugging directly into channel 1 but some people claim it's too bright, my amp has had the bright caps at C17 & C18 removed so that might be why mine doesn't suffer from this problem. You can get a little heavier sound by patching the channels. Like I said I shoot for an Angus Young/Thin Lizzy Jailbreak-era tone and this amp has got it. The wonderful thing about this amp is how well it responds to pick attack -- they are very, very, very dynamic. It's awesome how you can go from clean to crunch just by digging in.

Reliability : No Opinion
Built like a tank, can't say that for all Marshall amps I've owned, but this is a very simple circuit layout. Not much to go wrong.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I've owned or gigged with a Marshall DSL, TSL, JTM-60, JCM900, JCM900 SL-X, various Fenders, Oranges, and a lot of other amps. This thing is simply the best in my opinion. I know the reissues aren't as good as the real deal, but you can't really drag around a ridiculously priced '67 or '68 Plexi out to gig with. That being said my reissue is pretty damn good. I plan on swapping out the PCB in the future for a point-to-point, and I may change the output transformer and choke to a vintage-spec one just for that extra vintage sound (I'm never completely satisfied). It does seem that the older reissues might be better than the newer models, judging by comments on this forum. All things taken into consideration, these are wonderful amplifiers.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1350
Submitted 11/20/2005 at 06:42pm by RJS
Email: statham<at>pennswoods dot net

Features : 9
2003 Marshall 1959SLP "Plexi Reissue" w/ standard Super Lead controls plus a bypassable effects loop that I bought new. I play rhythm and lead in a two-guitar "classic rock" band that covers everything from the James Gang, Bad Company and Lynyrd Skynyrd through to Van Halen. Since I was looking for this amp specifically the features get a 9:)

Sound Quality : 9
I use a '61 SG Reissue or a Les Paul Standard (both w/ '57 Classic pickups) or a Les Paul Special w/ P90s with this amp. My rig is set up as follows:

Guitar->Voodoo Labs Sparkle Drive->Seymour Duncan Pickup Booster->EH Small Stone->Marshall 1959SLP (w/ Midiverb 3 set for reverb in the loop. Mix is set nearly dry for just a touch of verb)->THD Hot Plate->Marshall 1936 2x12 or 1960A 4x12 both w/ 12T-75s.

The amp is set up as follows:
Vol1->6 Vol2->6 Treble->5 Mid->6 Bass->6 Pres->3
Ch1 low is patched to Ch2 high input

Hot Plate is normally set on -12 or -8dB depending on the size of the gig.

This set up give a good semi-clean (no Fender clean but good enough for what I need!) w/ the guitar volume rolled back, a great crunch tone w/ the guitar volume max'd, and a good, fluid lead sound w/ one of the boost pedals kicked in and the guitar volume dimed.

Couple of the things to note about this amp (and the Marshall 1987X 50W reissue which I also use):
-These amps are LOUD so a power attenuator is a necessity for practical use at a gig or at practice. IMHO THD Hot Plates seem to work better than the Marshall Power Brake (I've got both).
-The choice of cabinet and speakers really makes a difference in the overall sound of the rig, so be prepared to try a few different cabs and speakers to dial in your sound. I tried 12T-75s, Vin30s, Greenbacks, and Eminence Legend V12s in both the 2x12 and 4x12 before coming back to the 12T-75s.

Other tech stuff about the amp:

Power Tubes are JJ EL34 biased @ 15W dissipation.
Preamp tubes are normally NOS RFTECC83 (which I like for a big crunch sound in 100W Marshalls). New JJ ECC83S (medium gain, darker tone) or Ruby 12AX7A-C (higher gain tone) also work well.

As an experiment earlier this year, I changed the OT to a Mercury Magnetics O100JM and the choke to a MC10. As compared to the original sound w/ the factory OT & choke, the overall tone got a bit darker and crunchier which I liked:)

When used in this rig for the "classic rock" gig, this amp works really well. Overall I give it a 9 (since I'm never 100% satisfied w/ my tone!)

Reliability : 9
Amp is very well built. I do all my own maintenance and this type amp is very easy to work on. That being said, it's never once failed in over two years of use. Of course, I never gig w/o a back-up amp:)

Customer Support : 9
Never used Marshall customer service. Website seems to be prety good.
Local shop (Rainbow Music in State Colleg PA) is very good should there ever be a need for assistance.
Warranty is 5 years.

Overall Rating : 9
Been playing for 20 years in and out of bands. Also own a Fender Strat and Tele in addition to the guitars mentioned above. Other amps are '74 Marshall 50W 1987, Marshall 1987X 50w "plexi" reissue, JCM900 Model 2500 50W head, Mesa Stiletto Duece (for the heavy modern rock), and a '98 Peavey Bandit combo (for late night practice:)

Overall I give this amp a 9 for use in a "classic rock" rig. Decent clean, big crunch, and a great lead sound are all available w/ the twist of the guitar volume or a stomp on the boost pedal.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1300
Submitted 11/19/2005 at 01:42pm by RJS
Email: statham<at>pennswoods dot net

Features : 9
2003 Marshall 1959 SLP 100W "Plexi" Reissue w/ standard tone & volume controls + effects loop which can be bypassed via rear panel switch. When compared to more modern amps this amp has "basic features" which are very useful nonetheless!

Since it had pretty much everything that I was looking for feature-wise in this type of amp it gets a 9:)

Sound Quality : 9
Primarily used w/ either a '61 SG reissue, a Les Paul standard (both w/ '57 Classics) or a Les Paul Special w/ P90s. I play rhythm & lead guitar in a two-guitar "classic rock" band that gigs regularly & covers eveything from the James Gang, Grand Funk, Bad Company, & Lynerd Skynerd through to AC/DC & Van Halen. For this type of gig the 1959SLP works really well when used in the right rig. I typically set up as follows:

Guitar->Fulltone OCD or FD2->Duncan Pickup Booster or Voodoo Labs Sparkle Drive->EH Small Stone->1959SLP (w/ Midiverb 3 in the effects loop for just a bit of reverb. Effects mix is set pretty dry w/ just a touch of effect for some ambience)->THD Hot Plate (typically -12dB or -8dB setting)->Marshall 1936 2x12 or 1960A 4x12 w/ Celestion 12T-75s.

The amp is set up like this:
Vol1->6 Vol2-6 Treble->5 Mid->6 Bass->6 Pres->3
Ch 1 low is patched to Ch 2 high input.

Everything from semi-clean (no Fender clean but good enough for what I need), to big crunchy rhythm and lead sounds can be obtained with the twist of the guitar volume knob and/or a stomp on one of the boost pedals. It did take me a while to "dial in" the settings on this amp (particularly the presence, treble, and the two volume controls) to get the overall tones that I was looking for in this setup.

As a note, I've also used this amp in an A/B setup w/ my Marshall 1987X 50W "plexi reissue". In this setup I use an A/B/Both switch to select the path through one amp (w/ its own effect chain), the other (w/ its own effect chain), or both. Each amp is run into it's own THD Hot Plate and then into one half of the stereo cabinet's speakers. The 1959SLP 100W amp is used for the semi-clean & crunch rhythms and the 1987X 50W amp is used for the higher gain rhythm sounds. For solos, both amps are switched on which gives a nice volume boost and a solid lead tone. Overall this setup is very versatile, although its a bit much to drag around to live gigs!

Other details of the amp set up for the tech-minded folks:

The circuit Marshall had reproduced in this amp is really not from a early '66-'68 plexi (even though the front and rear panels say otherwise!) but rather is from a metal-panel amp (circa late '69-71). As such, it's got the metal-panel era tone which is brighter with more gain than the earlier amps. I've left the circuit in the factory configuration since I like the tone of the metal-panel amps

Wrt tubes, my amp is set up as follows:

Power tubes are JJ EL34L (biased for 15W dissipation).
Preamp tubes are normally NOS RFT ECC83 (my favorite for a big crunchy tone). New JJ ECC83S (darker medium gain sound), Ruby 12AX7A-C (darker higher gain sound), or EH12AX7s (brighter higher gain sound) also work well in this amp although IMHO the EH can be pretty bright!

The output transformer was changed this year (as an experiment) to a Mercury Magnetics O100JM "plexi reissue OT" and the choke was changed to a MC10H. Overall the sound of the amp was a bit darker and chunkier after the change as compared to the original. I liked the end result of this change and have subsequently changed my Marshall 1987X 50W reissue OT to a Mercury Magnetics O50JM.

My overall rating for this amp in this rig for use w/ this type of music is a 9 (since I'm never 100% satisfied w/ my tone<G>)

Reliability : 9
The Marshall 1959 SLP appears to be extremly well built and has been very reliable to date. I do my own amp maintenance and also run a small audio repair shop and in comparison to many "modern" amps it's built to last!

I always take a back-up amp to gigs since Murphy can strike at any time!

It gets a 9 because nothing is perfect;)

Customer Support : 9
Never needed servicing that I couldn't do myself.
The local dealer (Rainbow Music) is very easy to work with if needed.
5 year warranty.
The Marshall website appears to be pretty good.




Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing for 20 years. Currently own the guitars mentioned above plus a Fender Strat & Tele. I also own a '74 Marshall 1987 50W, a JCM900 Model 2500 50W, a Mesa Stiletto Deuce, and a Peavey Bandit.

The Marshall 1959SLP is a great amp for getting a classic rock sound. It's got the classic big crunchy sound associated w/ 60s/70s/early 80s rock. It's also VERY LOUD which necessitates the use of a power attenuator for all my gigs.

If it were stolen I'd definately look for another Marshall 1959 100W amp (either the SLP or perhaps a HW).


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1,100.00
Submitted 10/26/2005 at 03:17pm by Dr. Tweedbucket

Features : 4
I have two of these 1959 amps. One was made in 1988 and is not really a SLP, but the first superlead Marshall manufactured. The USA only imported 100 of these amps and it is fashioned after the 1973 metal face superleads. I think the model number is a 1959X.

The second amp I have is the standard reissue SLP and it was built in 1997.

I am not going into all the details of what these amps do and can't do .... most of you already know that..... so on to the problems and issues.

Sound Quality : 10
Out of the box, both amps were ice pick harsh. Harsh Harsh Harsh ! Whoever designed this circuit must have gone out drinking while the prototype was being built, then stopped back in for two seconds to sign it off. These are NASTY out of the box !!

I quickly learned which two bright caps to cut out of the circuit and WOW .... what a different amp after that! The SLP sounded better than the 1959X for some reason. I installed JJ ECC83s preamp tubes in both amps and JJ EL34L power tubes biasing them up to 36 mA. The tubes improved things noticably over the junk Sovteks that came in it.

I compared the SLP to an original 74 superlead and the 74 just has more beef !! Just sounded fatter and fuller no matter how the EQ was tweeked. I ordered a Obsolete Electronics output transformer and installed that in the SLP. Bingo..... that brought the amp around to truly sounding like the real thing!!

The amp that I REALLY wanted to sound good just isn't there yet. I was thinking since this 1959x was manufactured in 1988, the output transformer may still be of decent quality, so I decided to install a set of Sozo caps. They take a long time to break in and the amp still doesn't sound nearly as good as the SLP yet.... so I don't know what to do next. I would kind of like to keep that amp as original as possible seeing that there were only 100 imported.

These amps with a Gibson SG and P90 pickups are just magic !! Play the amp with your pick attack and there are amazing tones to be discovered. A lot of people don't get it, but all the great players of the past sure did and I am glad Marshall was good enough to recognize true tone and reissue these amps. ....maybe their quality control guy is deaf now instead of drunk, and that explains the bright cap issue?

Reliability : 9
Never had one break down. Hand soldered connections are pretty hard to beat.
Take a look at any modern Fender or Marshall DSL with all the ribbon cables and PCB mounted power tubes ...... they won't last 15 or 20 years, let alone 35 years like many of these Superleads have.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with them. I do all my own work.

Overall Rating : 9
I own a Mesa DR, Soldano SLO, Hiwatt DR103 and a few Fender amps. Nothing sounds quite like the Marshall. The SLO on the crunch channel can kind of get close, but the Marshall just has something about it .... maybe those Drake transformers ( or the OE ).

I would buy another if anything happened to it. Actually, I would probably find a broken original and fix it.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1700
Submitted 08/22/2005 at 12:19am by Neil Keller

Features : 9
2004 100W Plexi Super Lead.

Standard 4 channel w/ effects loop which I haven't figured out how to run anything through it yet, so I don't use it, neither on the TSL. Next learning curve.

I want for no additional features except to find the idiot who designed channel 1 causing permanent hearing damage and frightened dogs. Caps 17 an 18 are going out immediately!!! I am keeping (taming) the 4 power tubes or I would have bought a 50 watter. I suppose at 9 am in 1969, when you really had to wake up a crowd, Ch. 1 at a setting of 10 would have done it for Mr. Hendrix. I am not, nor ever will be, him.

I use all the features now that I patched in and can tailor to single coils or humbuckers. Love the presence control.

Power? Yep. Too much? NO, not exactly. Mystified why a 300 Watt cabinet would turn to muddy crap when really cranked. The 1960A 4x12 distorts to (bass) mud in Ch.2 which really pisses me off, because when I connect this head to my Crate V30 single 12", or TSL 602 dual Ventage 30's 12's, or Fender Blues Jr. 25W Greenback 12" it sounds like God has visited.

I use this amp with a practice band from metal to '70's cover with Mr. Halen in the mix. 2 original Marshall Plexis and 1 RI (mine); no combos except for vocals. AMPEG '70's era sealed back 4x12's + '70's Peavy 2 x 12 & 240 Watt head + 1969A cab and drum machine (drummer drank all the red bull and couldn't chill for the blues...or our version of it).

Sound Quality : 10
I am using a mint vintage '63 ES 125 TCD dog-eared P-90's (a-la George T-good), a original '65 Jazzmaster, an original '71 strat and '72 tele thinline, a '05 Ibanez JS 1200 shredder, an original '59 es 335 and a '76 LP gold top with mini humbuckers which seem to have the most feel through this setup.

It suits my style because I go from all out max shred 10 to Clean Santana with sustain, but kick back a little to Johnny A's clean diverse licks I'm trying to learn (Texas local). On a rainy day I go virgin clean through my '65 super reverb.

The amp is whisper quiet, only hisses to let you know you forgot to connect something.

The amp will (should) distort the right speaker... but no freakin way the GT-75's so I got a Boss MegaDistortion which gives it just right sound. Boss Heavy metal MT2 is a must-have but used very conservatively or you will not hear for days... maybe weeks. May change to 25 W Greenbacks or put in a attenuator I guess. 75's are made for Nugent or the Ramones? Amp doesn't fart, pop, growl, blow fuses or overheat. A 12 hour straight burn it today at 3/4 volume didn't burp. Previous threads mention getting the 1960 AX with Greenbacks and I may do it.

The clean channel distorts when my ears do, above 4 or 5. All other settings at 12 o'clock..presence at about 6, bass at 3, normal volume at about 4, but through a CD player with pre-amp. Without the CD player I had it cranked up to 10 on channel 2 with the bass down but the cab was muddy-ear-piercing crap....tube distortion was forced, not rolled..maybe I have something else out of whack, impedenced was matched. No comments please, I let 'er rip and that's what I got. More breakin or amp mods may be required.

Reliability : 10
I would not hesitate to gig alone with it (+ cab), but would bring along my Crate V30. Either head plugs right in and has medium / maximum venue volume potential if miked through a PA.

Never broken down and I'm putting it through a tough breakin. My TSL 602 never broke down the past 2.5 years of heavy use either.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with Marshall direct.

Factory warranty.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I have been playing for 2.5 years. Own 52 guitars (too many to list), Crate V30 class A, Blues Jr., Marshall TSL 602, 59 plexi RI + 1960A cab, '65 super reverb (get one), Crate 15W practice amp, Fender G-Dec + boss effects + old ME33.

If the Plexi was stolen I would buy a lower power 50 watt version, but no multi channel confusion crap, or non-tube amp.

I did not compare this to anything- Big Crates, Krank, B-52, Ibanez-d Satriani, Mesa Boogie, Hughes and Kettner, Recent RI Fenders, Line 6, Lane, Roland, Rogue, Behringer, Rivera, Randall, Vox, Epiphone, Peavy (still one of my favorites for loud & reliable) Gibson et all are just posers. Marshall is KING.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/22/2005 at 10:32pm by anonymous

Features : 5
I'd like to clear up some of the arguments regarding the re-issue 1959slp...
I own a 1968 plexi, a 69 superbass, a 67 50 watt lead, and a 66 plexi park. I have also built my own amps and restored many cheezo
Modded 70's marshalls.

The reissue amp is a resissue of the 69-75 lead amp circuit. This is a stadium amp, is very loud brite and cutting, I personally find it offensive.

here's the scoop Hendrix used 66-67 amps for his GREAT studio albums
van Halen used a 66-67 amp for his recordings (filter caps under the chassis)

Prior to the final evolution 68-69 of the plexi circuit earlier amps were
a. warmer
b. smoother
c. more user friendly

Early amps (the best ones) had
tied cathodes on the first tube ( both chanels were bassy )
a lower value briteness capacitor or no briteness capacitor on the volume pots
early amps had HUGE 2 watt mil spec potentiometers
early amps had way less power filtering, caps inside the chassis
(lower values 32 & 16 mfd) this yeilded sweeter smoother compression earlier on the volume know (less head room)
early marshalls were biased VERY HOT from the factory most american techs won't bias your amp this hot !!!

the spl reissue plexi can easily be modded to sound killer
remove the 5k brite cap on the brite volume
rebias the amp very hot
replace the 50-50 can caps with 32-32 can caps
tie both cathodes of v1 to the bass side for the hendrix thing

Sound Quality : 5

Reliability : 5
The new factory issue Marshalls are biased cold as
modern el34's are just not Mullard units

Further tube oriented techs are just not as common as they once were.

used Marshalls share this problem because most amp "techs" re bias the amp even colder than Marshall does ...

I have a 69 50 watt head that sounds outrageous it is mint and still has its factory mullards, its never been serviced
the guy I bought it from was singing thru it !!

its biased at 40Ma per tube ... ask your tech to do that and he'll get upset ... most bad sounding Marshalls are biased 12 to 20 ma per tube ...
as an amp is biased hotter, even a brite amp it gets fatter and fatter

of course If you skimp on crappy tubes you will have reliabilty issues...
but this Ultra Hot biasing is what made the old ac30's and marshalls so killer and so touchy !!!

modern details like better screen resistors and some other stuff solve these problems now ... but try and get a tech to set an amp up this hot


Customer Support : 10
At the recent namm show Jim Marshall now in his 80's signed autographs each day for 6 to 8 hours ...
a typical autograph session lasts 30 minutes

at the namm show there were two jtm/45 100 resissues
the interior of the heads were marked DUMMY but we can always
hope and demand the real reissue's we deserve

Overall Rating : 5
Any year marshall reissue or 70's MOD DOG can be made to sound right like the records with enough attention to detail...

That the reissue amps don't GIT IT right out of the box is totally frustrating to many, and unfortunate for those who don't want to play at full volume all the time ... set up right a great marshall sounds killer at a low volume without a power break

currently I own 10 pre 75 Marshalls and have rebuilt many others...
the right knowledge is out there but many an "old amp" has been rebiased cold or modded to "LEAD" specs by well meaning techs just adding to the mess...


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $2,200
Submitted 05/13/2005 at 06:38am by Shaun Siddells
Email: siddells<at>bigpond dot net dot au

Features : 5
Basic settings.
Distinct to this amp is the Loudness 1 & Loudness 2. which are linked to input 1 & 2. Basically Treble booster for channel , and some muffy bass thing for channel 2.

Not overly versitile - but it's standard Marshall shelved tone shaping. Not a massive amount of scope, but does the job for the sound you buy.

