Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
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Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: USD 630
Submitted 05/10/2009
at 11:47am
by Phil Keat
Email: pakala<at>aol dot com
Features
:
5
(Read the other reviews. Nothing's changed since the JC-77 is no longer in production.)
Sound Quality
:
8
I bought the original JC-120 when it came out in 1979(???). I was playing acoustic guitar in those days and for its time, the JC-120 was the only amp produced that you could put an acoustic guitar thru and still have a workable sound. I used it only in performance as a monitor and using the FOH speakers for the audience. The chorus was really cool in it's day. But the JC-120 was a heavy amp to lug around. So when the smaller 2X10" JC-77 came out, I bought it (1994). By then I was largely only playing electric (1976 Tele Custom). While its twin 10"s don't have as much of the fullness & bottom end of the JC-120, it still sounds pretty good for clean playing...and it is relatively light to carry. It's a trade off. The JC-77 is much quieter than the original JC-120. The chorus on the JC-120 added enough hiss to make it unusable for recording. Roland had improved the SNR of the chorus by the time the JC-77 came out. I sold the JC-120 and have kept the JC-77 to this day. I recently loaned it to a guitarist heading an Alt. Emo band and he loved it and wants to buy it from me. Easy to carry and has about 80% of the good sound of its larger brother. JC-77s are hard to find now, so I'll probably keep it. If I blow the speakers I'd replace them with JBL's that were the speakers of choice for a strong clean sound in the 70s & 80s. The distortion is somewhat whimpy and unimpressive so I've always used floor pedals to get the distortion sounds I like. That way I can keep the JC set for a nice clean sound and can tailor my distortion options to what I want.
Reliability
:
10
Mine is 15 years old and still works perfectly. Never had anything break on it. But I take care of all my equipment. I don't roll my amps over bumpy sidewalks or leave them in my car trunk. Corrosion for prolonged exposure to outside air will kill any amp, but far worse on an amp that uses circuit boards. Take care of your stuff and it will outlast you!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed it.
Overall Rating
:
8
This is a fine amp for clean guitar playing. It puts out what you put in with little coloration. In ingorance, some people try to make it into something it isn't and are consquently unhappy with it. It is essentially a smaller more portable version of its larger brother the JC-120. It works just fine in genres where instrument distortion is not the primary focus such as country, jazz, world, Hawaiian, etc.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: USD 86 USED
Submitted 02/15/2009
at 11:26pm
by dfgdfgdf
Features
:
6
Great Tone. Classic tube sound. Distortion is horrible though. I use a Boss Metal Zone through it.
Sound Quality
:
10
Awesome sound. I play in a grindcore/metalcore band and for the description, it makes a suprisingly taunting sound with the chorus.
Reliability
:
10
I've had it for about two years ands its worked fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Huh?
Overall Rating
:
10
10/10 find jo self one
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/20/2008
at 06:15pm
by Mike Kosir
Email: michaelkosir<at>hotmail dot com
Features
:
No Opinion
Already stated. Mine didn't come with the three-button foot switch, so if anyone has schematics for building one, I'd appreciate knowing.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
I'm using this with two guitars, one a 1980 Ibanez AS200 and the other is an old Vantage I refretted and put in a couple of DiMarzio's.
I play a wide range of music, so I can find a sound I want.
I have two issues with this amp, and am looking for suggestions if anyone cares to write. First, it's noisy, not anything you'd hear in a gig, but it hisses enough to want to do something about it. Has anyone had this problem, is it treatable, and how? I don't mind opening it up and doing it myself if I knew what to do.
Second, the reverb sounds like a tin can. Would replacing the spring with a heavier one make a difference? Or do I have to go with a whole new unit? This is a backup amp, so I don't want to have to drop too much cash on it, because other than these two things, it's fine. Tone isn't warm, but not bad. This is a backup for a tube amp anyway
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Haven't had this for long, but no problems with other Roland products.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Wrote them once, they were quick to respond.
Overall Rating
:
7
This rating, for now. Apart from these issues, I'd say a strong 8.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: ?? 100 USED
Submitted 02/23/2008
at 09:43am
by Great Ape
Email: conwap<at>gmail dot com
Features
:
6
Made in the 1980's?
Primarily use this for African guitar styles and funk.
Never use the distortion. Has been stated in a guitar mag as sounding like 'your granny's rear end after a ruby' (ruby murray = curry; Cockney rhyming slang).
With a strat, it has plenty of headroom.