Sound Quality : 9
1958 Les Paul Reissues, Std Tele, Std Strat - all stock pick ups and electronics. No effects except the occasion VOX wah (true By-passed).

I like this sound. Pure cranked Marshall. I ahve owned a few and normally get my guy to rip out the pre-amps and handwire them pointo to point, throw in a negative feedback switch and CLASS A switch then they are ready to rock... Otherwise they pretty crappy out of the box.

This things come close and may need a bit of whacking but not much. Very good juice maker.

I see some twats woffling on about to bright this to bright that. Roll some treble down past 11 O'Clock, presence up, mid half, bass high and PATCH LOW INPUT 1 To HIGH INPUT 2 - For God sake.

I am at loss as to why they have two shitty channels in this amp - and yes, you're an ass if you haven't patched ya channels. This should be a switchable option. It just runs to bright or to murky muff puddlish not patched.

PATCH EM! Sound great. Then blend Loudness 1 with Loudness 2 - you can strick a great balance of highs and lows this way. It only cranks when both channels are engaged.

Reliability : 8
Yeah it a tank. But 4 Marshalls in and 2 have suffered sever heat damage - and 1 just keep blowing a fuse.

This amp - Well had it for about 18 months and it is solid.. My JCM900 took a spill on stage when I fell on it, lost a jug of water inside in and it was still cranking when it flat on the floor... go figure - when they're on they're on, when they not - i'd chuck em these days.

This one seems ok so far

Customer Support : No Opinion
No Idea - I am in Australia - We don't have support. Lucky we have some top chop shops.

Overall Rating : 9
Those who say this amp suck :
1. either got (not likely) a real Freak'n lemon
2. Need to buy boogie Dual Recto or an old Peavy Bandit
3. Or just have no idea how to dial a sound or ask someone how to.

If it was stolen,yeah i'd replace it. Not overly expense. My Dual Recto got stolen after 8 months - I replace it with a second hand JCM800...

PC boards a cheap shitty option for money grabbing sluts. A guitar amp should only have a board to hold components - not run copper tracks. I am looking at my old JCM900 preamp as I write this... a bit of heat damage there and it was fuked! cost me a penny to fix.

Also the two wanky channels suck. This amp really needs a bridge or patching switch. Again, It only cranks when both channels are engaged.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000.00
Submitted 02/23/2005 at 12:08am by Bobby Young
Email: bobby<at>bobbyyoungproject dot com

Features : 9
My amps were made in 2000. I use one for most club gigs, and two for concert situations. I'm playing Rock, Jazz, and Blues and the only complaint I have is that I can't get them to break up at lower volume levels, but I have a MKII 50 watt Lead 2x12 combo that I run through a 1963 4x10 cabinet for those situations. One of my SLP heads was new and the other one was used but they both have great tone and TONS of volume. These are not my first "Plexis", my very first Marshall was an original "Super Lead" that I got in 1970 and there is very little difference. I just wish the new heads had the removable plugs for changing impedence and voltage settings. The heads have no effects loop or channel switching, just the "High" and "Low" inputs that I run bridged all the time.

Sound Quality : 10
I use a Cordoba RCWE Gipsy Kings model nylon string, a 1966 ES335TD, a 1979 Stratocaster, a 1968 Telecaster, a 1957 Les Paul Special, a 2002 Gibson 67'Flying V re-issue, a 1998 Takamine Santa Fe acoustic and several other guitars depending on the gig and or the song. The amps are very flexible when it comes to tone at volume, but when I ues either of the two acoustics I find that I use the E.Q.s one the guitars to control the tone more than the amp. I love the way SLPs distort, it just kind of blossoms like an atomic mushroom cloud! The sweetest thing about the distortion is that you can control it no matter how loud you get.

Reliability : 10
I have never had an SLP let me down. I trust them to the point that my contracts for festivals and concerts where a back line is provided stipulates that I have a "Plexi". I've had them dropped and they still work. The bottom line is, if you keep your amp clean, change tubes regularly and have it serviced on a regular basis depending on how much you use it, these things will last almost forever.

Customer Support : 9
I've never had a problem dealing with Marshall and they are always very helpful. When I take my amps in for service I use a guy in San Francisco who always gives me a loaner. What more could I want? I never had any repairs done under warranty, just the service check-ups that they get each year.

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing for over 40 years and I also own a Carvin SX-200 combo, an Acoustic Model 117 combo, a Yamaha G100-115II combo, a Marshall G MKII Practice Amp, a Marshall MKII 50W Lead 2x12 combo, two 1959 SLP 100W Heads, a Marshall 1963 4x10 cabinet, a Marshall 1960A 4x12 300W cabinet and a Marshall 1960BV 4x12 280W cabinet. As for guitars I own 25 various models, most of which have "Humbuckers" for pick-ups except for the Stratocaster, Telecaster, and a Hohner Les Paul Custom copy that has the EMG Zakk Wilde pick-ups with an EMG "Afterburner" push pull tone pot. The only other amp that I've owned that I would stand up against the Marshall was an Orange 125W stack I owned for awhile in the late 1970's, but they are just too expensive and hard to find now days.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $800.00
Submitted 02/20/2005 at 04:45pm by aleister
Email: aleister<at>satanicide dot com

Features : 10
It features ROCK!!!

Sound Quality : 10
IT SOUNDS INCREDIBLE!! I just had an opportunity to hear it for the first time from the crowd perspective when I lent it out to the opening band this weekend. I was blown away. It BLOWS AWAY any JCM 2000.

THIS IS THE TONE!!! I don't know why so many people bash this amp. Maybe they just can't play guitar.

You just have to fuss around w/ the knobs, and as the review below says, a Hot Plate Attenuator is a must. I use one as well, and could not live without it.

I also find that backing off the Tone knob on the guitar really warms up the sound and actually sounds amazing. In fact, on no other amp have I ever gotten great tonal varieties with the Tone knob -- it's always been "10" or mud. Not so on a Plexi!

I also agree w/ the below review -- no need to change tubes and all that BS. I feel the same way about pickups. I believe that STOCK is usually the way to go and all that pick-up tube change, etc. crap is for geeks. Just play your friggin' ax, and play it loud!

Reliability : 5
Here's where I had a problem. The casing came undone. Didn't damage anything inside, and a bit of Gorilla glue did the trick.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never called 'em.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 23 years, and I know how to rock. I've used every amp and every guitar. This amp is the best (save for maybe an original). Any guitar will sound awesome.

Don't listen to all the geeks who bash this amp. It is phenomenal. Again, get a Hot Plate Attenuator with it.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1500.00 used
Submitted 02/13/2005 at 08:08am by Anonymous

Features : 9
Amp was made in 1995. The versatility in this amp comes pretty much completely from volume adjustments and your selection of speaker types. Most players would benefit from learning to be creative in just these 2 aspects - no choices helps in becoming truly proficient at using this as a musical instrument - not just an amp.

The amp does have "normal" and "high treble" inputs. Many players including myself patch the 2 channels together to get a blend of both channels. When blended equally - the sound is perfect to my ears.

Amp really has no features except fabulous tone.

Sound Quality : 10
Using stock American strats and Les Paul Standards. Both guitars sound fabulous through this amp. I am using this amp with a THD Hotplate (this is something you just have to have with this amp - nothing to "think about" - you just get one of these - it's like a speaker cable - you have to have it). This amp is as quiet as a mouse. Fully cranked, you are reminded about a thing called power tube distortion to which there simply is NO substitute.

This is a classic Marshall. The distortion is not brutal - it is warm and beautiful. Makes you want to play the guitar. I love that this amp rewards a guitarist for playing well.

After going through the tone search again - I tried many amps - Fenders, Bogner, Mesa, Hughes and Kettner, and even newer Marshalls. Call me crazy - but when you hear the plexi reissue cranked up - nothing comes close to the amazing tone - mesmerizing tone. And you don't need to mess with the tubes, the transformers, etc. These reissues sound amazing right out of the box. I am using a Fender Tonemaster closed back cabinet 150 watts (2 Celestion Vintage 30's wired for 4 ohms). Sounds excellent with the amp. I would also like to hear the amp with a standard Marshall 4X12 1960 cabinet loaded with 25 watt greenbacks.

Although you don't need any effects (just ask Angus), I am currently using a Hughes and Kettner Replex (Echoplex simulator) and an "Analog Man" TS9 Tube Screamer only because I already had these effects. Just when you didn't think the distortion could get any better, kick in the Analog Man and you won't believe it.

Reliability : 10
This is a reissue of a very, very simple amp design. Not much can go wrong. I would love to gig with a backup no matter what I was using, but I would not worry too much about using this amp without a back up - especially if I had a few extra tubes and fuses with me.

This is Marshall. Made in England. They've been doing it for 40 or 50 years. They know amps.

Customer Support : 8
I called Marshall (not Korg...I mean Marshall) one time. They were very polite and helpful. I don't know if it was because I was calling from America, but they will go get whomever you need to speak with to get the help you need. Very nice people.

I am getting a little worried about qualified tube amp techs here in America. It is getting harder and harder to find good techs. If you find a good one, he is so backed up that it can take way too long to get your amp repaired.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for a million years - owned everything under the sun. The only other amp I have truly loved was my original 1973 100 watt Marshall Mk II (which is what this amp is a reissue of).

I am so glad that these classics are still available. I'm sure they are not for everybody but these are the models that put Marshall on the map and it is simply because they sound fantastic.

If somebody stole it I guess I would just steal it back if possible. If not - I would go buy another one.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $900.00
Submitted 10/21/2004 at 03:41pm by Anonymous

Features : 1
2001 Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue. No Effects Loop. 100 Watts. Very Loud.

Sound Quality : 4
I have had this amp for three years, and it has been three of the most frustrating because of trying to get a decent sound out of this head. I have tried every combination of my 20 guitars, and four different Marshall Cabinets. I have tried it with two different THD Hot plate attenuators, and various Fulltone and Keely effects. I have tried changing the tubes, pre amp and power amp. I just had an amp tech look at it, and the only thing he did was to remove the bright caps at c 17 and c 18. This helped, but it did not make enough of a difference for me. I play in two different bands, one is an old school band where we play a lot of Cream, where I wanted to use it, I couldn't. Maybe I got a bad one, I don't know. I have two other Marshall heads, a JCM 900 and a DSL 100 that I have used for years, and they work great. This head to me sounded lifeless. The last rehersal when I used it, I wanted to smash it to bits, but decided to sell it instead. Maybe I'm really picky, but I have been playing for 30 years, and all I could get was one flat tone out of it. Linking the channels helps slightly only if you get the exact microscopic zone of the two knobs. I really hate to say anything bad about this, but I am just being honest and have got to let go of this beast because it has caused me a lot of headaches. It has been basically unuseable for me. I'm not going to give it a super low rating because there was a sort of AC DC crunch in there, but nothing close to the sounds I have heard on records.

Reliability : 8
It worked when I turned it on.

Customer Support : 1
Are you kidding me? They seem not to care.

Overall Rating : 3
I am giving this review to exorsize the bad demons from inside of me. I think I only bought the hype, and I have no one to blame but me. I'm going to take my time and really look for something that will live up to it's reputation, or at least sounds good to me.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 800+ (UK Sterling)
Submitted 10/12/2004 at 01:46pm by Johnny Fulltone

Features : 8
The 2003 reissues has few features but what it has suits me:
1. Voltage in selection (very versatile between UK, continent, and North America)

2. 4 - 16 Ohm speaker select, good feature for changing cabs in clubs and such or matching for studio work (driving through a Hotplate works well enough for DI)

3. Effects loop - simple with clean switching (manual). I do not like the voltage boost.

4. The rest is all duplicated from the original and is simple to the max.

Sound Quality : 9
2003 - I play from clean to distorted between a Fender Deluxe and the reissue through a custom 1995 Lado (dual Humbucker) and an original 65 Fender Strat. I have the SLP going through 4x12 Greenbacks and usually hot-rod between high-2 and low-1 with a tube-screamer for added lead OD. The tone is delightful and with thinner speaker cables gives less of a boomy low end, but still tasty violin-like distortion with a bit of compression (for me: scoop it and set everything else to 8, then let her rip). The presence really cuts through in both outside/tent gigs and loud bar environments. The amp will deliver whatever you are looking for if you spend a few minutes working through the range of controls.

Overall I am very impressed with the sound and have discovered original tone along the way.

Reliability : No Opinion
Haven't had it long enough to judge.

Customer Support : 3
I have dealt with Marshall customer service in the past and was not that impressed (AVT 50). To be fair I have not tried with this amp... but who is fair?? Next time they should fix what is covered under the warranty without hassle.

Overall Rating : 8
I've played for 22 years (professinally for 10) and have this as part of a larger group of working amps (Marhsall, Peavy, Fender, VHT) depending on the gig. I would recommend the VHT over the lot if I could have only one, but VHT are also twice the price. For the dosh, this amp is everything I could hope for and has added some extra tone to my back line for heavier outings.



Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $3700 used
Submitted 09/25/2004 at 02:49pm by carlos

Features : 10
I purchased this amp package off e-bay about 6 months ago. Its a 1966 slp. It has had some modifications done to it over the years. It has a master volume control know in the back. There is also some holes that look like the were for some other knobs at one point. I purchased it with the cabinet. I believe the speakers are original celestion 20 watters. The whole things looks pretty beat up but sounds awesome. After doing alot of research trying to figure out how to get Eddie Van Halens tone from the first record, I purchased a variac transformer to crank the voltage up to about 140. It actually works. I mean I still have to turn it up to about 7 or 8, but it has an awesome overdrive to it, still maintaining clarity though. Hook a delay pedal and an MXR phase 90 up and its all good. Very loud..but good.

Sound Quality : 10
I use mostly a texas Fat strat. I use the humbucker most of the time.
The amp setup is awesome. When you have it cranked up with the variac you really cant get a good clean sound. Well worth the $3700.00 I paid for the setup.

Reliability : 10
Had to have to tubes changed once and burn fuses out often but only because I crank the voltage up.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 10
Ive been playing for about 10 years. I own 2 texas fat strats, one with a floyd rose, a gibson EDS-275 double neck, and a kramer 1984 van halen re-issue. If this amp got stolen...well I have to get another one and hope it sounds the same. Oh yeah let me say that I think the floyd rose system sucks. A fender strat with an LSR roller nut, locking tuners, and graphite strings saddles stays in tune way better than the floyd rose.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 09/22/2004 at 12:18pm by Shane Gorski
Email: Country_Boy_Shane at yahoo<dot>com

Features : 10
3-band EQ w/presence. Volume 1+2. No master volume bullshit. This is a ATTEPT at trying to make a reissue of the original plexi's. ATTENTION! You don't need a bunch of extra knobs like gain, depth...etc to have a good amp. Power tube breakup is the way to go. Now suck on it Triple Recto Freaks!

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I'm updating my review that i did a while back when i first got this amp. Now that i'm much older and wiser (and have heard a REAL plexi) this amp doesn't sound a damn thing like one. Even when cranked to 10, the amp is way too bright, mushy, and overly saturated to the point where all clarity is gone.

Since the last time i reviewed this amp, i've totally revamped my amp thanks to my friend George Metropoulos who built me the original p2p '69 SuperLead board and scrapped the shitty PCB that comes in every reissue. We also did the amp a favor by trashing the Output Transformer and replacing it with a Mercury Magnetics Axiom OT. I still have to replace my Power Tranny with a Heyboer PT but PT's don't effect the tone of the amp as much as the OT does so i'm not rushing to do that.

If you don't wanna listen to crappy reissue sound's and want to hear what a real plexi sound's like check George's site out - www.metroamp.com

Reliability : 10
Marshall's as usual are like tanks. Tube's go bad every 6 months and that is to be expected. All in all, this amp is a workhorse.

Customer Support : 2
I've called up Marshall once and it's a pain in the ass to get someone to talk to. They might as well save some more money and not have Customer Service!

Overall Rating : No Opinion
In case you think i'm uneducated on this area, i've been playing for 10 years and have also played MANY shows live. I've seen and heard a TON of amps. Formally working at dirty Guitar Center is proof of that. Reissue heads sound bright, nasal, harsh, and like a horror icon is going to stab you in the ear with an icepick.

Please e-mail if you want more info, or for that matter you can Instant message me!

AOL SN: FunkyTwangFool


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $800
Submitted 08/11/2004 at 12:22pm by Phil
Email: phillip dot costello<at>earthlink dot net

Features : 10
Newish w/ 4 inputs, two for bright sound and two for the dark. Daisy chain the two sounds for blend. The dude just below didn't do this, it seems. That's why he thought one input too bright and the other too dark. Whatever. Anyway, I don't ask for versatility in an amp. Simply tone. I hate amps w/ too much crap.

Sound Quality : 10
This is the tone I have been looking for for 20 years. Why did I never own one of these? It's got that amazing Angus midrange growl. Not lots of crappy distortion that sucks out all tone and clarity. Just excellent tone w/ great break up when set up right. Perhaps some of the reviewers below don't realize that since it's a cleaner amp, you actually have to be able to play your instrument well. Yes, this new one probably doesn't sound exactly like an original, but it sounds damn good to my ears. The singer of my band is also the nitpickiest person I've ever met when it comes to tone, and he loves this amp. I use a Hot Plate attenuator to get the cranked sound at a lower volume. All the people who claim the attenuator sucks just don't get it -- the Hot Plate is great. Of course it sounds different than fully cranked -- that's because it's not as loud! A loud amp blows your ears off. It sounds great in the next room, but who wants to stand right next to one of these cranked full tilt?? Not I. Of course, if you get a cranked sound you love and then attenuate, it's gonna change some things. Big deal!!! I simply adjust the tone knobs AFTER I attenuate. Doy.

Reliability : No Opinion
Seems reliable.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Don't know.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I've been playing for 22 years and have been in tons of bands. I play an SG and a Guild electric. Both sound tits through this amp. The other guitarist in my band plays a JCM Slash. The blend of the two amps is orgasmic.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/09/2004 at 10:04pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion
1997 Limited Edition (White)

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
It appears that the reviews that say the 1959 SLP Reissue is a piece of crap seem to stem from the models from the late 1990s and more recent models, especially the 2003 model. I play my 1997 reissue almost every day, whether rehearsing, gigging or recording and it still sounds as good as when I bought it. Play Strat/Tele/Kramer through a Aphek Peanut Butter pedal / MXR Phase 90 and all is very, very good. My mate was warming up for a gig on the weekend and plugged his PRS straight in - sounded sweet and he was very impressed.
Is there a theme with later models that the tone does actually suck? I can't say, but this is the sound I have been searching for for many years. Maybe Marshall have changed something.....


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000$
Submitted 08/01/2004 at 01:46pm by Dave Forty

Features : 5
2003 Marshall SLP. There isn't much too it which makes it sweet. This may or may not suit some people. You can focus squarly on the amp itself. But on the flip side your going to spend hundrends on pedals that may or may not improve the tone.

Sound Quality : 1
Okay, first off, judging by what people are writing in here I'd say only about 30% of you have actually tried this amp. People that say it sounds like Page or Hendrix obviously work for Marshall and are in here to make this amp something it's not.
Now, on to the tone. When I first plugged my Les Paul into input 1 and cranked it to 10, it had the tone of someone scrapping their nails against a chawkboard. Insanely bright and absolute torture to listen to. Then I plugged it into channel 2 and cranked it. It was warm and great if I played jazz or something like that. But alas, I don't, I play classic rock, blues, and occasionally metal. To give the warm channel some life I plugged in a single coil Fender. The single coils made channel 2 sound alot more 'alive' without the harshness of channel 1. The problem is channel 2 was still a tad too bright with any of the single coils below the neck pickup so I couldn't get a hot enough output.
Needless to say I was very upset with this overly bright (and over priced) amp. I had a tech rebias the tubes of the amp and put in high quality Mullards and JJ/Tesla's. There are rumors going around that say this amp is getting it's bright tone because the factory biased them too cold. Funny thing is when I got it back; it was even brighter than before. The tech was sorry and gave me a free wireless system, (having pity on me from being ripped off by Marshall) explaining there wasn't much I could do with the amp besides take the guts out and start over.
Another note: people who say this amp doesn't have any clean are morons. Try rolling the volume knob down on your guitar! The clean is quite good and has a retro vibe to it. The amp is alittle noisy too when the tubes are warmed up.

Reliability : No Opinion
Didn't keep it around long enough to break it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them. I'd ask them for my money back and start making true reissues that sound good. I could care less if it had P2P wiring, I just want Marshall to make amps with sweet tones again. But who am I kidding? Marshall only listens to important people like Slash and Lenny Kravitz.

Overall Rating : 1
I've been playing for about 9 years now. I've owned alot of equipment over the years. All of which were better and cheaper than the reissue plexi. I'd only recommend it if you play heavey blues or 60's rock. But then again if you play that kind of music you can get a Fender for cheaper. I only wish I could go back in time and undo this purchase...now the best I can sell it is for 1/3 of the price I bought it for. What a shame :(


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 07/27/2004 at 12:39pm by Anonymous

Features : 7
I bought this 100-watt plexi reissue in 1999. The amp lacks the bells and whistles of modern amps, especially models like the Fender Cyber-Twin. But, considering that Hendrix achieved the sounds he did with this rudimentary array of options - "normal" and "high treble" channels with two inputs and one volume knob apiece, plus bass, middle, treble and presence controls - how can I give the amp a low rating for its features?

Sound Quality : 10
I pay bills by playing in a very well-known swing band, but I grew up on the rock and roll of the 1970s, and I've made a life-mission out of mastering that Tommy Bolin/Joe Walsh/Duane Allman approach: simple, lyrical blues phrasing with a tough but sweet distorted sound. I use primarily a '76 custom Les Paul with new '57 classic pickups, which compliment this amp perfectly. The sound is a vast improvement over everything I've used in the past: Fender Tone Master, Mesa/Boogie 50 Caliber, a'67 Blackface bassman with various distortion pedals, and a Mesa'Boogie Dual Rectifier. I'm using a 16ohm THD Hot Plate Attenuator and running through my old Fender Tone Master cabinet, which has two celestion 30's (16 ohms). (I've been told that Plexis are happiest at 16 ohms, which may be a wive's tale but my tone seems to bear the notion out). I removed two tubes and set the amp at 8 ohms, under the advisement of my tech guy, and I like the result - I can push the amp harder at 50 watts and get the desired sound at lower volumes. As to the heated debates about this amp's merits, I often wonder if people's comments are not coming from some weird, ego-driven place. I'm sure my amp pales compared to a '67 Plexi, and I have no doubt that if it were hand-wired it would sound better or that it would benefit from modification. But still, it comes much closer to the 70s rock sound I grew up on than anything I've used before. It sounds a lot like Page's tone in The Song Remains the Same, Joe Walsh's James Gang sound, Angus Young's early tone - you get the picture. I'd call it "organic" in that it responds remerkably to pick attack, and for the first time in my 20 year career my Les Paul's volume knob is a useful tool. It has re-energized my playing and brought me back in touch with why I picked up the guitar in the first place.

Reliability : 10
It's a tank. I've had no problems with it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I use local techs for repairs and modifications, so if I had a problem with the amp I would only call Marshall if I absolutely needed to. I haven't heard anything bad about the company's tech support.

Overall Rating : 10
I would replace this amp. I may also look into having it modified. As to he complaint that this amp has to be modified, I see that as a plus. It's not perfect, but it's an empty canvas on which you can project your particular style via the various ways you can tinker with it. Keep in mind that Hendrix didn't run his vintage Plexis as they were - he had them hot-rodded like crazy. If you want an amp that's perfect as is, well, good luck and I hope you have plenty of disposable income. The 1959 SLP reissue provides, for not too much money, a great foundation on which any player can build a sound that transcends the sterility and blandness of the typical modern, channel-switching hi-gain monstrosity.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/15/2004 at 11:34pm by Ben
Email: guitarguru<at>gmx dot net

Features : 10
This amp does not have 3 or 4 channels or anything else like some effects (chorus, flanger etc), but this is what it makes it to Marshall super lead Plexi!!

Sound Quality : 10
I think the sound's GREAT!!! Even though you don't have such a brilliant clean sound as fender may have, but this amp when it's treble channel turned up to 10 and it's bass to 5 or 7...that's just brutal!!

Reliability : 8
Well, this SLP is not an amp for guitarists who play without the moto: no risk no fun!!!
That's why Eddie van Halen, Jimi Hendrix and Yngwie Malmsteen, especially Yngwie use this Amp with a backup of 4,5 maybe 10 of these amps...But they got the Money for it!!! :)

Customer Support : No Opinion
got it by ebay :)

Overall Rating : 10
First I have to say something to those who are about to smash this amp, who say it sounds terrible etc. ...
I think that those one can't play guitar...that's why it sounds so terrible!! and with only six knobs you can't do so much wrong with it!!! even if you are playing it in a low loudness...perhaps you can use a boss ds-1...that sounds great, too!! so guy's, think about it and just lern how to play the guitar!!!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/05/2004 at 09:33pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Okay, let me clear things up. WHERE DID I SAY I WAS EVER LOOKING FOR A HIGH GAIN AMP?!?! I was trying to tell people that (contrary to what other people have been saying) this amp has no balls at all. After awhile I was convinced this amp was a lost cause when even my band members told me to stop using it, so it ended up as an 1100$ coffee table and a place to stash drugs. The best way to make this amp sound like that of a classic plexi (if you havent heard already; it sounds like dog crap in stock form) is to use JJ/Tesla tubes in the preamp and EH in the power amp...plug the guitar into input 2, crank the amp to 7-10 (take two power tubes out to make it 50 watts if you want to save your hearing), then during a solo use a treble boost stomp box to cut through the mix of the rest of the band. I've finally found an okay sound but nowhere close to a 1000$ sound. Your paying for the name on this one. Save your money and get something else or a vintage marshall if you have the means.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1200 used
Submitted 06/26/2004 at 05:14pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : 10
It KILLS!!!!

Reliability : 10
BUILT LIKE A TANK!!!!

Customer Support : No Opinion
haven't had trouble

Overall Rating : 10
Just wanted to clear up that review by Mr. Waters. It is a killer amp for for classic rock and blues. No, it isn't high gain so if he wants that he should get a peice of shit peavey or mesa. This amp is perfect for me it is though, and like many others have said it has balls.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/27/2004 at 11:23am by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I think if you're looking for "brutal" high gain distortion then this amp will certainly dissappoint. Better choices would be Soldano, Peavey, Engl, etc. Also the character of the distortion from a plexi is different, it isn't the buzzy tone of a master volume type amp; the notes ring out clear. No question the amp alone is loud, bright, and not instantly gratifying; but I maintain that with everything turned up full via an attenuator the amp sounds full, thick, and dare I say it, ballsy. I used it for 3 gigs last week in just that fashion, miked a 2x12 cab, covered Zep, VH, Aerosmith, et al, no problem, sounded fantastic and got great comments. Sat in the mix perfectly. I did kick in a tubescreamer for a couple of songs but mostly used a lowish output humbucker. So yes if you need instant high gain, tons of low end, a "screaming" amp, probably a plexi isn't worth your effort; if you want pure, full, clear, ballsy distortion, do check one out. Last word from me I promise.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1100
Submitted 04/25/2004 at 08:03pm by Storm Holloway
Email: stormholloway at yahoo<dot>com

Features : No Opinion
This is a 2002 Plexi. Features? Well it has volume knobs and such. I don't need features. I need tone.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I play rock and blues with a fender and bought this thing because my heroes used them. Well, my heroes must have been using something that looked like this because this thing runs WAY cold.
I totally agree with Mr. Waters here. I love the potential of this amp, but selling this amp as a dream machine is like adopting a Pit Bull with no legs. This thing needs work--period. I wanted an amp that screams; instead I got an amp that whimpers. I have a Hot Plate attenuator and that helps, but really it just makes it worse because I yearn for much more. There's no scream, no drive, no distortion. It's ice cold.

Reliability : No Opinion
Uh well. It hasn't blown up yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion
How about modding the amp for me for free?

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Can someone tell me how to mod the thing myself? Maybe I can save some money. E-mail me if you can help me out in anyway (advice, etc.)


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 800 (AUD) used
Submitted 04/22/2004 at 04:58am by Kim

Features : 8
Tone, and lots of it!
This is a 93' model. The usual controls, 2 channels in 1 with good use of the guitar's volume knob.
Mine came standard with 5881/6L6 power tubes, which gives slightly less power tube saturation but more bite and nastiness (in a good way).

Sound Quality : 10
This amp is the bomb! I have a comment for John Waters, I also have a 2003 1987XL 50 watt version of this amp and, yes, i do believe there is a noticeable difference between the older models and the new ones. Also, when i was looking for a decent new one, i found over 90% of amps i looked at (this model) were biased way too cold, which makes them sound exactly as John described. I set the bias with some new EH's and a mullard in the preamp and now the 50 watter just sings.
As for as this one goes, it's just plain balls to the wall 'marshall on 10' heaven. The 5881's give it more punch and beefier lows, and they also allow the amp to clean up considerably better. With everything on ten, i can get early VH rhythm, Lead with the aid of an eq boost, and rollthe volume knob of the guitar off to achieve very glassy clean tones.
The amp is freakin loud, attenuation is a must. I run it through a 1960TV cab with 25w reissue greenbacks. The greenbacks have about 80 hours on them and are really starting to break in and are a perfect match with the 1959slp to achieve the classic rock tone. I use a Trainwreck attenuator which is a magnificent piece of equipment. Full attenuation still gives a fair volume, but dynamics are very well preserved. With full attenuation, i can still get sweet,controlled harmonic feedback at will.
The amp is very quiet compared to other amps i have owned, it really only gets a little noisy when standing idle with my echoplex in front of it. Even this is quite controllable using the echoplex's knobs.
This amp suits my style perfectly, i play hard rock and the tone of this amp just blows away any other amp i have used or heard onstage!
This one's definitely a keeper!

Reliability : No Opinion
Not had it long, but apart from tubes, i cant see too many problems arising. These have a very simple circuit, easy to fix myself if anythingdid go wrong.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
This is the amp/tone i have been striving for for over 10 years.
I always used to be easily swayed over amps, used to play a 5150 cause VH designed it. Never liked that amp.
This is the first amp that actually feels like an extension of my guitar. I have always fought with an amp to get a good tone, and any amp that i have owned, there was always SOMETHING that i didnt like about them. NOT THIS ONE!!! As i said before, this one's a keeper. I am now going to buy a vintage plexi as these non master volume amps are simply the best.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/17/2004 at 08:27am by John Waters

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Without getting into the details of a power attenuator, yes it may clear up some of the ice in this amp, Id say it maybe 10% warmer, so your still going to have a harsh sounding amp either way. But rather than spend 300$ for one I'd recommend a ten band EQ if you really want to dick around with that sort of thing. And no this is not an amp that you can roll everything to the right. I play the volume on 5-8 depending on venue, 10 with 50 watt (2 tubes)... treble 4, middle 7, bass 8-10...can't remember pressence. No, the plexi is not a big balls amp, Marshall will even tell you that one :p. For all you gain heads your going to have to find some good tubes. The distortion is lifeless. I took it into an amp technician and he said the sound quality was so poor that I'd have to spend 100$s to mod it to life. I'm coming to the realization that this amp was made for mods. Keeping in mind that I'm reviewing a 2003 plexi. Looking at some of these reviews that have baffled me, I'd say maybe some of the plexis from the 90s were better.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/14/2004 at 06:49pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
To follow up to the very negative review by Mr Waters, an attenuator attenuates sound, and yes it does tame the highs, and that's all I will say about that. The amplifier sounds best with all controls full right, and it is a clear, ballsy distortion very unlike most of today's master volume amps which have that fuzzy/buzzy nature to their tone. Anyway it's worth checking out for sure, it's not perfect and not for everyone, no single amp is, but for classic rock fans it's a good one to consider.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/02/2004 at 11:11pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Just wanted to add a comment

If you want a reissue to sound like an authentic Plexi, throw in some kt66s... SEDs (Svetlanas) I hear are the best bet, but Sovteks or Electro-Harmonix are usually good too


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1100 used
Submitted 02/24/2004 at 04:39pm by John Waters

Features : 10
Nothing there, thats what makes it great. Marshalls effects suck so I'm glad they didnt do anything to it. I can't believe people dont know how to use the effects loop. If you use it correctly it wont alter the tone at all. People are just dumb and I'm not going to bother with explaining the effects loop.

Sound Quality : 1
2003 SLP) I play in a rock/blues band and this amp is TERRIBLE! This thing totally blows. Thin, thin, thin. If you think this sounds like an original plexi ...you are kidding yourself. I used it through a Marshall cab with vintage 30s in it. Used almost every guitar,almost every pickup,with it and still the same results. As far as the reviewer that said a power brake will make it sound less icy...he has no clue what hes talking about (and thats all I gotta say about that):p Jumping the channels wont help, switching the tubes wont help, the only good tone I could get out of this amp is a clean tone?!? It's true the clean tone isnt too bad (when volume is rolled down)in the live situation. Velvet overdrive...hahah more like velvet static...it had no dynamics at all. When you play the low E it sounds like someone farting. CRAP!!!...okay enough ranting.

Reliability : 8
Built tough but the tubes went out fast (stock tubes are crap anyway).

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them.

Overall Rating : 2
Don't buy into the hype like I did. This reissue sucks balls. If this thing is exactly like the original plexis (like so many of you deaf people are saying) why would Warren Hayes spend thousands modding it back to the original plexis specs? STAY AWAY ...for the love of God. Heck I got better tones out of my solid state $250 fender combo. I've been playing for 18 years and this is one of the biggest scams ever.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: $1800 (Australian) used
Submitted 01/04/2004 at 04:25am by Anonymous

Features : 9
This amp was made in the late 90's and is made to give you a rock sound and pretty much nothing else. Sure you can get away with doing a quiet jazz show with the volume pretty much on nothing or you and turn it up a lil louder and get a nice blues sound! but this is a loud amp was is designed to put out alot of volume and anything past 4 is just pure ACDC. It is a 2 channel 4 input amp, I always patch both channels togeter (therefore then having to use both volume knobs). Patching is simple... just get the smallest guitar lead you can and plug one end into one channel... other end into the remaining channel and then your guitars lead into the remaining channel 1 input.
Its got your basic presence (please keep it no more than 12 o clock) and it has your treble,mid,bass EQ.
I use this amp in a 3 piece rock band and i have to say our best asset is our sound. We aint anything famous, just playing gigs and having fun but i always get positive feedback on my guitar sound.
I give it a 9 because... it dosnt have a reverb or whatever... its better that this amp dosnt have anymore features but still.. yeah I give it a 9.

Sound Quality : 10
I use many guitars such as a Gretsch with TV Jones f'trons and a Les Paul Custom. It is a noisey amp.. but it was made to be top of the line and used at any venue in the world... angus young uses 2 of these on stage. And of course this amp distorts at high volumes :) thats the only way to get an overdriven sound... crank it!

AUSTRALIANS: I'm just putting this here cos there aint many aussies here talking about this amp... Anyone here thats into ACDC, The Living End, The Casanovas, The Bazooka Joe's ect.. You will get that sound! Have this amp on at least half volume with bass under half and you will have THE angus young sound. Pull the volume off a bit and you will get that chris cheney vibe in your sound. Especially if your like me and also have a gretsch with tv jones'!

Reliability : 10
I havent had it very long but I have used one before and I borrowed a simular amp (a jmp) and they are the most vesitile amps around in my oppinion. I also own a Fender and a Moody and im scared they aint gonna turn on everytime I go on stage cos it has happened b4 but with this amp i am totally dependable on.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
I have been playing for about 10 years.. havent own heaps of gear.. Ive kept everything and i have a gretsch,gibson,fender and a few crappy ones.. amps I have a Fender deville 410 and a 50watt moody head made in '67. Orange 412 quad box with vintage 30's.

I'd go for this amp 2nd hand.. mine was in mint condition for $1800 as compared to a new one in a store for $3300
I only gave it 8 because they are are really expensive brand new.. thats all. They are my favourate amp in the world.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 2100 (FL)
Submitted 12/15/2003 at 05:45am by Cornelis
Email: Cornelis<at>caesarswife dot nl

Features : 10
mine was made 1990 came in straight from the production line, because marshall had a delay with delivering the amps at that time 4 channels from which I only use the 2nd and not the high treble one, because this switches of the first level of the preamp, so will be painfull shreddy high treble. If you sit down and try the settings you will have a very subtile and versatile amp ;-)

Sound Quality : 10
I use it with humbucker guitars only, which are gibson, PRS and Ginkel.
It has that tube treble hiss which can't be heart anymore when playing. For the rest it can make you play everything as long as you can play guitar and know what you are doing. The amp only distortes at very high volumes, which I think is good as I use it as a power amp and not to dist.

Reliability : 10
it has been my mate for 13 years now and never had to change the tubes!!!!! very rare as I use it everyday and go from town to town with a band and a van....... Eat that, Fender or Engl!!!

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with them. The support should be easy to find though

Overall Rating : 10
I would certainly buy it again, but this absolute no beginners material. Everything I play on is because I searched first and then buy. Play this Amp with analog stuff (like boss pedals or REAL tube preamps)otherwise it gets muddy or very far away. (remeber the 60's and 70's and think that way)Very VERY Good amp


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/23/2003 at 05:19am by Anonymous

Features : 3
Bought new in 2002. Very few real features, I can't get the effects loop to work with anything without drastrically altering the tone. It's really a one trick pony.

Sound Quality : 10
I think after reading some of the negative reviews you have to put this amp in its proper context. It isn't a bedroom amplifier, it was designed to sit in a band which it does beautifully. You are really forced to use an attenuator otherwise it's just too loud. And this is why the amplifier is so bright otherwise, because when you run in through an attenuator you lose that icy brightness and you get really just the right amount of high end. The amp played by itself is a bright amplifier.
As far as tones, this is 70s rock and that's about it. Put a tubescreamer or Fulldrive in front and there's little you can't play from the late 60s to early 80s. There isn't any clean that I can find, but it does clean up semi-nicely with your guitar knob. It isn't bassy like modern amplifiers, it is midrangey but very complex musically in the midrange. It tracks beautifully with your playing, there is almost no fight in the amp, but it still is very uncompressed.

Reliability : 10
I've used it several times on gigs, no problems.

Customer Support : 1
Marshall has lousy customer support IMHO, compared to say Peavey where you can get an almost immediate response.

Overall Rating : 10
Overall this is a great amplifier for what it does. It is the amp that defines rock and roll IMHO. It isn't plug and play like most amps, you'll need to spend some time with it, and really use it in a band. If you want Page, Townsend, early EVH, etc, it's worth checking out.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US Too Much
Submitted 11/08/2003 at 03:13pm by John Utah

Features : 5
Okay we all no by now that there isnt anything on this amp. No reverb or effects to make everything complicated. This is both good and bad at the same time. If you want a versatile amp look elsewhere.

Sound Quality : 1
If had this thing for 3 months and havent found a decent tone at all.Its either too bassy or too treble ...it never equals out nicely. Ive tried everything from changing the tubes to fooling around with the board. I use a gibson with emgs and another with duncans. This amp sounds so flat you need active humbuckers or pickups. Channel 1 on the plexi is inexcusable. Its probably the worst tone Ive heard from a head in my life. The bottom end can sound larger than life and will be alright if distorted naturally which would be sweet if your Malcolm Young. But if your not a rhythm player and like to throw some lead fills here and there you'll be sorely disappointed. I dont know what kind of plexi you all have been using but its certainly alot different from mine. The man that can find tones of the likes of Hendrix, Page, or Clapton on this piece deserves an award. Using both channel 1 and 2 doesnt help much at all either. The only time the natural distortion sounds even decent is when cranked to 8-10 (I took two tubes out to make it a 50 watt). If anybody knows any way to make this amp sound good enough to gig with let me know.