Sound Quality
:
7
Suhr Classic w/classic FL's - EB volume pedal - crybaby - MI Audio BBD OR Reverend DT2 - Boss TU2 - amp.
I need the headroom for funk, so that bit is good. Could use more warmth, but that'd be what valve amps are for.
Can be noisy but at gig levels, you don't notice it.
It's a utilitarian piece of kit. Not going to win any tone trophies, but it does the job with some aplomb.
Brings out the strat 'out of phase' sounds well.
Had the opportunity to try it against a Cube60 the other day. Sounds warmer than the Cube. Punchier. I like the 10" sound, though...
Reliability
:
9
Well, I got it for a song a few years back, because it needed some TLC. Reverb was busted. Hissed a lot. ??30 later at the tech, and things were back to normal. Has been fine ever since, and it's had some rough treatment. More than I can say for my Traynor ycv40, which has had about half the playing time, has been babied, and constantly needs repairs.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A - used.
Overall Rating
:
8
Playing since 1989.
Also have a Traynor ycv40, a Takamine EAN60C nylon, Washburn dreadnought and a Fender AM Dlx strat with a bad truss rod. Various pedals inc. boutique and non-boutique. (Can anyone recommend a good funk wah that doesn't pop eardrums, BTW?)
What do I love about it? It's a no-frills, reliable gig workhorse. Drop it, and it keeps going. Sounds much better than many more recent SS amps. Gives you Twin-esque headroom without the back-breaking weight.
Would rather have this than some of the lesser valve amps out there, like a budget Randall.
Basically, the score is this: you can fetishize gear to the point where it's all you worry about, or you can get stuff that fulfils your needs. This doesn't sound as good as a Carr or Dr Z, but it fulfils its role. I keep coming back to it when all else (literally) fails. For that alone, I've gotta big it up.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: USD 200.00 USED
Submitted 01/14/2008
at 10:52am
by DC
Features
:
8
Solid state combo amp, single channel, 80 watts (40 per speaker), 2x10" speakers, 4 band EQ (Low, Mid, Treble, Hi Treble), built in distortion, stereo chorus and spring reverb. The three effects are foot switchable. Stereo line out.
Mine is a classic 80's model. I bought it used about 6 years ago.
The JC-77 was discontinued and replaced with the current model JC-90, which is almost identical as far as I can tell.
Sound Quality
:
9
First off, look at the name: Jazz Chorus. This is not a "rock and roll amp" and will not sound like a cranked Fender or Marshall, so please dont expect it to. You can use pedals to get just about any sound you want, though. By itself, what this amp excels at is clean, and chorused clean sounds. The clean is rich and full bodied and not brittle sounding (unless you go overboard on the treble. I leave mine at about 3). With the four band EQ, you can dial in a wide range of tones, especially using the dual treble controls. I can't comment on the stock reverb, it was broken when I bought the amp. I replaced it with an Accutronics tank, which sounds excellent.
The chorus is, like everybody says, the best there is. It is beautiful and transparent, it doesnt muddy up your tone like most chorus effects I have used. There is a Fixed setting, and a Manual setting with Speed and Depth controls. The speed will not go super fast, so you cant get a heavy vibrato type sound out of it.
Which brings me to the most maligned feature of the Jazz Chorus line, the built in distortion effect. I agree that when fully cranked it is a fine example of nasty, solid state "distortion". However, if kept below 4, it adds a nice bit of overdrive effect to the sound which is really not bad. Using a footswitch, you can kick this in at will to get a slightly dirtier sound. Or, just use your own distortion pedal and ignore it completely. I use a Tube Driver in front of it and it smokes.
This amp is quite loud for being so small and portable (less than 40 lbs). It does lack some bottom end, with the 10" speakers in an open backed cab. I am planning on trying some different speakers, to see if I can get some more bass out of it. It is still plenty loud for gigging jazz, country, reggae, world beat type music. Also sounds good with an acoustic electric or keyboard running through it.
Reliability
:
8
It's solid state and I can't see anything going wrong, it's built like a tank. I bought this used, and the previous owner was in one of the top show bands in town. It has been around the block a few times. The pots were very dirty and the amp was covered in dirt and beer stains. I cleaned the pots and the tolex and now it works like a champ and looks sharp. The spring reverb had a broken spring (fairly common I think) and I replaced it myself with an Accutronics. The amp was missing the casters, but its not that heavy, I dont miss them really.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never dealt with Roland, but I have a ton of their gear. None of it has ever broken.