Reliability : 8
It looks strong enough. But ive only had it a couple months. It seems really touchy and has many wierd ticks (like many tub amps) so I wouldnt be surprised if it starts falling apart soon.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them.

Overall Rating : 2
In conclusion this amp may be okay if your strictly a rhythm guy and its only redeeming factor is its ballsy bottom end and huge huge volume...but thats not enough to save this D.O.A. Stay away from it!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: $1500 (AUD) used
Submitted 10/23/2003 at 10:56pm by sam

Features : 6
1997 Limited Edition (White).
Not big on features but certainly not required. No master, no fx loop. It's a monster!

Sound Quality : 10
1990 USA Strat/2002 Tele/1980's Kramer Baretta custom. Play prog/hard rock. Loud Loud LOUD. Attentuator required if playing any size gig under stadiums. Cleans up nicely with guitar volume rolled off. Responds accuratley to pick attack, the way an amp should. Distortion is warm, sheer wall vibrating power amp distortion. Great tone in all circumstances. Can remove two outer tubes and go 50W as well.

Reliability : 10
Gigged twice a month for 18 months without a backup plus studio and rehearsal work (I know!!!! I shouldn't be gigging too much with it in the first place - looking at a 5150 MK2) It never missed a beat. I do however treat it with extreme care moving about.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed them.

Overall Rating : 10
Playing as long as I can remember. Playing through the white 1960AX quad with 25W greenbacks - the perfect combination. Run various guitars through a G-Major, BBE Sonic Maximiser in most instances and various vintage pedals where required. Have used a Sans Amp GT2 in front on occasion and it performs superbly. If you own one of these or are looking to, then grab yourself a Ahpek Peanut Butter distortion pedal, made in Australia; the most natural overdrive pedal out there - period. Best thing I ever did. See the reviews elsewhere in Harmony Central.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1350
Submitted 09/06/2003 at 02:30pm by wade burrow
Email: talman5 at aol<dot>com

Features : 1
Has all the features we've known and grown to love in a 4 input marshall. As far as features go they got it right. I will have to lower the rating for the effects loop. Though it is true bypass it does effect the tone. I will have to give a much lower rating to do to the cheap piece of crap electronics used to make this amp. No paper bobbin output transformers, the caps in the head are cheap and will go out, no CTS Pots or carling switches, the cliff jacks are not fully insulated, no carbon comp resistors, and of course no hand point to point wiring. The Output Transformer on this amp must of cost them 35 cents. This is an outrage, these features are not so outrageously expensive that they couldn't put these in there and raise the price 200-300 dollars. At least the amp would have the essential parts to create a true re-issue. Marshall has obviously gotten too rapped up in bottom line profits and left us regular musicians in the cold. Do not buy this amp unless you are going to heavily mod it!!!

Sound Quality : 1
I use a Gibson Custom Historic 57 Goldtop (The 2003 version). Gibson finally done the right thing and spent a little more money and actually made a real acurrate copy for the 2003 models. Now for the SLP. For one, this is much more musical than the multi channel amp stuff out there made by marshall or mesa to me. But that doesn't mean much, the marshall and mesa multi channel amps sound terrible to me and are very limited in personality. Having said that, this amp is supposed to be like the greats. That is appauling it sounds mushy when pushed and doesn't crank out anything that resembles the velvety overdrive on real SLP's that I have played. The high treble is incredibly ice picky and unusable in my opinion. Patching the channels together helps but the harmonic content of the signal is far from rich enough. This amp to me is all bark and no bite. This to me is another cheap imitation of what marshall used to be.

Reliability : No Opinion
With the parts I listed above and the use of Ei preamp tubes this is far from a reliable amp. Ei tubes are know for going microphonic at the turn of a dime. Didn't keep around very long so I will rate no opinion. But it should be known that marshall is not putting your $1350 to good use. How much profit do they want!!!!

Customer Support : 1
I e-mailed them and asked why they are using cheap parts and not wiring the amps like the originals and never recieved a reply

Overall Rating : 1
I've been playing for 10 years and have played real late 60's and early 70 marshalls that were out of this world. It was a terrible attempt at that same sound. It was no where close. I returned the amp and went searching on the web for a builder who could build one right. I ran across Germino Amplification. Audley Freed from the Black Crowes has one, probably more than him. Holy Crap!!! From the very first E chord it was on!!!! The amp cost me $1700 and absolutely destroyed the Marshall version. It sounded exactly like the old marshalls I've heard. Do not buy the Marshall. Your waisting your money. Save a little more and get a Germino, a Matchless Clubman, or a Bogner Shiva. All of these amps are a cut way above the quality Marshall is putting out. And only cost another 400 more. I figure if your going to spend a lot of money get what you want. The only thing your getting with the Marshall Plexi's are the name. Oh yeah, the marshall 50 watt reissue sucks too.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: EUR (1210) used
Submitted 08/22/2003 at 06:33pm by Mike Donkers
Email: mike dot donkers<at>lycos dot com

Features : 10
I have a limted edition 100w so-called 'Purple Haze' half-stack, which is from 1994 and features purple tolex. I believe there were only 50 of these made worldwide. I got mine thru eBay. The features have already been described: two channels (no high-gain channel, who needs it anyway?), three-band EQ, no effects loop, no headphone jack. Just a simple, straightforward purple monster. When I bought it I had to replace both the preamp tubes (military style 12AX7's) and the power tubes (Svetlana EL34's) because the tubes that were in the amp had simply had it. I was very happy with the speakers, since they were actually NOT reissue Greenbacks but Celestion Vintage 30's. I like speakers that like to be driven hard and are still able to take the abuse and the V30's do just that.

The reason why I'm giving this a 10 for versatility is because I think a simple amp like this is actually more versatile than any modern multi-channel amp. I'm an old-school player who believes versatility comes from picking dynamics, controlling your guitar's volume and tone, and, not to forget, the proper use of a fuzzbox. IMO this makes for the most vertile and, above all, PERSONAL clean, crunch, and OD sounds. Just think about it, players like Clapton, Page, Hendrix, Kossoff, Allman, etc. all used plexis, yet they all had their own personal signature sound. In this day of multi-channel amps, how many players can honestly claim this? The secret, of course, is power tube distortion instead of preamp tube distortion. Pushing the front end of your amp always gives you more diversity, more power, more forward thrust, more warmth, more tone, more of YOU. With one of these heads and a 4x12 cab and a decent fuzz I can make it sound as blues, heavy rock or heavy metal as you want it be. How versatile is that? Besides that this puppy has a LOUD bark to it, way louder again than most modern amps which seem to get their bark more from compression than tone.

Sound Quality : 10
Like I said, I'm an old-school player. I come from Texas blues and started out with vintage Fender amps and no effects. This taught me to work with just my guitar and amp to bring out the biggest tone and vibrato I could muster. Since I like Classic Rock as well I've always loved the British guitar sounds and was never averse to, say, a Vox, Orange, Hiwatt or Marshall. Through the years I gravitated more and more toward a hybrid Fender/Marshall sound and had my amps modded as such. Until I got familiar with the sound of Doyle Bramhall II. Like him, I'd been wanting to combine Texas blues with Classic Rock and hearing him play his music through an original Super Bass prompted me to take the plunge and finally switch from Fender to Marshall. When I noticed the purple Plexi on eBay I just knew I had to have it and I actually stayed up late so I could win that auction!

With the Marshall came the pedals. I currently use a silicon 80's RI fuzz face by Audio Crest (built by none other than Dave Fox of FoxRox; read the story behind these RI's on http://www.analogman.com/fuzzstor.htm), a germanium Everman Fuzz Drive Deluxe, a Roger Mayer Octavia, a Prescription Electronics Vibe Unit, and a Menatone Red Snapper. These are all great pedals but what's so special about the SLP is that it makes any guitar and any pedal sound great, even the cheapest crap. It's THE most tolerant amp I've ever heard. Being used to very picky Fender amps that was quite an ear opener for me.

I do agree with Jamie who says in his review that the RI SLP's sound much too icepicky. He suggests taking cap 17 and 18 of the high treble channel out of the circuit, which I had done to my amp, and he's absolutely right! My amp tech discovered that these caps actually had a value which was three times as high as that of an original SL's high-treble channel! You have to wonder what made these guys at Marshall come to a decision like that. Removing c17 and 18 is the easiest and most basic mod you should do to get rid of that upper-mid harsness which actually effects the entire EQ range and, as Jamie rightly points out, prevents you from having a warm tone at lower volume settings. Thanks for the tip, Jamie!

I then got in contact with George Metropoulis of MetroAmp (www.metroamp.com). He's fairly new in the business of making ptp replacement boards but make no mistake: he is an accomplished guitarist and amp tech with many years of experience. More importantly, he's friendly, highly competent and his customer service is absolutely great. I explained to him that I like the Super Bass tone of such players as Paul Kossoff and Doyle Bramhall and he suggested a few mods that I had done to my pc board, all of which were major improvements. Despite all that there were was something about the pc board that just didn't sit right with me. I could have easily left it at the modded pc board but I felt the tone was still a tad too compressed. I decided I was going to order a stock SB ptp board from George. George made me one and, based on the many lengthy email exchanges we'd had about the specific tone I was after, he took the liberty of adding a cap and resistor common to the SL circuit which I could decide whether or not to use. He also included some extra components, among which was a different value slope resistor.

The tone of my SB board is dark and complex. It makes the amp sound good at many different settings, even lower volume ones. Before I had to turn it up to a certain volume (loud!) in order for it to sound good. Speaking of volume, the amp now sounds even louder than before but in a way that is much more pleasing to the ears. The tube distortion comes mainly from the lower regions rather than the higher ones which makes it sound less gainy even though the overall sound is still distorted with my settings. It also sounds better with pedals than before, particularly fuzz, because the low end distortion already has a fuzzy edge. I would describe the sound as more natur

Reliability : 10
I haven't had this amp for very long but it has already been in the back of the band van without any protection. So far it hasn't failed me and I don't expect it to, either. If you don't ram your guitar into it or shake it like they did in the 60's I imagine it can take a fair bit of abuse.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Have never dealt with the good folks at Marshall. Can't say enough about the customer support at Metro Amp, though. Get your replacement board from George, folks, and make your RI SLP really sing! Whether you want an Eddie Van Halen plexi-style sound or an Angus Young-style one, this guy can custom-make you one.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 17 years. My band Mike & the Mellotones has been around for 10 years. Feel free to check out our website, www.nubluz.com. We've evolved from straight forward three-piece Texas blues to four-piece Classic Rock and we've always done it Mellotone style. There's no better tone than your personal tone!

I own two B/F Fender Super Reverbs which I had modded to become 70w hybrid Fender/Marshalls, one w/ EL34's and one w/ 6550 tubes (I know it's considered sacrilege but you should hear these babies wail!). This RI SLP is the best buy I've done in years. I was lucky enough to win this purple beast for about USD 1320. Besides new tubes I just needed to add another USD 185 incl. shipping for a ptp replacement board and I was there. That's way cheaper than an original plexi with all-new components. You can't get any better value for your $$$!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $920 used
Submitted 06/04/2003 at 12:46am by Paul Gabriel

Features : 10
Excellent. Mine has a few mods by Lee Jackson Himself, this includes a 5 position EQ BOOST and a Power attenuator built in with a Master Volume, which enables me to play this at lower volumes. The controls are very easy, mine only utilizes the "Bright" channel, so I use loudness 1 as a preamp, and high treble(loudness 2) as the overall volume

Sound Quality : 10
100 watts of true Marshall GENIOUS. I use a Les Paul with EMG's 81 (neck) and 85 (bridge) just like Zakk Wylde. I also have a custom ESP with Seymour Duncans, the bridge is a Dimebucker, neck is an SH-6. THE TONE FROM MY AMP IS THE HOLY GRAIL OF GUITAR TONE! I mainly play metal (Old Ozzy, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest) and this thing is unbelievable! The rhthym sound I get is absolutely perfect, palm muted riffs and leads sound great. WHEN PLAYING LEADS AND SOLOS, IT BRINGS OUT THE BEST DAMN SOUND ON EARTH. I also like Hendrix style (who doesn't?) you can get many many sounds from this thing, although it is IDEAL for Classic Rock and Heavy Metal. If you are considering getting a new "high-gain" amp, I suggest you try one of these first. THIS IS A TRUE TONE MONSTER.

Reliability : 10
Play it almost everyday, no problems besides 1 blown fuse (I bought a 4 pack at Radio Shack for like 2 bucks)of course,if a fuse blows on you twice, you get the tubes checked. Mine are FINE

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing this thing for a few months now, I absolutely love it. I will one day try to get more of these babies. I use this head with a VINTAGE Marshall 1982B (straight cab) 4x12 with 30 watt vintage celestions. I sold my last Marshall stack to get this head, well worth it. If it was stolen, I would hunt down the person, and force feed him his own arms after I ripped them off (j/k) That would totally suck, but I would definetly buy it again, if I couldn't get one, then I would get a JCM 800 (those have the same tube config.)I compared this amp to a Mesa Triple Rectifier, a Peavey 5150, a Crate Blue-Voodoo, a Soldano, and thisamp KICKS THEIR COLLECTIVE ASS! Marshall is GOD!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/23/2003 at 10:21am by jamie

Features : 10
A 96 reissue. The most flexibility any amp needs IMHO 6 knobs. No loops, no master, no channel switching, it just doesn't get any better. All tube, EL-34s & 12ax7s. At least they didn't mount the pots to the board as they did with late 800 series and 900 series heads. It's not point to point but there are sources for board mods with better quality components. Heard good reports about users changing the OT using a Mercury Magnetics OT. The cosmetic components are not accurate to originals. The pilot lights are cheezy compared to the original vintage heads. Not a big deal.

Sound Quality : 9
If you are reading this review you know how a Super Lead should sound. It's seems to be more of a Super Lead flavor than a Plexi, especially prior to this quick fix... The first thing you want to do with this head is remove the bright caps, c17 and c18. Channel 1 is insanely bright, I have no idea what they were thinking, not even close to originals. You might as well drive an ice pick into your ears. Some suggest to clip the caps, I lifted the pc board and de-soldered them. The amp warmed up very nicely and has plenty of edge/brightness at any volume. The bright caps effect tone when running at low volumes, not dimed. So this is an important fix. Jump channels 1 and 2, that's necessary to get the best tone IMHO. After that quick mod it brings the head a little more accurate to originals but still not the same.

It also had a severe 60 cycle hum at idle. Sounded like holding a single coil up to the front of the head all the time. I measured 63 db of noise floor before locating the problem, lowered to 60 db after, with virtually no 60 cycle hum. If you have this problem, one of the things you should check after the obvious issues is to check the wires to pots. I noticed the lead wires going to the presence and other neighboring pots were very close to the OT leads which pop out underneath the board just above the presence control. Carefully pull the leads parallel to the ground rail that connects to all the pots and tie strap the leads to the rail down to at least the channel 1 volume pot. Try to issolate signal leads from voltage supply leads as much as possible using tie straps. That did it for me, I think issolating the wires to the pots had the most effect.. Also, watch those caps, discharge before you poke around or you won't be poking for quite a while. It also had some biasing ussues that needed addressing. I'm the 3rd owner of this head and that was the main reason the previous owner decided to sell.

If it sounded like a real plexi I'd give it a 10. I have a 69 small box 50 I used as a bench mark for this comp, which sounds awesome to say the least. I also have an 800 series 2204 and a 72 Marshall Major... horseys a plenty. Would never consider anything from 900 series to present... I used a 900 100w dual reverb for a while and it didn't have near the tone and volume as my 800 series 2204 (50w).

Reliability : 10
Nothing has gone on it yet...

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 8
Decent attempt to recreate the originals. It's better than some of the previous reissues. It would have been a little more accurate if they used more similar components and values, the right trannys and voltages (lay down) etc. I understand point to point can't be done at the price these are going at but using better quality components would sure help. But still a quite usable amp... Very happy with it.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $700.00
Submitted 04/18/2003 at 08:51am by Rob

Features : 10
I have a rule, I never buy an am with more than 6-knobs. Its useless (to me anyway). 1 excellent, loud, perfect tone (thats all any RAWK player needs), I'd rather have that 1 Marshall plexi sound than 3 over-metal sounds. Sounds Beautiful!!!

Sound Quality : 10
I use a 69 and 79 Les Paul (both have Seymour Duncan JB pickups at the bridge, the best pickup ever made for rock) and a Modified 70's Strat. I play in a Rock/Punk/Rockabilly/Chuck Berry meets the first 2 Iron Maiden records kinda thing. What alot of people don't get about this amp is that it gives you one of the best tones you can get. The rest is up to you, you can use any overdrive pedal (or modify it)sound you want and still have that killer "Marshall" tone (a fulldrive 2 works best for me, excellent tone overall). Most 2-3 channel amps just have the head units of a overdrive/distortion pedals that manufactures choose. This one you choose your sound. Its not for people who want to Plug-N-Play. It takes a little work but when you figure out what works best for you you will never go back to anything else! I also own a 1976 50w MK2 master lead and love that just the same!

Reliability : 10
Took it on tour, went through the desert, snow storms, high altitude (all within a week), fell off of a pretty high stage,god knows what else happened to it and it plays like same day I bought it!!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never used it

Overall Rating : 10
If you are in a gigging band, you know what a pain in the ass it can be getting a good tone from the practice studio to a club. Try to deal with that along with having a few coctails in you and looking a 24 + knobs and switches and not knowing what they do but when you touch one of them it screws your sound up really bad (thats why I have the "no more than 6-knobs" rule), I rather concentrate on how my playing is rather than how did my sound get so screwed up! These Marshall are no B.S. (I can't find a better amp in its class (exept a 57'-59' Fender Bassman). I've owned or played through almost any amp you can think of and came to the conclusion that no matter how many wacky knobs or channels you have all you really need is one good sound and then go from there. I have owned the pricy 3- channel amps and have gotten OK sounds through them, never 100% happy,more of settling for them because (getting a basic overdriven warm tone is harder than you think), but the same problem is that they never cut through like a Marshall does. I got it at cost to try it out (as a backup to my 76' 50 watt) and now my 50 watt is a backup to this! Not for the beginner!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/07/2003 at 06:31pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion
I wrote the last review. Thiers something I forgot to add. For almost 12 years I was the owner of one kick-ass sounding '68. I bought the RI SLP about a year ago as a backup and I was lucky I did becouse not long after that at the last gig I was gonna use the 68 at it was stolen. Talk about bad luck. I never got over it. it was stupod using a vintage plexi to gig anyway.

After I had the RI modded, about a week before that fateful gig, I was very interested in seeing how close it came with the "vintage clone" components in. I almost shit myself. I always thought I had pretty discriminating ears but it was damn close. The reissue was just the tinyest bit flabbier in the low end and harsher in the highs, and not quite as sweet sounding on the pick attack but the difference was negligable. It was a hard to hear a very notaceable difference without an A/B comparisson. I was pretty shocked to say the least.

Ill put it this way: I definitly would take my 68 over the reissue soundwise but since it was stolen, I havent tried to replace it with another vintage. I can afford it although it is a little steep (nearly 4 grand for 67-68!) Its something I still may do before they become impossable to find and cost a small fortune (as if they dont already!) but Im not searching for one yet.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US Used for 700. With Mods about 1100 total
Submitted 03/07/2003 at 06:12pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion
Everything needed for great tone. I added a master volume but thats not really a tone mod. When turned all the way up the components are taken out of the signal path and the amp is the same as stock.

Its also been upgraded with true to origional Filter caps, components and output tranny. At least as close as possable. Mercury magnetics O/P tranny by the way. For those of you who dont know about those, if you cant afford a vintage plexi replacing the O/P tranny with a MM hand wound clone is probably the most integral replacement you can do to get the amp closer to a vintage stock sound! Most vintage amp repairers use the MM as replacements.

Sound Quality : 10
What can I say. This is the guitar sound that everyone knows and loves. It cant be beat. (I do, of coarse, consider the AC-30, old fenders etc... to be equally great but thier all very different sounding instruments.) For anyone who hasnt had much experience with old amplifiers and Plexis in particular try to really play one some time and youll know. Not everyone wants to get this sound though and I cant blame everyone. If everyone played 1 amp itd be a pretty dull music scene. Which is probably why older amps have such a small following now next to the dual rectifiers and other modern amps. The sounds been soooo done in the past but it is the best. Page, Hendrix, EVH, Beck, ACDC, Eric Johnson, Randy Rhoads, Jake E Lee, Metallica (yes metallica!), Satch, etc, etc, etc.... The list goes on. One day the Dual Recto's of the world will be the old amps that only a few people still use. Its a cycle.

Although not everyone should play a plexi people who dont like it in my experience just dont know how a real amp should sound. That sounds strange or aragant but thiers a generation of kiddies out there who are looking to get the sound of guitar hero A and/or hero B and that leads to a few problems. The sound on recordings doesnt really sound like live sounds from an amp while your playing it. Any recording and touring pro knows what Im talking about. Things just sound very different on tape then they do live. Plus thiers the volume issue and the fact that the Line6's of the world are pumping out crued digital facsimilies at rediculouse rates which perpetuate the need to achieve a "like the album sound" strait from a small amp for use in basements. Its an instant gratification culture and taking time to learn to use and really get to know how to play an amplifier like this just isnt a priority to most. Whatever floats your boat.

The thing about this amp is the responce to your playing technique. Its soooo dynamic. The notes have a real deep snap to them. Real meat and body. Picking dynamics are sweet. You can vary the sound by your picking attack. Everyone says that but I gaurentee if youve never played one youll be shocked by the amount that is true. When you really dig in you get the sweetest harmonic responces. Think EVH solo's. Even legato runs have a very distinct sound to each note. A great presence to each note and a very present bass responce in every note. This amp is both bright and present but meaty and warm at the same time which is hard to understand without playing one. When speed picking and sweep picking the pick attack on the string isnt in your face although it is present. Although with a good fuzzy preamp like an old fuzzface, a good fuzzface clone or a Tube Driver you can get very close to that Eric Johnson tone were the pick attack is almost inaudable. I have all of those boxes and it definitly sounds right.

The harmonics just jump off the fretboard when playing. I dont know if anyone else can relate but to me I know I have a great sound on my hands when Im playing and you can just dig in and get those random harmonics and bad notes or dead notes cease to happen.

What other amp can you think of can give you such a different tone depeding on nothing else but whos playing it? Jimi sounds nothing like EVH. Both of them in turn sound nothing like Eric Johnson or Yngwie, Young, Clapton and all the other great players.

I run mine similiar to EVH. I have and mess with a variac but I generally dont use it. It sounds too much like Eddie and Im not that big a fan. I run the amp on about 8-vol, out 4ohms to a 16ohm THD Hotplate Load, through desired effects to a power amp. If your unfamiliar with this rigg it turns the entire amp into a preamp which includes power tube saturation since its cranked to almost 10 or to 10. The load box converts the speaker level signal to line level and, via a few effects, the power amp you run to can be on almost any volume and the sound will be the nearly same. Thats volume con

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
Im 29 and have been playing pro for just under a decade. Ive been all over the US and europe. Played through many a rigg. Live I mainly use Soldano SLO's and Plexi's modded with Soldano/arrendondo type mods with FX loops. I feel thier both great amps but are missing something important in thier tone that the stock plexi has but thier both (especially the soldano) are consistent, reliable and simple. thiers too many trouble spots in my Plexi rigg. If one thing fails it'd take 15 minuts just to figure out what. Itd be nice if someone could build one into a rack unit if thats possable. Especially since I use it as a preamp.

Heres 2 great sites for plexi owners legendarytones.com and tone-man.com. Great tips about how many people run thier plexis and how to get the most out of them. Toneman does all the great upgrade mods. They both are run by people who welcome questions and have an answer to anything plexi related.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: (it was a gift from my bandmates) used
Submitted 11/29/2002 at 03:12am by www.custardpie.it

Features : 10
I play with Custard Pie, the italian Led Zeppelin Tribute: should I say more?

Sound Quality : 10
This baby is a referring point on HOW an amp should sound. No presets, no dozens knobs, no gain. Just tone, amazing.

Reliability : 10
In almost 30 years of playing, Just one single speaker got broken in one of my old amps. Hey... it's a Marshall!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with the company.

Overall Rating : 10
This is the "Ferrari" of the guitar amps, I can't find the words to describe how good it sounds. Every player on this planet should plug in it a Les Paul at least once in a lifetime...


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1400 used
Submitted 10/16/2002 at 05:57am by Anonymous

Features : 3
-97 Limited Edition(white head, white 4x12, white powerbrake)
Two channel amp if you use an A/B box. The 4 inputs are a nice feature
I wish it had a channelswitch and EQ-knobs for both channels.

Sound Quality : 5
Distorsion-more distorsion and with a boost-stompbox silly distorsion.
Impossible to get a clean sound from it.
This amp does one sound but does it really well.

Reliability : 6
Probably reliabel if you get good tubes. I changed tubes three times
in six months. I would never bring it to a gig without spare tubes and
I usually don't without a back-up amp.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them.

Overall Rating : 5
I been playing for about 25 years. Currently I play fast "rock'n roll/punk/country/metal" I like this amp and it's classic sound. It's a one-trick-pony though and sometimes that annoys me but I get by with
an A/B-box, a boost-pedal and a tubescreamer.
I don't remember all the amps I've tried they all have their pros and cons. There is no "ultime amp" an most modern amps sounds pretty good
with minor differences. To me there are 3 categories of amps; Marshall,Fender and Vox. All other amps fall into these categories.
If I lost this one I would try a Fender for a while.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/09/2002 at 11:08am by Ray

Features : 9
100 watt, presence, bass, mid, treble, volume1,volume2 K.I.S.S. Keep It Simple Stupid!
I've got the '94 purple haze stack. Special leather handle on the head and cabs. Extra tall bottum cab (model no 1982A & 1982B)
Don't know how much they made of this limited run, I should open it up to check.

Sound: Loud, louder, loudest! Nothing beats this! Just use your guitar volume and turn it up!
Power brake, hotplate or loadbox needed for smaller gigs!
Bleeding ears!!!

Sound Quality : 10
I play strats, PRS mccarty and singlecut, Gibson ES125, and all sound sweet at low volumes. Played louder the strats brings Jimi back to life and the prs's bring the greatest vintage 'les paul/marshall' sound, to your fingertips.
For serious players ONLY!

Reliability : 10
Hey it's a marshall...

Customer Support : No Opinion
never needed

Overall Rating : 10
If your serious about guitar you should own one of these!
This is THE SOUND for all gigs, provided you get a powerbrake or something with it!
I love my special purple tolex, but I'am even more impressed by the sound this baby generates!
Gtrz,
Ray


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $600 NEW!!!
Submitted 06/20/2002 at 06:04pm by Jordan Wagner
Email: jwagner at avatar-systems<dot>net

Features : 7
I'm pretty sure this is a 2001 model reissue. 100 watts, 4 EL34 tubes, 3 12AX7's. Very straight-forward controls: Presence, Bass, Midrange, Treble, and two "Loudness" knobs, one for each channel. Black tolex, gold piping, gold Marshall logo. I love the look of these heads; very traditional and classy. The newer reissues have an effects loop, but this one doesn't for some reason. Oh, well. Jimmy and Jimi didn't need them....

But it would have been nice to have reverb in the reissue....

Sound Quality : 9
I'm using two Gibson Les Paul Customs, one is a 1969 Black Beauty and the other is a 1978 Silverburst w/ Tom Anderson pickups. I'll occasionally use my UV777BK Ibanez, but I mostly use the Gibsons. I own several amps with different effects setups, but this one I use only a Boss pedal tuner, a modified Vox V847 wah, and a Fulltone Bassdrive. The sound is awesome with the 1960TV extra tall Marshall 4x12 with Greenbacks that I have......immaculate distortion.

LOUD AS SHIT

Reliability : No Opinion
This thing looks very well-built. It weighs a ton, as well. I have a lot of friends who own original Super Leads and reissue Super Leads like mine, and they've rarely ever had a problem with them. I've only had it for a couple weeks, so I don't really have a good opinion yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have no clue how Marshall's customer support is, except that I've heard from others that it really sucks hard.

Overall Rating : 9
Badass. Completly badass. Get a cab for it that does it justice, perhaps the extra tall 1960TV Marshall or a Mesa traditional slant.

Awesome.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 03/17/2002 at 12:15pm by Shane Gorski
Email: SnowDemon71 at hotmail<dot>com

Features : 10
Two channels, high treble and normal. Control knobs include prescence, bass, middle, treble, volume 1, and volume 2. Proves that fancy 20+ know amps are trash and simplicity will always be king. Uses 4 El34 power tubes and 3 12ax7 pre-amp tubes, 100 watts. Oh yeah!

Sound Quality : 10
Oh my lord. The 1959-SLP is the shining diamond of all old school rockers and bluesmen. If you are into the all time great old time guitar players like Page, Hendrix, and Clapton... you must buy this amp... period. I've been playing since I was 9 years old and i'm 17 right now for a total of 8 years. I play through a Gibson Les Paul DC Standard with 57' humbuckers I installed, it's a cheap guitar but it sounds incredible. I also have an American Strat. Then, I wire it through my Vox-Wah, then to the high treble input. When i'm playing with my LP selected on the bridge pickup, it's a shear tone heaven when it's cranked to 10. The tone is practically identically to an old live Jimmy Page sound that can be heard on the Led Zeppelin DVD "The Song Remains the Same". When you put the pickup selector in the middle position, you get some really nice country twangs and a real view at how versitle the amp really is. Roll of the volume and put the pickup switch in the neck position and you've got sounds that have a small overdrive factor with a warm blues tone. It's truly amazing that such a simple amp can produce such a tonal plethora. Whenever I plug in the Fender I usually bring out the Arbiter Fuzz face just to have a crazy feedback fuzz-fest that brings back the memories of Hendrix. When playing on this set-up, the amp again shows that it has the best tonal quality of any amp built. When your playing on the neck position with the Fender you get the best blues sound imaginable with a warm tone and a rich tube overdrive, absolutely unbeatable. Flip the pickup selector to the bridge, and it's an all out Hendrix tone feast!!! The amp again shows its versatility with a rich overdrive and tube balls. Awe inspiring! If you're wondering if the overdrive is brutal, well it's not. Unlike Mesa and Peavey amps that melt your face off with over-distorted tones, the Marshall 1959-SLP always keeps its tone under control and never get squeely. If you buy this head, don't connect it with a 300 watt cab, the sound gets really dead and boring. I use Marshall's 1960AX vintage cab with 25watt greenbacks. This is the only way the amp sound like it should. My only complaint about the amp is that when you play at small venues you may want to buy a THD hotplate so you don't have to sacrifice your tone for a small room. I used to play on other amps that had controls like Gain and about ten other knobs and got sick of always trying to find the right equalization of the amp. It got old really quick enough for me to shell out the best thousand bucks i've ever spend. But other than the fact that you might want to purchase a THD hotplate, this amp is the god off all tube amps beating out all over complex new age amps of today.

Reliability : 9
I've had this amp for about a year and a half now. Make sure you replace the tubes every six months to ensure the head reliability and tone. I had only one problem. One of the power tubes had a problem in it this month and I had to replace it because it would blow the 4 amp fuse every time you flipped the standby switch. It was pretty scary at first thinking my amp had to go in for expensive repair, but I found the problem and fixed it. When I replaced the faulty tube the tubes I had last put in it were only 3 months old. So it wasn't the amps fault, just a bad EL34.

Customer Support : 6
Customer support for Marshall is on the border of absolute crap to half-way decent. My friend had a problem with his Marshall, and you have to call Korg. They usually have good advice but it's no fun callling long distance. When i bought the amp there was no warranty for it probably since it was sitting in the back of their store. Finding an authorized Marshall service center is a joke. You are better off looking for the local amp repair man as my friend did.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been rockin' it out old school style for 8 years and this is the head I will always use... bottom line. I do own other effects pedals like a Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive, Boss Chorus Ensemble, MXR Phase 90, Line 6 Delay Modeler, Arbiter Fuzz Face, and a Violin Bow, but I would only use those fancy pedals if i had to do some low volume recording work. If my baby was stolen, I would probably hunt them down, wack em' accross the face with a bat, and pour a 2-liter of coke in their car's gas tank. If I couldn't find where the head had gone, i would immediately buy a new one. I've played on other tube amps like Mesa, Fender, Peavey, and Crate but they don't put out as much ass-whooping tone as my baby does. I just love it's huge array of sounds and mean 70's natural overdrive. It's great! Remember though, if you buy this head make sure you have a Marshall 1960AX/BX cab with 25watt greenback so you can hear this amp the way it was meant to be heard.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $700. used
Submitted 01/05/2002 at 11:39pm by riff

Features : No Opinion
The date is no where to be found, i bought it used in '96 in L/N cond.for $700.00 w/cover. Versatile enough if all your after is TONE. I play rock - A to Z. 4 channels, no effects loops or channel switching etc. You buy this model amp if you know how to use them and a power brake is not the answer and neither is adding a master volume - if your stupid enough to do that, sell it first and go get yourself a master volume amp! 100 watts of Plexi power is equal to a zillion watts by lesser mfgs.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
To get the best sound, you jump the channels, run from your guitar to a rat or what Ingwie uses,a DOD overdrive preamp 250 - which incidentally DOD is reissuing under his personnal direction, to control your volume and tighten the bass up a bit. I have both of these and have been using them before ingwie was around. a POWER BRAKE just gives you the same sound at a lower db with a very loose bass,the DOD or Rat will tighten up the bass and bring out the Marshall sound though the DOD is a bit noisey,the rat is smoother and has better distortion and will also clean up but be prepaired to twiddle the knobs and be patient, it takes a while to dial in that sound and dont go butchering up the amp with some stupid Soldano circuit or a MV mod., nothing works better than what i have just told you, been playing 36 plus years,Marshall owner since '70

Reliability : No Opinion
Like a Rock!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never used it,was always serviced by my dealer for free.

Overall Rating : 10
I own a plexi SLP 100 and a jtm 45, also a Sov mig 50 and a Randall. I would list the other amps i've owned but would run out of room.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: too much (canadian)
Submitted 01/01/2002 at 10:48am by Anonymous

Features : 3
This amp has no extra junk which is the way I like it.
Plane and simple. I ordered mine in june 2001 and had to wait
till october to get mine. Interesting note; The marshall rep,
the dealer, and I all had to sign a waiver. Apparently this
amp is not Canadian CSA certified. The rep said that the model 1959
reissue is being replaced by a JCM800 reissue. My is apparently
1 of the last 500 made! I don't know why marshall has waivers for
this last batch, could it be something special???
As for features this amp as the bare essentials, tone and volume
controls with the standard dual channels/dual inputs. Not
a lot but just what you need.

Sound Quality : 9
Not as good as the vintage ones(in my opinion) but they are as close
as your gonna get. The new ones you can't roll every thing to ten.
For example on an old plexi rolling every thing to ten and having the
volume at 75% produces an crazy growl. On the reissues you have to
roll the treble off halfway and cut all the presence.
With my reissue I can achieve a sweet blues, 70's rock and crazy
saturation(my person fav!)

Reliability : 10
You get back what you put in it. It is a strong amp but with
tube you still have to be kind to it.

Customer Support : 10
I got to meet the marshall rep when I ordered it and he was
great. My dealer bends over backwards for me so I can't complain.

Overall Rating : 7
I spent a small fortune to get mine so it wasn't a great value for my money but is every thing I wanted and needed in an amp.
***One and only problem: Where the power cord mates with the amp is kind of loose which is a big deal if its going to be a giging work horse.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1,049
Submitted 12/26/2001 at 12:57pm by Tony

Features : 10
This 2001 '59 SLP reissue plexi is an extremely versatile amp if you know how to utilize its potential. Very simple eq setup with Bass, Presence, Mid, Treble, two volume nobs for each channel and four inputs (two for each channel - one bright, one normal) and all work incredibly well. The one thing that I have learned through experience is that simpler is better. The power potential is unbelievable and must be tamed with an attenuator to allow for full power tube maximization and also minimum hearing loss.

Sound Quality : 10
I use a '78 Fender Strat with stock pickups in the neck and middle positions and a SD JB Jr. in the bridge position. I play mostly blues, punk and classic rock. With the exception of using a THD Hotplate, this is all the hardware I need and given I have owned at least 20 different pedals in my 20+ years of playing guitar, this is quite a testament. The tone that comes out of this beast is nothing short of phenomenal! Simply, the best "clean" distortion that you will ever hear and turn down the guitar volume and you get the lushest, sweetest clean notes that surprises you every time it's the same amp. Dynamics are everything with this amp. The tone shimmers and is not unlike the airiness that a Vox AC30 can give with 3 times the balls. Get away from those confusing/multiple channel/half-filled glass master volume amps and open the door to refreshing simplicity, intense dynamics, clarity and distortion that will leave you speachless. I have tried them all including Marshall master volumes, Boogie, VHT, Matchless, Bogner, Dumble, Soldano, Fender, Dr.Z., Bruno, Vox, Peavey, etc. and for me none can match the feeling you get when you plug into this puppy! You know its right with the first note while you wonder why the hell the others are selling at multiples. You also know it's right when the technicians at rehearsal studios are rudely barging into your room to find out what your rig is all about only to leave perplexed when there is no garbage plugged into it. Hendrix, Van Halen, early Clapton, Page, Beck, Trower, Ronson, Priest, Kiss, Aerosmith, AC/DC, etc. couldn't all have been wrong.

Reliability : 10
No problems yet. I bought a Marshall 100 JMP in 1978 and I have had 0 problems with it. I expect the same here.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had reason to use customer service.

Overall Rating : 10
I will never go back to anything else. For true rock-n-roll and blues, this amp was the first and will be the last. This amp allows me to play better because is it is inspiring to hear. No longer will you get lost in the grindy mud of master volume amps that only tend to get worse as they get louder. If it was lost or stolen I would perform a sex change operation on the male bastard and send him back to Afghanistan as a woman and then buy another one. Such anger but as you can tell I feel pretty damn strong about my opinion at the topic in hand. To each his own, but my search has ended.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1250 including tax
Submitted 10/20/2001 at 02:53pm by Josh Haynes

Features : 6
I believe the amp was made in 2000. I'm pretty big on Classic Rock and Hard Rock like Pink Floyd, Van Halen, Metallica, Rush. It doesn't have a whole lot of features, which I like b/c it's a lot less confusing. It has 7 tubes, and the sound is huge. I wouldn't change anything with it, it's fine the way it is.

Sound Quality : 10
I play a Fender Strat and an ESP LTD MH-301. I mainly like the Fender/Marshall combination. I also have a Digitech RP-7 Valve Processor that I use for distortion and clean sounds. I mainly use the clean input of the amp, but I still get a lot of roar and beef to the sound. If you plug in the first channel and crank it up to about 2 or 3, (this amp is so loud in the first place) you can get that Malcolm Young (from AC/DC) rhythm sound that he is known for. The number 2 channel is the one I use and it's clean, no overdriving the speakers or anything.