Overall Rating
:
9
I have been playing over 30 years, I own too much gear to list. I play everything from rock and blues to ambient and world beat stuff. Like most people, I prefer tube amps, but there is something cool about the Roland JC amps. They have their own sound, a great full sounding clean that no tube amp can really compete with (except maybe my Twin Reverb), plus the built-in chorus is second to none. Very transparent amp and sounds great with pedals in front of it. Good to have one in your arsenal of amps, plus no tubes to maintain.
I am not really a "jazz guitarist" but if I was, this is the only amp I would need. The JC-77 is small, portable and LOUD. I only paid $200 for mine and it's a keeper. If stolen I would get another if I could find one.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: USD 200 USED
Submitted 04/26/2007
at 03:01pm
by Jason
Features
:
8
Pretty well covered previously. Two inputs, one for high gain one for low applications. Really handy if you want to use dual output effects, such as a delay/echo. I run the mono channel into the low input and the dry output to the high. Gives it a subtle delay effect, really thickens things out. Has about the best chorus I've ever heard already built in. Rarely ever get the volume on this thing above 3 or so. The distortion is pretty well useless, but if you're looking at an amp called a "Jazz Chorus" that shouldn't matter too much to you. FX loop would have been nice.
Sound Quality
:
9
Like I said the distortion is pretty useless. In my experience its much harder to find a clean-sounding solid state. You can slap any pedal in front of it to make it sound however you want, but they don't make a "Clean guitar sound" pedal. Hard to make the clean channel distort unless you're in the "High" input. I've only ever played an Epi Les Paul through it with stock pickups, and it also sounds fantastic with my Ibanez Acoustic Electric. I've read about a hiss with these amps, but I honestly never hear it make ANY noise, unless its coming from other effects in the chain. Straight from the guitar to the amp, this thing is quiet as they come.
Reliability
:
10
I've never had any problems with it. Replaced the fuse when I first bought it. It's pretty solid. The corner bindings are plastic, and I wish they were metal, but they haven't cracked or anything yet.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know. Bought it used and have yet to have problems with it. Not sure about Roland's reputation in this area.
Overall Rating
:
9
Been playing for eight years now. Great thing about this amp is the crystal clean sound and the chorus. Absolutely sparkles. Then put a compressor in front of it, a decent overdrive pedal and you can't go wrong. Probably be pretty difficult to find again if it were stolen or lost, but if I saw one I'd probably snag another.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 01/31/2007
at 12:33pm
by Tomas
Features
:
10
If you're reading this you already know the features. A big plus was that mine came with the FS3. It has everything you need in this kind of amp.
Sound Quality
:
10
The sound of a jazz chorus is unmistakeable. My 15 year old son was walking by as I was playing and he stopped to see what was going on. I asked why and he said "it sounds different than usual". I have some nice vintage Fender tube amps and what I think are some pretty nice effects, yet still, with only the JC and a tele, it sounded different that I have ever sounded. That says it all. Nothing sounds like a JC. Yes, it hisses and pretty noticeably. I have read different things in reviews. Some say you can fix it, others say you can't. Maybe I'll bring it into the shop one of these days. For a few bucks it may be worth it.
I disagree with all the reviews about the distortion. Well, not necessarily disagree, but just have a different view of it. As distortion, it sucks. However, I still find it very workable and easy to fit in to my playing. It beefs things up a bit and from 0 to 5, it really doesn't compromise clarity all that much. It just seems to round things out. The chords still ring out and the chorus still does it's thing, but the volume is kicked up a bit and it just sounds fuller, which is important with the 10" speakers. So all the reviews that talk about the poor distortion, this thing was not made for distortion. Maybe if it was called a fat switch or some other such nonsense people would feel differently about it and the word "distortion" wouldn't be there to cloud their judgment. I find it works better on manual setting than fixed, with rate from 0 to 5 and depth at 2-3.
Reliability
:
10
From the 80's and has held up fine so far. I can see it lasting forever. I would depend on it and gig without a backup (if I don't use a backup for my tube amps, why would I need one for this)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I would definitely replace it. As I said above, nothing else sounds like a JC. Aside from the hiss, or if somebody got a lemon, I don't know how anybody can find fault with a JC if they know what they're looking for and what they're getting into. It kills me when almost every review I read says "not good for metal" Yeah, no crap it's not for metal. I haven't read any reviews for triple recto-whatevers, but do those all say "really not good for jazz improv, way too much drive". This amp is what it is and for what it does, there's nothing better. I have also played a JC 120 and it sounds very similar to the 77. I can't talk abut the other JC's and how they sound, compared to the 120, but in the 77, I basically have a 120 with less volume (yet still plenty to play all but the biggest venues) and far less weight.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: USD 375 USED
Submitted 07/18/2006
at 03:39pm
by myfyne
Features
:
8
I guess it's been covered here before, bit I'll just do it again. This amp has 2 inputs (hi and lo), 4 eq knobs (bass, middle, treble and hi-treble), a distortion, reverb and chorus. The chorus has two knobs for width and dept. You can switch between a fixed chorus setting and a 'manual' position, which lets you dial in your own setting. 2x 10" speakers. According to information from Roland this particular amp was made in 1984. It could use a headphone output and an effects loop though.
Sound Quality
:
9
I bought this amp to check out it's clean sound. All I can say is this amp's a keeper! I just love the clean sound of it. This amp can be turned up very LOUD, without and it won't distort the signal. The chorus is absolutely wonderful! Even the preset one. The reverb unit is not really my cup of tea, but I don't use reverb anyway. The on board distortion rather sucks. That doesn't bother me either, since I use overdrive pedals instead. So if you're looking for an amp to play metal or hardcore, I guess this is not your thing. But other than that, I love it. I don't like to give 10s on sound, partly because of the crappy distortion, so I'll make it a 9.
Reliability
:
10
As far as I know it has never failed during its 22 year life span. And I expect it to stand the test of time a lot longer. All the parts seem to be very solid. Definately an amp you can rely on.
Customer Support
:
10
I emailed Roland Europe with a couple of questions concerning this amp. They were very helpful. So I guess that justifies a 10.
Overall Rating
:
8
This amp is not suitable for everyone. If you're after a good crunchy amp, this one might dissapoint you. But considering my own wishes, I'm pretty satisfied with it. I usually play songs which kinda resembles Radiohead/Smashing Pumkpins/Cure/PJ Harvey (in an indie rock band). Also, I play guitar in a sort of alt.country band. And it really fits both jobs! My usual setup is a Fender Jazzmaster, connected to a Boss TU-2, DM-3, DC-2 and BD-2, and a Fuzz Factory. Sometimes i switch to an Epiphone Les Paul. I'm really keen on getting a nice tone, and at the moment the JC-77 gives me exactly what I'm looking for. Plus it's rather lightweight and easy to carry around.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: 12000 ? used
Submitted 06/01/2006
at 08:54pm
by peaceful
Email: peaceful_70<at>msn dot com
Features
:
10
It's Made in Japan 1989..I've played Jazz And Blues Rock.It's Enough for me.
It's 2 Channels(High and Low).No loops.It's Enough for All styles.I Guranteed.
Sound Quality
:
10
My Guitar,Gibson Lespaul 1982 and Fender Tele 72' thinline Mex 2001.
It's Make a good sound.Clean and Clean if you want it ,enough for all clean that I've ever heard.And You'll find a Original Classic Chorus too.Some future's too bad,Distortion,I've never touch it.I use pedal to it.This Amp's something about clean and loud.It's Perfect for me.I think it better than JC-120 and JC-90 that I used to play.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
mine's too old to get a warranty.
Overall Rating
:
10
All is Best for You Guys Good Luck with it.Plug And Play.Bye
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $350.00
Submitted 12/17/2005
at 08:31am
by Roger
Features
:
9
I purchased the Roland Jazz Chorus 77, with my Gibson L4,Back in 1987,
I can say that I've played just about every style of Music, Including Classical, For the Smooth sound, And a 87 Strat USA, Gibson LP Studio, And it's Great For all Genre's of Music, It's not the best, But hey, it's lite in weight, has wheels, Don't have to carry a head and a Cab, If you're doing club work, And like someone else said, I've Played a Fender 65 Standard Bass with it, To save space when traveling, I give this amp a 9, 'For it's realiablity, And quality, Have used the Hell out of it, And never had to get it repaired once, Like my Peavey's ETC. I also do Old Style Rock Gigs, "Perfect," for that sound, What more do you want? I paid about $350.00 in NYC, 48th St. And I would purchase another one again, for studio use.
Roger/NYC.
Sound Quality
:
9
Very Clean, And has excellent reverb, for Rock leads, Unless you're going to play Punk,
Reliability
:
10
Very Reliable, Own it for 18yrs purchased it brand new, Used the Hell out of it, Never a repair, Great Amp.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I don't know,' I never needed any customer support.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing since 1963 and before that, I've played and own and still own Gibson L4, Les Paul standard, Fender Strat USA, And I would definitely would purchase it again, If it's in Exc Cond.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $270 used
Submitted 10/25/2005
at 01:11pm
by T Johnson
Features
:
10
Not sure of exact year; however, were made between 86-91'.