Reliability : No Opinion
It's pretty reliable so far, haven't had long enough to say.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't used them yet.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for almost 9 years, and I've owned mainly fender amps, and this is my first marshall. I'm very happy with it. If it were stolen or destroyed, I would hope the person who stole it dies and goes to hell, and then I'd get another one. lol I was just generally wanting a 100 watt marshall, I had a choice between the 1959 plexi and the jcm 900, and I liked the classic look of the plexi and it sounded a lot better too.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1,115
Submitted 08/03/2001 at 04:14pm by paul
Email: crankittothemax<at>aol dot com

Features : 10
don't know what year it was made, it was very good sounding right out of the box! it was good for the classics(hendrix, cream, page) but im more of a metal man. so i added the mxr dist. + for a while until i had enough cash to modify it (more about that later) one channel, way to much volume, all tube, you know the rest.

Sound Quality : 10
im using a randy rhoads custom jackson with emg 81's. i had it modified. the modification was called a soldano mod. this is where they add an extra tube and a master volume. it cost $200 for the extra pot/knob and the modification. creamy tone. randy rhoads and iommi without a distortion pedal! did i mention creamy?

Reliability : 10
owned it for a year no problems except i needed new tubes.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with it

Overall Rating : 9
if it were stolen i would look at the jcm 800's first (just like zakk) and probably modify those to. but if i had the cash id buy both nd mod both and kill the guy who stole it. i could've used a master volume right out the box but now i have one. i give it a 9 because it wasn't perfect right outta the box.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1,049.00
Submitted 06/19/2001 at 12:58pm by GS
Email: GSelf3 at excite<dot>com

Features : 9
Nearly being deaf from access, years before I bought this. I can hear
this baby like ringing a bell. It has a very basic EQ setup. Which is
outstanding !! The treble response on this head is unreal. Nothing fancy to screw up like other heads I've used in the past. As far as I'm concerned all others heads can step a side because daddies home.

Sound Quality : 10
I use a Les Paul Standard with it. And alot of time I'll go total raw with the volume up around 6 and combine both channels viva patch cord. This head can blister the paint off the walls with more punch to break the windows. The tone is unreal. Mr. Page I'm playing one for you. OUTSTANDING !!!

Reliability : 9
No trouble, its slick as shit. This Plexi blows all the other Marshall Heads into the ground I've ever owned or used . My opinion only. Thats fighting talk in some parts of the world....

Customer Support : 9
Never had to use it. Hope I never have to ! I can't find any paper work on this amp to save my ass ,I've been all over the internet looking around for a manual. Bought brand new ,was told that Marshall doesn't write one.

Overall Rating : 10
If this amp was distroyed by fire it would be replaced. If stolen ,the person would die who stole it, then his will would pay for another one. I've been playing over 25 yrs with all kinds of trash shit equipment and this Head and my Les Paul are two things I'm not going to part with. I play Classic and Metal its great for both..


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1,200
Submitted 06/14/2001 at 10:53pm by Anonymous

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion
i love this thing i bought it in 1993 brand spankin new. and hands down it is the loudest amp i have ever heard. and i've heard vox, mesa boogie , fender, kustom, crate, carvin, other marshalls, orange, the list goes on and on. the best guitar to use through it is my 1993 gibson korina wood sg. which gives off the best tone and sustain a guitar can give. just look at the price of a 1958 gibson korina wood flying v (70,000 depending on condition) i'm no dummy about equipment and vintage equipment, as you can read. i won't tell you what effects i use and the cabs i use my marshall with...because it's none of your business.CIAO`

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $650 used
Submitted 04/14/2001 at 11:59am by Ty Gerhardt
Email: tygerhardt at hotmail<dot>com

Features : 2
TONE...the only feature an amp really needs. Without tone you have a wooden box covered in Tolex (or if you're really unlucky...carpet *eeewww*) with a bunch of worthless parts housed in it. If you can find a 100 channel amp with a million effects loops, a direct recording out, a warp drive indicator, a digital rectal thermometer and whatever else the kids are into today don't buy it unless it's one of the best sounding amps you have ever heard. None of those fancy features will matter if your tone sucks. Never settle for OK or bad tone because you think you need channel switching or and effects loop. Also beware of amp fads. Great tone never goes out of style. Does the amp you're buying today have a tone that will be cool 10 years from now or will it only be cool for the 15 minutes a particular style is popular? If not don't but it. You will be glad you didn't.

Well enough of my endless pontificating. Bottom line the 1959 SLP Reissue is low on features, big on tone.

Sound Quality : 9
I've been playing music for 18 years and guitar for 15 of those years. I have a lot (12 at last count) of very cool tube amps from Fender, Marshall, Hiwatt, Sound City, Orange and more. I use mostly American Fenders, and Hamer USA for my guitars. For effects I like Fulltone, Roger Mayer, Visual Sound, Lovetone, Electro Harmonix etc. I play a wide variety of styles from vintage rock and roll (50's, 60's, and 70's)heavy stuff like Black Sabbath, Sleep, High On Fire, The Melvins, 70's King Crimson, and Quicksand to noise pop stuff like My Bloody Valentine, Built To Spill, Sonic Youth, Radiohead, etc.

The 1959 SLP Reissue simply kicks all kinds of ass. It's probably the loudest amp I have ever played (even over my 100 watt Hiwatts) which isn't necessarily a good thing. It's clean sound bright powerful and punchy with a good amount of bottom end. Way more versatile than I would have imagined. With a good overdrive or distortion, this thing will rupture the vital organs of anything withing a 10 block radius. With the right overdrive/fuzz/distortion this amp will fit almost any style (with with exception of most types of jazz).

Reliability : 9
I have not had any problems with mine and don't expect to. Very well built. I know because the first thing I do when I buy a new amp is take it apart.

Customer Support : 10
While I know Korg USA has it's problems, I have recieved excellent customer service from Nick Bowcott at Korg USA

Overall Rating : 9
I got a really good deal on this amp as I got it for $650 used in absolute mint condition. The 1959 SLP Reissue, it's 50 watt version, the JTM45 Reissue and the Bluesbreaker Combo Reissue are the best amps Marshall has in production at this time PERIOD. I'm not a vintage snob. I feel there are a lot of good new amps out there right now, but the 100 watt DSL or TSL 2000 doesn't even come close in the tone department compared to the 1959 SLP Reissue. I would definitely buy this amp again if anything happened to it, but I might go with 2 50 watt heads instead of one 100 watt head.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 03/08/2001 at 01:34pm by george cain
Email: none

Features : No Opinion
Just bare bones - very versatile EQ and 2 channels give a very different tone.

Sound Quality : 10
Strat and 81 les paul; marshall 4x12, it's very quiet; i run it around 5 or 6 for recording in my studio. I use the bright channel with high input only. gets a great rock rich harmonic tone. absolutely love it. i'm going to put in better quality preamp tubes - it comes with EI preamp tubes which aren't great quality. going to put in some tesla's.
If you want a marshall amp - this is the one to get!!! hands down.

using a strat in neck notched position, reminds me of red hot chili peppers. using my les paul, sounds like a monster - reminds me of soundgarden's superunknown album. using a celestion greenback gives a warm full sound; a vintage 30 gives a super clear cutting tight bottom sound - great for lead work. I find using a sm57 mic sounds best with it in the studio.

Reliability : No Opinion
just got it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
haven't used them.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
been playing over 20 years.
I got a 65 fender twin reverb reissue for clean sounds.
I got this Marshall 100 watt plexi for vintage EL34 rock tone.
I got a Boogie dual rectifier tremoverb for heavy metal tone.
Hey, what else do you need; that covers the spectrum!!
best three amps in the business


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: Lots......... (Can)
Submitted 02/27/2001 at 07:56pm by Jim Neil
Email: janeil<at>telusplanet dot net

Features : 8
Amp was manufactured n 1999. It is a reissue 1959SLP 100w all tube head. Presence, Bass, Mid, Treble, Volume 1, Voulume 2. Two channel/
4 inputs. I play Christian Rock and Roll. It has plenty of power. It is the thunder of Heaven when cranked up. I like to be able to mix the two channels to get the sound I want for a particular night. Tone is incredible. Very nice warm clean and when pushed, overdrives like crazy.

Sound Quality : 9
I play a 1976 LesPaul Custom all original plus a Washburn G4 with a EMG81 pickup in it. the amp suite my music very well for both clean and dirty playing. The amp is a bit noisy. A little hum and hiss, but on stage it is not noticible and doesnt come through in the mix. the overdive starts at about 4, is really nice at 6 and is unbeliveable at around 9 -10 although you have to back some bass out of it or youll get a concusion.

Reliability : 9
Only had it a month. Ive been carring my JCM900 (1990 model) around ready to go just in case but so far I do not expect any problems.

Customer Support : 10
I have had some questions about the amp and the Marshall importer for Canada is awesome. Allways finding out info for me and being very nice and quick as well.

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing for about 19 years. I have a 1960A cab and B cab,
the Guitars above plus a 94' Ovation limited edition, JCM900head, a few pedals. If I lost the amp or it was stolen Id sure look at one again if I could find one. I might even try out the 50w too as the 100 is Like a hurricane. Ive always liked Marshall. there is no other amp really.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $650 used
Submitted 01/26/2001 at 08:33am by Anonymous

Features : 7
Very simple. Volume & EQ. I've got a JCM 900 100 watt with all the bells and whistles. This has tone, the bells & whistles don't.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm Gibson/Marhsall driven; I've got the usual boxes in between. Bottom line this amp has power and tone; you get the punch when it's clean and the raunch when you overdrive with volume or pedals. Call it versatility in tone. It's all there. In the studio, in the clubs, you can get what you need when you need it.

Is it loud? It's supposed to be. I play a Les Paul and a 335 through it - no howling feedback, no control problems. Did I say I play rock, so we're also loud?

By the way, what you read about EL34 tone vs all the rest is absolutely true. I wouldn't/couldn't go back.

Reliability : No Opinion
No breakdowns so far.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Phone support is good for basic Q&A.

Find yourself a local tube amp guy; that alone improved my tone more than a lot of what I tried; they also keep you real clean and neat when something breaks the day before the gig.

Overall Rating : 10
This is the keeper. I'm getting another asap. I wouldn't ever change.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1050 + tax and shipping (bought from MF)
Submitted 12/30/2000 at 12:34pm by Mike Neppel
Email: none

Features : 7
The knobs/switches from left to right are:

Mains, Standby, Presence, Bass, Middle, Treble, High Treble/Loudness1, and Normal/loudness2

Then, of course, there is the indicator light and the 4 inputs.

Two speaker outs, ohm selector, mains power selector, powercord slot (powercord included of course) and two fuses in a convienient spot to change them from.

100 watts, 4 EL34 power tubes, 12ax7 preamp tubes (I think, don't take my word for it) All the good stuff you need for pure Marshall tone.

Check out Marshall's website for more info.

This amp isn't terribly versitile I guess... It can't do extreme metal or fender clean, but who cares? If you want metal get a jcm900 or something, and If you want fender clean, get a Twin Reverb. It works well for the sounds I need, more on that in a second....

Sound Quality : 10
It gets a good vintage Marshall tone. Think Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Cream, etc. It can also get a few modern (less edgy) tones if you tweek it.

I'm using it with a 52 RI Telecaster and I'm going to be using it with a MIM 70s or something of the sort soon. Here's my setup:

52 RI > dunlop 535q wah > fulltone 70s > 59slp > Jcm900 1960b cab

The fuzz works well with it and It gets a very good "Live at Woodstock" tone, or almost any Jimi Hendrix tone for that matter. It can get (*some*) srv (not all though). Roll Back the tone for a little Clapton, or sling your guitar down low and tweek it some more for a little Page. This thing has VERY VERY extremely good sound, for (almost) everything I play, give it a shot to see if it works for you!

Reliability : No Opinion
Hasn't failed me yet (had it since october, early xmas present)...

I'd use it without a back up, can't afford one anyway. A couple gripes (see below for that)

Customer Support : No Opinion
haven't needed them yet (hopefully I won't)

Overall Rating : 9
This amp rules! I would buy it again.

When I got it, one of the corners was ripped (shipping?) but a little glue fixed that. And even though this doesn't pertain to the head, when I got my cab, the JCM900 thing in the corner was missing...

my REAL overall rating is probably 9.5 but I'll just have to do 9


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000.00
Submitted 11/27/2000 at 01:38pm by DAVID HOOPER
Email: MPLLINEMAN at aol<dot>com

Features : 10
THIUS IS THE REPLACEMENT FOR MY 25+YR OLD THAT WENT UP IN A PUFF OF SMOKE. FOR 70S ROCK, IT CANT BE BEAT. AS FAR AS IM CONCERNED, THE TONE CANT BE BEAT PERIOD.

Sound Quality : 10
I MOSTLY PLAY A81 LES PAUL STD, STOCK, AND THIS IS A MEAN COMBINATION. THIS AMP WILL CLEAN UP NICELY, AND IF YOU WISH, CRANK IT UP, BOTH CHANNELS PATCHED, AND IT IS CRUEL. THE DISTORTION IS ALL NATURAL, NO MASTER VOLUMES HERE, SO THE HIGHER YOU TURN THE KNOB, THE MORE YOU GET. IT IS VERY STRAIGHTFORWARD AND SIMPLE TO USE, WHICH IN THIS DAY AND AGE, IS REFRESHING. MINE IS ONLY A MONTH OLD, SO IM STILL PLAYING WITH THE VOLUME SETTINGS.

Reliability : 10
ONLY A MONTH OLD, BUT IT WAS BOUGHT TO REPLACE ONE THAT I BOUGHT USED 25+ YRS AGO.

Customer Support : No Opinion
NEVER USED IT, ALTHOUGH I TRIED TO REPAIR MY OLD HEAD, A 50 WATTER, AND TOLD NO PARTS. NEVER FEAR, I HAVENT GIVEN UP.

Overall Rating : 10
IVE BEEN PLAYING ALMOST 30 YRS and would and did replace this. it is brutally frank and simple, just like some of us like it. I PLAYED A PEAVEY FOR A FEW MONTHS, YEARS AGO, BUT COULDNT REALLY COMPARE THE TWO. I AM A MARSHALL MAN.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 950 (Canadian) used
Submitted 10/23/2000 at 02:53pm by Anonymous

Features : 6
Having read most of the reviews of the 1959 reissue in this forum, and after reading "The Tube Amp Book" by Aspen Pittman (of Groove Tubes fame), I have had some of the questions raised here answered. It's a fantastic book by the way, and in my opinion anyone who owns a tube amp, especially a vintage or vintage reissue amp, should get it. Anyway, he explained that the original Marshall "Plexi's" had transformers that delivered over 600 volts to the power tubes as compared to about 450 on the more recent Marshalls, which resulted in some VERY loud amps (he even claims to have come across some 150-watt "100-watt" Marshalls because of transformer inconsistencies). So it seems that the originals probably WERE louder, but I think most of us can agree that the current issue of the 1959 is loud enough. Another interesting thing he mentioned was that the filter capacitors (the big blue cans near the tubes) have a tendency to dry out over time which will result in poor amp performance. He recommends having them changed every 5 to 6 years (I hope it doesn't cost too much). For the record, he says that he really likes the new reissues and seems to think that they offer a good value for the money. BTW, for those of you who may want to lower the output of your 1959 to 50 watts, it's very simple. Just remove 1 pair of EL34's from the amp (either the outside 2 or the inside 2) and reduce the ohm setting to half. For example, if you have a 16 ohm cab, set it to 8. It's good for smaller venues, or just to save your hearing and money.

Sound Quality : 9
I really like this amp, I traded in a Marshall JCM2000 DSL401 combo for it and there is no comparison. These amps are what Marshall amps are supposed to sound like. They're VERY, very loud, so you better have a good place to play, away from neighbours ears. I'm thinking about trying the THD Yellow Jacket converters for low volume gigs and practicing, I've heard good things about them.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 3.000.000 # (Lira) used
Submitted 09/09/2000 at 03:44am by Sk@rlet
Email: none

Features : 6
There are 4 channel presence, bass, middle, treble, loudness1(high treble), loudness2 (normal). Ohm regulator, voltage regulator two ext speakers.Was made in 1994, purple is a limited edition.

Sound Quality : 10
The sound is very fantastic (like led zeppelin, deep purple,ac/dc) I have no words....

Reliability : 8
I hadn't no problem with this amp...

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $600 used
Submitted 08/25/2000 at 04:17pm by josh
Email: josh<at>robins dot net

Features : 3
It's nice to have two channels on this amp, but I don't know anyone who uses one or the other separately. It sounds great when the channels are used in conjunction. Other than above average clarity and tone, this amp has no special features. The volume level is incredible on these amps. Many other tone snobs, as well as amp collectors, will argue the fact that the old 1959 superleads were/are louder, but unless you're one of the few people playing stadiums these days, this amplifier will provide you with more volume than you need or want. Your non-musician audience members aren't going to care if your tone is awesome, your songs are great and your performance is interesting if you're deafening them with too much volume. I use an attenuator with this amp to keep it from feeding back in small clubs and hurting peoples' ear drums.

Sound Quality : 8
Overall, I'm happy with the amp's tone and sound. I considered selling it to achieve a fatter, warmer tone that many MESA BOOGIES generate, but I could not deny the 1959s superior clarity. In comparison to other Marshalls, the only other (new) one I've been very impressed with is the JTM-45 re-issue. This amplifier doesn't hiss or buzz very much, even at high volumes like JCM800s and 900s. It's very touch sensitive. Even on hot settings, the amount distortion is controllable (to an extent) by simply strumming harder or softer. There are other amps that do other sounds better, but the only one I'd replace this one with is a SOLDANO. I use a (circa) 1977 Travis Bean Artist with this amplifier (two humbuckers in neck and bridge positions) and a Jerry Jones Baritone guitar (two single coils in bridge and neck position). Bottom line is clarity. This amp really cuts through the mix without muddling the other instruments.

Reliability : No Opinion
I haven't had a problem with it yet.

Customer Support : 2
Good luck. You have to deal with KORG in the USA and they are often OUT of whatever it is you want. Fortunately, enough people use Marshall that there's probably a good repair man in your city who can help.

Overall Rating : 7
Love the great tone and clarity, I just wish it also had the ability to get a little warmer without being muddled. Reverb would also be a welcome option on these amps.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 1500 (Australian)
Submitted 06/21/2000 at 03:57am by Alex Murray
Email: alexander dot murray<at>student dot adelaide dot edu dot au

Features : 7
No mods, so it is the original set-up - ie. four inputs, 2 volume, 3 band eq and presence. No master volume, effects loop etc. No need for all that wanky stuff, just perfect the way it is.

Sound Quality : 10
I play with a beautiful black Gibson Les Paul Standard and it sounds sweet. Nice fat low end from the second channel when chained in with the first to still retain the high end. VERY LOUD, but so is my band so it suits. I had a JCM-900 (100 Watts) but the power output just didnt compare. I use a Danelectro DaddyO for a great overdrive/distortion without the fuzz that seems to come from so many pedals nowadays. Suits any style of music, just use your pedal to get whatever sound you want, as the clean sound of this is just brilliant.

Reliability : 10
Have only had it for about 4 months and so far not a problem. I have no backup, so I keep it in as good condition as possible.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I wouldnt use Marshall to repair it, although I think my local amp guy is authorized with them, but nontheless I'd still take it to him. - find someone you trust, and who you know can do a good job, and get it back to you quickly - 12 month warranty.

Overall Rating : 9
Brilliant, but no good if you don't like a bit of volume as it is quite loud, but has some excellent sounds.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $500 used
Submitted 03/20/2000 at 08:27am by rarcher
Email: r11270 at aol<dot>com

Features : 8
4 tone nobs, 2 volumes, ohmage selector, 4 inputs

Sound Quality : 9
this amp gets the most phenomenal tone - you have to chain channels 1 and 2 through each other to get a complete tone (not too trebly not too muddy) and mine doesn't really start breaking up until you get it up around 6 (which is LOUD) but the attack is absolutely fantastic - i've never found anything that can come close (i had a 50 watt original and the tone is very close, just louder and less muddy on this 100 watt reissue) - great for that classic crunch without that ridiculous generic grindy sound that everyone seems to love so much lately - i was using a musicman axis, now i'm usingpeavey wolfgangs - this thing is great covering sounds from hendrix, zeppelin, ac/dc, and early van halen - if you have to control the volume try getting an attenuator from harry kolbe (i think his website is www.soundsmith.com)

Reliability : 9
no problems ever

Customer Support : No Opinion
never needed any help

Overall Rating : 10
i've been playing for 20 years, i also own a fender twin reverb, a peavey 5150, and a bunch of weird pedals like ring modulators, loopers, echos and this wacky old ibanez "wau wau" - the 1959 slp is a great amp - the 5150 is the only amp i've played that even comes close (unless you can find an old unmodified London City somewhere)


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $869 new
Submitted 01/28/2000 at 03:37pm by Ben Trenary
Email: btrenary<at>hotmail dot com

Features : 6
Not too many features. instructions? Crank er up and rip. This is 100 watts of vintage tube balls. No master anything. No effects loop. Good rock tone. Listen to AC/DC or Jimi for a tone approximation.

Sound Quality : 8
I am using with strat stly e guitar with two singles and a Gibson PAF Reissue. I play rock and blues and it can do that. Its loud its proud its a good amp. Not a huge variety but it has that tube distortion sound. No question there. Very powerful rock sound. A little bit bright with the PAF but just keep the highs and presence down and you should be ok. On distortion its vintage all the way. Really good tight lows and chunky mids. Sparkly highs on bright channel really dark tone on normal. I am using a new Sunn/Fender 4-12 with it.

Reliability : No Opinion
Just got amp.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never used

Overall Rating : 9
Haven't been playing for very long and this is my second amp. I spent about 3 years searching for the right amp and finally settled on this. Good amp and you can get any tone under the sun if you add pedals.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $800
Submitted 01/23/2000 at 07:45am by Anonymous

Features : 10
one trick pony.period. this amp is very loud leaving you with two choices if you play clubs- 1) by a power brake, I tried this but found that the tone suffered significantly.2)call doug hoffman at hoffman amplifiers in florida. the guy is a genius. he sells and installs point to point hand wired boards that he can design to the type of sound you want. mine has a master volume mod and a little switch that goes from the standard 60's plexi to unbelievable gain and tone. tone not mud.I've had this amp for 6 years and after several failed attempts to sell it because I couldn't use it because it was too loud, I talked to Doug. This was the best money I've spent on equipment in a long time. for the same amount of money as one of those boutique distortion pedals you can have a work of art.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a '76 les paul, '80 les paul and a '96 prs macarty. with the new board I can play anything from jazz to alice in chains.

Reliability : 10
Very reliable. I change my one tubes and set bias with a multi-meter.In 15 minutes or less I can remove the amp from the cabinet,change tubes , set bias and have the amp back in the cabinet. I also re-check and adjust bias once a month.all it took was a quick lesson from my tech.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/a

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I've been playing for 25 years. I would probably do the same mod with the 50 watt.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $550.00
Submitted 01/21/2000 at 06:02pm by J.L.
Email: frayed_static at hotmail<dot>com

Features : 6
From what I was told this is a '96. It has all the controls on it I need. There isn't anything on it that wont be used. Just basic as can be... but enough to do the job very well in my opinion.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using an American Standard strat with a SD hotrail in the bridge position. So far I've just been using the higher input on the 2nd channel because to me it's warm as hell... compared to my other amp.
I like a bit of a sludgy sound... but I would'nt even call it that.
I've just got it so I am experimenting with the small collection of pedals I have. So far I'm favoring the Vintage Rat by Pro-Co for the style I want to play. Where as a Tube Screamer gives more of that vintage rock vibe. I was able to get a good tone out of each pedal I tried within seconds. I've yet to link the two channels together. I plugged into the High input on the bright channel and I was blasted with the brightest thing I've ever heard. Maybe it takes turning it up for it to warm up. This thing has made me quite happy in the whole two days I've owned it.

Reliability : No Opinion
Since I've owned it so short of a time I really have no opinion. From what I've read they are quite reliable. I need to replace the presence pot since it was pinched together somehow and made one of the sides weak. (I broke it off today playing with settings) =(
I'm not too worried about this thing.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No warranty as it is used... But like I said I'm not too worried about this thing. Finding someone to fix something would be a breeze I'm sure.

Overall Rating : 9
I spent night after night reading reviews on amps. I considered Hiwatt, Orange, Green, Sound City, Laney... on and on. I need something loud as hell that will hold up. I never thought I would buy a Marshall but here it is... and I'm very pleased. I think I got what I was looking for at a good price. So it isn't a real Plexi.
Or even an early 70's. All I know is it sounds great to me. I'd suggest this amp to anyone who wants a good, loud, rock sound.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: 1000 (D-Mark)
Submitted 01/15/2000 at 06:54pm by Jan
Email: Jan<dot>Rudolf at t-online<dot>de

Features : 9
4-band EQ,2 volume controls,4 inputs
I can switch the powertubes seperately (25/50/50/100watts), this modification saved my hearing(thank you thomas,great work)
When i see a TSL head i wonder what these guys do with all these nobes, you can overdo things

Sound Quality : 9
WARNING!! Buy some ear plugs bevore using a Plexi !
You must use both channels when playing, using just one is either disgusting(high treble)or muffled(normal);
In combination with a Prescription Electronics Overdriver and a Marshall 1960TV cabinet i get the perfect crunch sound. Generally, using a Germanium overdriver you get the finest vintage sounds (if you want with nasty fuzz)
Both, SLP and 1960TV have a characteristic that pushes higher frequencies(increasing volume in channel 2 should help)
I'm using a Tony Iommy sign.PU on my Les Paul copy since 3weeks (X-mas!).This combination gives me the sound that i dreamed of: forceful but still smooth and warm(being careful with treble)

Reliability : No Opinion
When i bought the amp i had some chinese tubes in it(1991model)so a new set was required. 3 of 4 inputs had interferiences(repair under warranty). Fortunately i knew a marshall-specialist that done the rest(again: Thank you Thomas)

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
This is my first and only tube amp(less money!)and i'm really enthusiastic, although i had a bad start. If you like 60/70 crunch and moderately overdrive this is an opportunity. Some people are using powerbrakes to reduce the volume. In my ear these resistors are taking away the dynamic and attack(I've tested a Marshall PB100)


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $800 Used
Submitted 01/12/2000 at 02:41pm by Steve O''Connor
Email: soconn4 at po-box<dot>mcgill<dot>ca

Features : No Opinion
There is a large degree of personal prefference involved in evaluating the features on this amp. Many people believe that in order to obtain the full range of tones that an amp is capable of producing it is neccessary that it have a lot of tone controls. I disgree for two reasons. 1) Most amp manufacturers use poor components in their circuits such that in adding more controls into the circuit, tone is lost. 2) An amp circuit needs to be very carefully designed to shape its tone through conections to tubes, feedback circuits, transformer selection etc... No one amp should be expected to produce beautiful clean and overdrive tones. With respect to "gain" controls specifically, I believe that people are using them improperly when they use them to control distortion at high settings. A gain nob is effective at raising the signal level of a guitar input when using different guitars (strat vs. les paul). Gain knobs are good to find the point where the preamp will saturate and thereby send the maximum signal to the power amp allowing the power amp to distort. Preamp distortion pales in comparison to power amp distortion and this is in my opinion the primary reason why the majority of people find themselves unsatisfied with amps like the JCM 900s and TSLs. This all said, I am fully satisfied with the features of plexi amps. Their circuits are optimized for power amp saturation which leads to great tone.

Sound Quality : 7
The plexi amp is made to overdrive and it does this well. It can be played clean by turning back the volume on your guitar which maes it very dynamic. At moderate guitar volumes, the amp will sound clean when the attack is light but will break up with heavier picking (Ex. Hendrix: The Wind Cries Mary) The amp also souds very good with fuzzes and overdrives in front of it (Fulltone Pedals will give you the exact Hendrix sound). Driven even harder with distortion pedals and swept mids will allow you to achieve heavy metal sounds. Any overdrive or distortion tone can be achieved through the combination of the plexi with the appropriate pedals.

This amp is very loud and it is of no use turning down the volume knob. The only way to control the volume is by using an attenuator between the amp and cabinet. I use a Power Brake but would not recomend it to others. The THD Hot Plate is by far a superior product.

In terms of sound quality I rate it as a 7. The amp "behaves" just as a like a plexi to in terms of dynamics, feedback, and overdrive, but the actual tone suffers from the effects of poor components (low tolerence resistors and capacitors) and the use of PC Board construction. Hand wired boards constructed of high quality components are fairly inexpensive and improve the tone a lot (avaliable from Hoffman amplification)

Reliability : 9
Perfectly reliable but mae sure that if you're using an attenuator that you turn the amp to stand-by before adjusting the level settings. Otherwise you'll ruin the amps transformer and the attenuator will also suffer.

Servicing can be done by authorized technicians which can be found almost anywhere.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
This amp can achieve the tone of any popular rock band by placing the right pedals in front of it. For example, I was a big Pearl Jam fan when I bought my first amp, a JCM 900. I was never able to achieve the right tone (the greatest prolem being that I was trying to play with low Master Volume settings). My Plexi nails the tone when using a Fulltone Full Drive 2 in front of it and a Clyde Wah. It is deffinately an amp worth owning for anyone who wants to play blues or rock and can play loud where they live.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/12/1999 at 12:39pm by Bill Davis

Features : 10
I bought this amp brand new in 1994. Two channels, volume (1 volume for each channel), treble, midrange, bass, and presence. 2 speaker outputs, 4, 8, and 16 ohm impedence selector. 4 EL34 power tubes, 3 12AX7 preamp tubes. I like simple, straight ahead amps, so this is right up my alley.

Sound Quality : 6
I primarily use a PRS Custom and a Les Paul Standard with this amp. It sounds ok, but not great. I also own an Alessandro Redbone Coonhound and a Callaham EL34 (See my comments on those two), which are both inspired by the old Marshalls (to my ear), and the 1959 SLP does not quite have the tone complexity of those two. Unless you are playing at a stadium, you need to use a power attenuator with this amp. It is the loudest amp I have ever played through. Running it with only two power tubes helps, but you still need an attenuator. This amp has a nice, but not blistering distortion. I use a Klon Centaur to get a little more gain for leads (as I do with the Alessandro). For rhythm, the amp distortion is enough.

Reliability : 10
I have owned this amp for 5-1/2 years, and have not had a problem with it, although I have not used it very much for the last 2-1/2 years. It seems to be well constructed.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to find out.

Overall Rating : 7
This amp is ok. Not great, not terrible. It delivers a nice sound and is good for gigging. I have never played through an original plexi, so I don't know how it compares, but I do know that it takes a back seat to the boutique amps that I own. Still, for the price (I believe I paid around $900) it is a decent amp, and does the job well.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $850
Submitted 11/20/1999 at 10:26pm by James
Email: fl_799 at yahoo<dot>com

Features : No Opinion
This is a follow up to a review I did a few years ago. In fact, my original review should be at the bottom of this page! After living with this amp over the years, I would like to follow up on tubes, settings and tips.

Sound Quality : 10
First of all, the Plexi reissue is a great amp on its own, but to get the most out of this amp, I have tried a few things to make this amp even better. There seems like there is alot of Voodoo engineering concerning this amp and getting a good tone but with some practice, it is easy! First of all, a Marshall Powerbrake or THD hotplate is essental with this amp but all power attenuators will color or "smoke out" the sound and make it different from the natural state of the amp. The degree of coloration increases the more the attenuator "chokes" the amp. I find that a preamp EQ stompbox can solve this problem. The preamp EQ is also essential shape the sound to get Van Halens early tones. I boost the 800-1200 khz levels about 10-12 Db and up the "master" level about +6 db. Try it...you'll love it (hot stuff!). I also mess with a Variac too. The variac takes some of the harshness out of the amp somewhat like the tone you get when you continue playing your guitar while turning off the amp at the same time. I like the 95-100 volt range on the reissue while 90 volts seems to be the magical voltage on my original Plexi. I personally have not had a bit of trouble with my amps whatsoever while using the variac. Tubes are critical and I suggest matched Svetlana el-34 gold tops and Groove tubes 12Ax7 preamp tubes which are quiet and have alittle more gain in them. I have tried every tube imaginable and I have found these tubes to be the best period! The lack of an effects loop can be a problem when you want to turn up and jam but how do you get a reverb/delay out of this amp? I use an effect box (ART FXR elite, or an RP-5), daisy input 1 low level input through the effect box and into high level input 2. This will require some tweeking to get the sound right but the idea here is to dry kill the original signal and send only the delayed (effected) signal to the second input. You can also tweek the level with the "Normal" channel's volume knob cause balance is the key. Like I said, tweeking will be required here but a decent delay and/or reverb can be had using this technique (even though this technique is less than optimial). Otherwise, I have luck using my flangers, phase etc. right in front of the amp. Speakers and cab are essential to this rig and while I love the greenback loaded vintage cabs, the Peavey 5150 cab sounds AWESOME with the Plexi head. I would have never guessed this untill I tried it. The 5150 cab brings in a sizzle and seems to pull more of a hi gain sound from the plexi. Best of all, the 5150 cabs are pretty cheap when bought used. My rig consists of a 5150 head/cab and this Plexi/vintage cab A/B'd so I can switch between 'em on the fly. Although the Plexi is not a high gain amp like the 5150, the lead and chord tones when turned up are inpressive cause this amp does not need 5-6 gain stages to get sweet sustain. Get it? This is a crunch amp which sustains similiar to a hi gain amp and THAT is the magic of the Plexi Marshall! The trick to that sustain and crunch is the tubes, and if you play your amp, these will need to be replaced at regular intervals!

Reliability : 10
The reissue is rock solid. I had ONE problem with a tube socket because my amp tech was rough when replacing a tube and the socket was replaced. So far, I have played this head countless hours (on 10 none the less) over the years with not a peep.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $600 used
Submitted 11/20/1999 at 01:02am by Steve
Email: sao0002 at unt<dot>edu

Features : 3
four band equalizer, two simultanious channels (bright and muddy) that you mix, and mine has a series/parallel tube effects loop that was installed by the previous owner. No features other than that and an ohm selector switch. Pretty much just sheer volume. That's all this amp really needs, though. That's kind of what the amp is made for. I guess the three rating is a little bit misleading.

Sound Quality : 9
This amp is truly one of the best sounds around. At a low volume, the amp isn't very warm, it just has this tight, punchy response that is fairly harmonically rich. The sound is smaller and colder at a low volume. When using the amp with the normal channel on at least 6 and the bright channel on at least five, you'll discover why so many musicians have relied on this amp for a great rock-n-roll sound. It is very bright! The bass, however, is likewise very filled out and extremely "thumping". The sound, as many have described it, is HUGE and meaty. Since it's the power amp that is providing the distortion rather than the preamp, even the most saturated (distorted) tones come out with great clarity. In other words, when this amp is turned up, it creates a most distorted sound. Unlike many modern amps which use preamp distortion, the "Super Lead" can create a very nasty sound but you can hear all the notes. They kind of shimmer and shine in a way. Bottom line, when this amp is run at a low volume, it's nice. When at a high volume, it's tremendous and really beautiful. It's exciting as long as you have earplugs. This thing is a tinnitus machine, so when you crank this monster you need earplugs or a THD Hotplate, which is what I opted for.

Reliability : 7
This amp is probably going to be less reliable than many other amps you could get for the same price. Not to say that it breaks all the time, but I think of Marshalls as Z28 Camero's. You don't buy it for the reliability. You buy it for performance. Mine hasn't had any problems, but I've had other Marshalls and I've come to realize that while they aren't going to break too frequently, they do like to be babied. Take care of these monsters and they will take care of you. They are generally fairly reliable, but if I had to go on the road, I'd get a backup.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to call Marshall.

Overall Rating : 9
Beautiful amp. Sounds great, looks great, and it's a good price. It's really a catch. Just remember to get the THD Hotplate. You'll be happy you did. For what the amp does, it's the best in the catagory. But it is impractical and a one-trick pony. It's freakin' loud, it's freakin' big, and it can't do too much. But it sure does do its job well. I've tried to get the plexi sound without the plexi, but it really doesn't work because it's really hard to simulate power amp distortion from such a bonehead simple amp in a digital pedal or modern amp. Go get one, it's worth it.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/02/1999 at 12:44pm by Ryan
Email: ryans<at>indyorch dot org

Features : No Opinion

Sound Quality : 10
Just for the information of those interested. I've had some pretty good conversations with a Marshall technical spokesman and although he would not give me permission to quote him, I will paraphrase.

He said that Marshall started with over 12 1960s era 100 watt plexi heads. Then, with the help of a team of 5 players headed by Gary Moore narrowed the heads down to 3 which in the players opinion sounded the best.

Because of Gary's intense schedule they were only able to meet with him every 3 months or so to evaluate what they had done with the reissue. They met with Gary for over 2 years until he could not identify the reissue from the original heads by playing them.

The Marshall guy said that there are definite differences in tone between PC board amps and point to point wired amps, but some amps have more of a variance than others. He contends that he has several 1959 heads, one of which was used in the comparisons, but he cannot tell it from the reissue by listening. He says that the differences must exist, but you'd need an electronic measuring device to capture them. He said you can't tell with your ears, and that is as close as Marshall decided they needed to get.

Gary Moore is an incredible player and I encourage anyone who has not heard him to give him a listen and explain to me why Americans venerate SRV and ignore him. He gets unbelievable Marshall tone through a series of genuine vintage Marshall amps. If he really couldn't tell the difference, then I don't know what other argument there can be.

I'm sold, and I'm buying one.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Don't pay over $1,000 for one new, the $14,999 list price is bogus. I saw a used one for $600, but I didn't know. So now, I'm kicking myself.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $775
Submitted 09/20/1999 at 02:11pm by Joe Williams
Email: joewilliams<at>powwowmail dot com

Features : 10
I don't know who this hate mongar is with the temper and attitude, but I don't appreciate his comments about my opinion on my amp. I thought these submissions were to be non-personal. Whoever this guy is is cloggin up the reviews with his idiotistical, self centered, unknowledgable reviews of these real fine pieces of equipment. All of these reviews are submitted with best intentions and now one spoiled sport wants to ruin it all for everybody. Not on my time, or my reviews Mr. Chicken. And who is Brad, and don't refer to me with that name again Mr. Chicken. Brock!

This amp has all the features a respectable guitarist would wish for.

Sound Quality : 10
This amp is superior to everything else on the market. This amp would make Randy Rhodes churn in his grave with the sweet tones. Though I'm sure Mr. Chicken would disagree, as he can't find the roses to smell and cackle at.

Reliability : 10
I would say it is more reliable than a Mercedes SL. Don't refer to the unnamed submission for these reissues. I have been referring to that review as being a review from Mr. Chicken. Brock Brock! All he does is come onto HC and trash reviews and then doesn't have the balls to put his name on his review.

Customer Support : 10
Again, don't listen to Mr. (Brock!) Chicken. I wrench on my own gear.