The amp I find is extremely versatile amp to play any style of music.
One channel amp, how many do you need.
The amp is solid state80 watts and can be loud loud or quiet.
The JC 120 has a fuller sound due the 2-12 over 2-10 inch speakers however for 90% of what you may need this amp will cover it. Unless you are playing outdoor parks and huge venues you won't need the 120.
Very tweakable tone controls. Hight treble, Treble, Mid, and low.
Reverb is great and chorus is outstanding.
Distorition is ok and raw. I find the distortion underrated read section on sounds. for full features down load a manual from www.rolandus.com
Sound Quality
:
10
I use single coil, P-90 and humbuckers on hollowbodies and strats.
I play jazz mainly and this amp is perfect for clean tone and very tweakalbe, especially with the extral high treble control.
The distortion is mild at best but you buy one of these amps for the clean sound. It won't break up until you really turn up the volume.
You can get just about any distorition you want from pedals so I buy an amp for the clean channel first. Therefore I have clean distortion when I want it. MOst tone is matter of opinion I don't mind the raw distortion that amp provides. At 3 you can emulate that tube amp attak when playing the blues. I can get clean tone and when I strike or strum harder it breaks up just enough for a bluesy sound.
Reliability
:
10
Very reliable, parts are still available and most areas have an authorized roland repair shop.
My used amp is over 10 years old and in perfect condition. This amp has held up very well.
Customer Support
:
10
Very reliable, parts are still available and most areas have an authorized roland repair shop.
Overall Rating
:
10
Ok, Here is the deal. Tone is from the player and I find too much emphasis is placed on equipment. You can tweak guitar and amp tone controls to almost any specs you want the thing is you will still sound like you with the best gear in the world. Find your sound and buy the amp that will best suit 90% of the playing you will want to do. I baught this amp for the clean sound. As other reviews have said these are the cleanest solid state amps on the market. The older ones are better then the new ones but very little difference in sound just cheaper parts. Love that clean sound. Best chorus on the marke who do you think makes boss chorus pedals but Roland. This amp as true sterao chorus. I have played for over twenty years and have liked these amps since I tried one in 86'. I like the 2-10 model for it portablility over the JC-120 61lb beast or a twin reverb 68lb tube monster. I tried just about all new solid state and tube amps on the market and still went back and baought a used JC-77. Nothing came close to the clean unless you wanted to spend 800 plus for class A 1-12 or 2-12 combo.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $40.00 used
Submitted 06/26/2005
at 06:11pm
by Elmo Saxon
Email: elmosaxon at webtv<dot>net
Features
:
9
Like with all of the other reviews here; ultra-clean sound, sucky distortion, good reverb, heavenly chorus. It was most likely built in the '80's. I use it both in rehearsal and live.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is where it gets weird. For the first ten years of owning this amp it was in the rental inventory at my prop house or it was being used within my band as back-up for a problematic Fender Twin or sometimes as a keyboard amp then about five years ago we moved to a new rehearsal site and forgot to bring a PA so I plugged a mic into it and have been SINGING and playing brass through it ever since! The rest of the band is constantly saying "Wow...how did you get your voice to sound like that?" Mostly we play Capt. Beefheart, Zappa, some Alice Cooper and the JC-77 makes it sound amazingly like the vocals on the record when we're doing The Rutles "Cheese & Onions"and it's unequaled when I'm using throat sounds to emulate synthesizers, oscilators, tone generators or even a theremin. Of course playing live there's always a lengthy discussion with the house sound tech trying to get him to understand why we want to mic a guitar amp that's being sung through rather just singing through a house mic but generally at the end of the night during load-out they'll come up and say "That Roland's got a great chorus and it sounded like you had more horns onstage."
Reliability
:
10
Absolutely no problems - EVER with this JC77!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I bought this amp 15 years ago and would replace it immediately if it was no longer in my life. Speaker outs would be a nice addition. If you look closely you can see it in "Mr. Holland's Opus".