Overall Rating : 10
This amp is unsurpassing. God only knows why Mr. Chicken is so abusive towaards other reviewers. I can only imagine that he is the one responsible for the badgering of brrichter and myself. Such a shame to have such hatred and feel that one's always right about something, not leaving ones opinions alone, but to trash them as they cannot at all be better than their own personal findings. Mr. Chicken, if you're reading this, please write back you spineless piece of chicken meat if you feel like you have any validity at all. Brock! Brock!! Hey, Mr. Chicken, at least Mr. Chicken is better than Yellow Turkey Face just so ya know.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 09/17/1999 at 04:25am by A real BRIT-not joe "the twit"

Features : 1


First off,if your name is Brad or Joe "nobody wants to bother your dumb-ass"Williams, skip by this one or at least read carefully.One channel head no master volume 4 inputs-2 normal 2 bright volume normal volume bright(parallel)Bass,Middle,Treble and Presence.Printed circuit board construction.(originals hand wired)And by the way,Joe williams,this is how you spell "voila`"And I must correct you about marshall being the "botique" amps competitor,marshall was and is their inspiration!While I thank Jim for making these products in the first place,of course it was Leo Fender's(R.I.P.) designs that inspired Jim.Next time Joe "there seems to be some controversy" Williams,just review the product wether you loved it or hated it and why.("I'm not claiming this is a plexi"? shut-up fool!)Mind your own Fu*#&n'business

Sound Quality : 6
Compared to a real "plexi" this amp is a little disappointing.The general voicing is good classic marshall(good for blues and some "rock") but you would think marshall would keep certain attributes at par with the original(there is no disclaimer about this being a plexi 1.2) The attributes I am reffering to are as follows:Volume-both this amp and its brother the 1987x 50 watt lack the volume that the originals had/have.Not only is it a little quieter,but as reviewer Mr.Joe Williams points out,full volume is reached just after "2" then it becomes more overdriven and more compressed(not very useful considering they made master volumes to give more control over crunch/volume).Originals manage to get to "4" before the volume peaks and when it does compress,the tone is sweeter(not as stiff) than the re-issue.Considering this is a one channel amp I would say these are significant tonal differences.

Reliability : 7
Well they're relatively new (used) and are still available "brand" new.So no,you wouldn't expect to be replacing pots or rewiring the amplifier(so it would be redundant to compare the old to the new)Right Joe?I have never owned one for a great length of time so I can't comment.I gave it a seven as this is what I rate modern marshall devices that I have used for long periods and conversing with local marshall "authorized" amp repair guys.

Customer Support : 8
Marshall is going strong and have local shops providing repair or replacement.

Overall Rating : 6
I have played through this amp with the following guitars and environments:Les Paul,PRS,Tele's,Strats,SG,Ibanez.Rehersal,home,studio the ol'guitar store(s).This amp will give you a good aproximation of a "plexi" though,if you want some convincing AC/DC or early Def Leppard you will have to find a 60'S or 70'S version(and they don't have to be plexi's either believe me,as long as they are non-master volumes)Of course Randy Rhodes used a non master volume,but it is well documented that he augmented his sound with various devices(pedals)Edward Van Halen is the only person on earth who can get the "brown" sound through his fingers-everybody else gets it through their ass.Marshall dual or triple super leads even though they are master volumes,will better approximate a older non-master volume marshall(used market has great prices)


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: AUD $1000 used
Submitted 08/04/1999 at 08:46pm by STRATMAN
Email: fellowel at cryptic<dot>rch<dot>unimelb<dot>edu<dot>au

Features : 10
THIS 100 WATT HEAD WAS MADE IN 1992 AND IS A REISSUE OF THE OLD MARSHALL PLEXI'S AS USED BY THE GREATS, I HAVE HAD 2 OF THE POWER TUBES TAKEN OUT SINCE THEN AND NOW THE AMP IS RUNNING AT 50 WATTS. NOT MUCH VERSATIITY IN THIS BABY BUT THER ARE 4 CHANNELS, BUT THEY CANNOT BE FOOTSWITCHED, THERE ARE FOUR INPUTS EACH HAVING IT OWN UNIQUE TONAL CHARACTER, AND TWO OF THE FOUR CHANNELS CAN BE JUMPED TO EXPAND THE TONAL VARIATIONS FURTHER. NO REVERB, NO TREM BUT IT DOESN'T MATTER THIS AMP IS TONE, TONE, TONE. IF YOU WANT FANCY FEATURES BUY A PEDAL TO DO IT FOR YOU. EVERYONES KNOWS GREAT TONE COMES FROM NOTHING ELSE BUT YOUR GUITAR AND YOUR AMP. PLENTY OF POWER, THIS THING IS LOUD. CAN HANDLE ANY SITUATION. ALL TUBE CONSISTING OF FOUR EL-34'S AND 3 AX7'S.

Sound Quality : 10
I PLAY BLUES MUSIC AND MY MAIN AXE IS A FENDER STRAT LOADED WITH TEXAS SPECIALS. I ALSO PLAY A LES PAUL STUDIO AND A FENDER TELECASTER. MY EFFECTS ARE A VINTAGE TUBE SCREAMER, BOSS DS-1, ELECTRO HARMONICS SMALL-STONE AND A CRY BABY WAH. THIS AMP RETAINS ALL THE NATURAL SOUND COMING FROM MY GUITARS AND THE EFFECTS, IT ONLY ENHANCES THE SOUND AND DOESN'T CHANGE THE TONE THAT AMP PRODUCES. IT CAN BE A LITTLE NOISY WITH SINGLE COILS AND A BIT OF OVERDRIVE, BUT WHAT DO YOU EXPECT. IF YOU WANT AN AMP WITH NO NOISE BUY A CRAPPY DIGITAL AMP WHICH HAS NO TRACE OF DECENT TONE. THIS AMP IS NO.1 AT PRODUCING A BLUESY/ROCK TONE, IT ALL DEPENDS ON HOW YOU USE IT. LISTEN TO A BIT OF HENDRIX, PAGE OR CLAPTON, AND YOU'LL SEE WHAT I MEAN. NOW IF YOU WANT CRYSTAL CLEAN TONE WITH NO BREAKUP READ NO FURTHER AND BUY YOURSELF A FENDER TWIN BECAUSE ONCE THIS THING IS ABOVE 4 IT WANTS TO PARTY, BUT THE NATURAL OVERDRIVE IS NOT SOME MODERN HIGH GAIN THAT ALL THESE SHITTY NEW MARSHALLS PRODUCE, THIS AMPS PRODUCES A MILD CREAMY OVERDRIVES THAT PURRS, ALL POWER TUBE CRUNCH.

Reliability : 10
VERY TRUSTWORTHY AMP, NO NEED FOR A BACKUP. THIS AMP CAN LAUGH ANYTHING OFF.

Customer Support : No Opinion
WOULDN'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT CUSTOMER SUPPORT NEVER HAD TO USE THEM

Overall Rating : 10
I'VE BEEN PLAYING FOR 6 YEARS NOW, I HAD A 1968 FENDER BANDMASTER REVERB WHICH I SOLD, SO I COULD BUY THIS AMP. IF WERE LOST OR STOLEN I WOULD DEFINATLY BUY AGAIN, BUT THIS WON'T HAPPEN BECAUSE IF I SEE ANYONE EVEN GO NEAR IT I'LL RIP THEIR FRIGGAN HEAD OFF, I'VE SEARCHED LOND AND HARD FOR THIS AMP AND NOTHING WILL COME BETWEEN US. I COMPARED THIS AMP OF MY MATES VINTAGE PLEXI AND 3 OTHER PLEXI'S AND SETTLED ON THE REISSUE IT ACTUALLY SOUND JUST AS GOOD AS THE ORIGINALS. I LIKE SIMPLE AMPS, I LIKED MY BANDMASTER BUT AS SOON AS I HEARD THIS AMP IT WAS LIKE I WAS LOST AND THEN FOUND MY WAY HOME, I ACTUALLY PLAY THIS AMP WITH THE ORIGINAL SPEAKERS FROM THE 1968 BANDMASTER AND THE TWO TOGETHER SOUND AMAZING. THIS AMP HAS A CLASSIC TONE TONE AND WHEN YOU PLAY THROUGH IT YOU GET THAT FEELING THAT YOUR PLAYING THROUGH A PIECE OF HISTORY. IT NOT AN AMP FOR EVERYBODY BUT FOR THOSE WHO LIKE THIS KIND OF AMP AND SIMPLICITY THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE. CHAO!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $650
Submitted 07/15/1999 at 01:12pm by Tad Banzuelo
Email: ProTools4 at aol<dot>com

Features : 3
Purple 1959 Plexi R/Issue Super Lead 13 of 30 100Watt El34s 4 input bass / Treble No FX loop, No Master Volume, No verb, No trem One Channel. This LOUD Purple Monster makes heads turn.

Sound Quality : 10
This amp has low noise and and loud signal! Awwww Sheot! It will clean up nice with my US Tele and Big Apple just turn that Vol. knob. Everyone who has played or heard this amp is impressed. This is what a Marshall should sound like. Put a Fender Reverb tank infront of it and Surf your brainz out on 2. Put her on 8 and it's time to rock. It won't get sandy or fuzzly like my Ampeg VL so Metalica fans go else where for tone.

Reliability : 8
Not alot of parts in there and I hear the new Svetlana EL34s sound good. So I'm not worried. i wouldn't bring a spare head if I was brining this along.

Customer Support : 9
Marshall is still around and every tech has seen this on heis bench. Just dont let him put in a Master Volume.

Overall Rating : 9
This thing looks and sounds amazing. If it was any diffrent it wouldn't be as cool. I almost bought a 67 Super Lead but it wouldn't go clean with my tele like this one. I tryed every nice Plxi in LA Orange County. (I must have played 20 at Black Market Music alone) I'd give it a ten. But this thing is heavy and will kill my hearing. So a 9.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $1000
Submitted 02/25/1999 at 08:13am by Felipe Fuentes
Email: datande at ibm<dot>net

Features : 7
Mine is a limited edition from 1997 and it has all what i need, just a volume control and the rest i manage it from the guitar. It came with the cabinet, all great.

Sound Quality : 10
I play it with a gibson flying v and it's really loud. Though i played before 100w marshall valvestate amps, you can't compare this amp with a 100w valvestate. When you plug the guitar in the treble channel and turn the volume control to 10, you get a really nice natural distortion with feedback and all the things i like. But if you don't like the distortion of the treble channel you have a fat channel, or you can link channel 1 with channel 2. This, boost the natural sound of the amp. The only problem is the presence control, because at 10 makes a disgusting noise.

Reliability : 9
I would use it every time i play, practising, live, etc. But because of the tubes, this amp can have some tube problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Didn't deal with them............yet. For me, a 6 months warranty.

Overall Rating : 10
This is the one i like, i didn't compare other products. The sound is cool, everything is cool and if i ever have the money for other, i would buy it again.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 09/15/1998 at 01:15am by Anonymous

Features : 2
No master volume, no channel switching,and no effects loop. Just extremely loud, beautiful tone.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using a variety of guitars with this amp but mostly a 1962 strat.I play mainly hard rock and blues and for that this amp is the ultimate. The firt time i plugged in i was skeptical as to whether it would deliver, but after a second my skeptisism was destroyed.......and so were my ears!!!!!! This is the loudest amp i have EVER heard, not to mention the most brutal tone known to man. The tone is just absolutly amazing! In my opinion this amp is in a class all it's own, NOTHING can compare

Reliability : 10
Built like a rock. would use without backup. never broken down. Might want to change the tubes about twice a year, depending on how hot you run it.

Overall Rating : 10
If you are willing to throw down the cash for this thing do it. I have been playing for 15 years and have never heard such power. if lost or stolen i would buy it again but i plan to buy another one regardless. This is not like a fender amp where you turn it up and it maxes out on like 6 or 7, you keep turning it up and it never really maxes out, it's scary. once you turn it up to ten(if you have the balls to) it will kick in to this amazing overdrive that is just plain evil.this is not a jazz amp or a country amp or anything even close to that it is pure rock and blues .if you want to sound like hendrix,jimmy page or clapton in the days of cream than this is the amp for you....if you can handle that much power.I'll put it this way if you want tone that sounds like you just opened the gates of hell buy it.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $375.00 used
Submitted 06/03/1998 at 04:18pm by K. Romanov
Email: brynas<at>ix dot netcom dot com

Features : 4
Lets see: No master volume, no half power switch, no effects loop, no PA output, no gain knobs, no footswitching between channels, no reverb or tremolo.
At times I wish they had made this a reissue of a SLT. This head has loads of tone. I use it at gigs and at practice.

Sound Quality : 9
It's a little noisy when driven by my '61 Les Paul Spec (P-90's), but I think that guitar has a ground problem.
I'm trying to achieve a late 60's tone with this amp. Something in the range of Cream. I pulled two of the power tubes out of the chassis as the amp is just to damn loud. I was not able to get the desired tone when all 4 tubes were installed. I'm now able to turn the beast up to 8 on channel 2 and 6 on channel 1. I use a "Y" cord into the head. Plugging into the low input on channel 1 and the high input of channel two. I set the presence to 6/8, bass to 8/10, mid to 5/10 & treble to 5/10.
This amp does not sound quite as good as the real thing. I'd say the tone is more like a post 70' amp rather than a 68' or earlier.
Made a few mods to the guts... Installed a POT in the NFB resistor position... Works for me, allows quick changes between the std. 47k to 100k for a little more punch (when needed). Will also be adding necessary pots to make biasing a much easier process.

Reliability : 10
No problems...

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't needed it as of yet...

Overall Rating : 8
This amp is a winner... One bad thing, the Tolex is pealing in most of the corners.


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 02/27/1998 at 07:47pm by Stephen

Features : 5
This is amp is THE rock guitar amp in my opinion. Although it doesnt have any real extragravant features (channel switching etc) you can pretty much get any tone you want using your guitars volume control, switching pickups, etc.

Sound Quality : 10
Simply put, this thing OVERFLOWS with tone. I actually have the 94 Purple limited-edition one, with the extra tall bottom cabinet. Both cabinents have the 25w "Greenback" Celestion speakers. I think they sound the best in my opinion. I also have a Marshall 4x12 with Vintage 30's in it, and they are harsher sounding than the greenbacks. The tone is fantastic, with ablility to go to creamy smooth overdrive (think neck p/u) to raging full-tilt power chords, to very clean and chimey, just by varying your volme knob, attack and touch. I am using the amp with a PRS McCarty model, which doesnt particulary have high-ouput pickups. However, almost any guitar sounds great through it. Strats can be a little bright, put this can be rectified with rolling off more treble. The only real problem is, the amp is UNBELIVEABLY LOUD. You have to use a powerbrake unless you are playing at Madison Square Garden or something. This amp will wail over ANYTHING, I dont care if its a Dual Rectifier or whatever. Also, I would like to mention that the re-issue compares very favorably with the orginal amp, i have a '73 model as well, and I would say the re-issue is about 95 percent as good, which is pretty darn good!!

Reliability : 10
Never had a problem at all. Replace the power tubes about once a year, and you should have years of awesome tone!

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing 10 years, generally play blues/rock, but with some BALLS. Although just for kicks, will play some hard-rock/metal at times. I also have a Jubilee 100w, which is also a fine amp, but it doenst really compare with the Super Lead in my opinion. I like lots of other amps too, AC30's, Super Reverbs, etc, but I prefer the power and balls of the Marshall. Every rock player in the world owe himself/herself to try out one of these and..."you will see the light!" Just bring some earplugs!


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $799
Submitted 09/11/1997 at 03:40pm by L. Dale Walter

Features : 5
The main feature of this amp is that it provides pure tone. There are 4 channels, but switching them is accomplished by unplugging the guitar from one imput, and plugging it into another (is short, non-switchable). No effects loop, no headphone jack, nothing to get in the way of your sound. Basic volume and tone controls.

Sound Quality : 10
The sound. THE Sound. OH MY GOD THE SOUND! As you turn this amp up, it doesn't get louder as much as it gets fuller. It is like going from a quartet to a symphony as you roll on the power. Rich and full, with bass that thumps and treble that sings. I am using the head with 1960 Vintage cabs with "Vintage 30" 70 watt Celestrons.
My band plays mostly originals, in a very 'heavy' style. My guitar playing is very percussive (lots of palm muting for rythym playing) and this amp picks up every innuendo of my playing. We have been described as "Queen meets Aerosmith and gets mugged by Kiss" stylistically.
As for variety, the amp goes from clean to Marshall crunch and that is about it. If you want to have the amp do everything, this is not the amp for you. What I want from an amp is pure tone, and I'll color it from the front (I play with a Rocktron VuDoo Valve).
Distortion has never been an issue, as I have never got it loud enough to distort. At 3 it is deaffening. At 7 It will cause pain in people 400 feet away, through 2 sets of walls.
Guitar wise I am using 3 Les Pauls (Standard with stock pickups, Classic with Duncan Screamin' Demon at the bridge and Alnico II Pro at the neck, and a Custom with Classic 59's) and 2 BC Rich (Both with Dimarzio Tone Zone at the bridge, Lil' 59 at neck in one, Air Norton in the other) The fatter PAF style pickups at the neck are thunderous with this amp. Bridge pickups can sound a little bright, but this can be handled with a little tweaking.

Reliability : 10
Been using it regularly for 8 months without a single hitch.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with the company. Warranty is 5 years.

Overall Rating : 9
I -might- buy it again. I love the amp, but it is powerful as all get out. I could play stadiums with this rig. I just bought a 1987 Plexi Reissue, and am going to try the 50 watt version of what is basically the same amp for a while. Preliminary testing says that the 50 Watt is going to be PLENTY loud. Having all of that headroom is great, but it may just be too much. Our Bass player is running a 400 watt head into 2 4x10 Eden cabs and he has trouble being heard if I turn it up above '4'.
The pure tone is the reason for this amp. Put a Les Paul through the 1959 SLP and a 1960 Vintage 4X12 and you will swear it is the voice of God. I played the JCM series amps, and they sounded tinny and limp next to this tone monster. The sound is thick, full, and rich. For me, it is the sound I want. Listen for yourself and try it out before you buy. This sound is not for everyone, and 100 Watts is a TON of power. Seriously consider the 1987 Plexi 50 Watt if you like the sound, and aren't planning on playing stadiums...


Product: Marshall 1959 SLP Reissue
Price Paid: US $750
Submitted 01/25/1996 at 11:30pm by James Lonano

Features : No Opinion
Features on this amp? How about tone, the missing link on virtually modern designs. This amp has gobs of pure POWER AMP EL-34 tone. Sorry, no 1000 presets, footswitches, or gimmicks. This amp has it where it counts.

Sound Quality : 10
These reissue Marshall's compare perfectally with my other original '67 100 watt head. The new reissues have "BALLS". Awesome harmonic content that responds to the players touch. Hey, these amps get a beautiful clean sound great when you bridge the terble and normal channels at lower settings. You want Page, Van Halen, Hendrix. . . any of the great tones are easy to get with these amps. The distortion is fluid,sustaining,perfect and in your face. This is tone man, not the buzzy preamp stuff here OK. Only pure power tube heaven. This amp takes on a life of its own with a good 'Paul, stock Stratocaster, or a floyd style hot rod strat.

Reliability : 10
The new reissued have been modified as far as plate voltages to keep reliability. This does not effect the sound in the least. I use this thing 15 hours a week for 6 months without a problem. With this amp, you really need the Marshall Powerbrake to take advantage of this amps heart of gold. Speaker Cabs are as important as the head itself. Dont even think about using a JCM 300 watt cab with these guys. High watt Celestions are TOO efficient and sound brash with these amps. I've always had excellent results with Celestion 25,30,35, or the 60 watt "vintage" 30's.

Overall Rating : 10
Folks, these amps have made history. There is no better amp head out there than the original JTM 45's, and 50 & 100 non-master volume Marshalls or the early Fenders and Voxes. As guys like Aspen Pittman or Ritchie Fleigler will tell you, "You havent played guitar unless you played through one of these".

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