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $350 used
Submitted 05/01/2005
at 11:06am
by Guthrie
Email: gallen<at>triwest dot net
Features
:
8
This Roland masterpiece comes fully loaded with Chorus, Distortion, and Reverb. The reverb is splendid but it's splendidness does not exceed the awesomeness of it's distortion. The chorus is great. I usually use it on fixed but only because I do not have the mad skills of being able to dial in a good manual rate and depth. The volume knob is awesome. If it surpasses 2, your windows are garaunteed to shake. I play in my garage and the tools on the walls shake at 3. It's definitely loud enough. It's too loud for headphones and unfortunately, my line out doesn't work. But I did buy it used.
Sound Quality
:
10
I usually have the treble either cranked or barely there to get a real nice blues/Beatles tone. I play punk/indie rock and the distortion for it is awesome. The chorus also adds a nice touch. Again, the volume is intense. But it is great for gigs.
Reliability
:
9
Mine comes fully rigged with brackets. I'm so glad they have them because the amp is light as hell. I doubt it ways over 30-40 pounds. I like the wheels anyways because the weight dispurtion is off centered. So if you have to lug it around it's slightly awkward. Mine's never broken in the 5 days I've had it and it's never been repaired. Definitely dependable.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Not needed it yet.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for 4+ years and I use a Gibson SG with it. It sounds great from my standards. Well enough that I'm going to use to record. If it were stolen, I would definitely buy it again. It's trusty and dependable and loud as ****. I wish the line out on my worked but it's great as is. I prolly wouldn't need it if it had it in the first place.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: $100 (New Zealand) used
Submitted 03/22/2005
at 03:19am
by Rewa
Features
:
7
Had my JC 77 for over ten years. Bought it off another member of our band who had it for about ten or more years.I play mainly rock, country, jazz, reggae, gospel and ethnic stuff, live and session work occassionally. It has hi & lo inputs, single channel; distortion/ volume/ hi treble/treble/mid/bass and reverb knobs plus chorus with switching for manual and fixed and a rate and depth knob. Out the back- inputs for switches for-chorus/reverb/distortion. Also L & R line outs. Studs along the edges.
I would have liked a send and return, and, like many of the other reports...a headphone jack!!Never use distortion and the reverb springs have seen better days, but the chorus,,,one of the best I've used.Heaps of volume and easy to lug about.Would have only given it a 3 rating but deserves more for the clarity.
Sound Quality
:
6
With this amp I've only used a USA standard Fender Strat and an Ovation legend deep bowl with bridge pickups. The JC77 will pick up interference if there is enough of it about but I have no problems otherwise. I like the volume, never have to wind it up to full for my style of playing, great chorus, nice clean sound, but never use the reverb or distortion and lacks punchy bass sounds when playing live so I line out through a Rockit 150 head and a 115 bin, gives me bass punch while the JC gives me treble.
Reliability
:
9
Apart from the reverb springs floppin about and the wires to the springs always breaking off, I, or the previous owner have never taken it to be fixed. The Roland badge on the front has dropped off some time ago but the rest of this rig looks just like it has just come out of the factory.I have used this amp as a backup and would not us any other amp to back it up. The pots are clear and never been cleaned and the sound is crystal clear at any setting.Would have given a 10 if not for the reverb. Can't be bothered repairing the reverb as I use a digi verb now.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never needed one in 10 - 20 years
Overall Rating
:
7
I have been playing since the middle 60's. Owned many common guitars since the 60's and a lot of amps but now only have an 1981 Ovation Legend, USA Standard Fender Strat, Custom made Ibenez Blazer Series , Aria Pro 2 FS series and a Fernandes Bass limited edition. Apart from the Ovation which had bridge pickups added all my axes are original with no mods.Amps are; 150 Rockit head 115 bass Bin, Laney 300 head, 250 Trace Elliot bass combo, Marshall 100 DFX combo and Roland JC77. If I lost my JC77 I would probably not get another-they are as rare as hens teeth.My Roland amp can be summed up as;
clean, portable, good looking, nice chorus, reliable, but, lacks bass, a few features.A good buy at $100 New Zealand in 1995!!
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $170 used
Submitted 02/03/2005
at 07:04pm
by Erick
Features
:
7
No idea about amp year, very simple to deal withi it's controls, and very nice 2X10 SS amp. Since it's an old amp it doesn't have so much features as the amps made now.
Sound Quality
:
8
Here is the problem... i use a guitar made by myself with an emg81 in the bridge and an emgSA in the neck and my amp simply distorts....
i think something is wrong since i bought it used, but i can't turn the volume all the way up and the crunch comes out of it....
Anyway, the crazy thing about it is that if use a shred master, slash comes out of the amp and plays.... i can't say it sounds different cause it sounds exactely like his sound, but the cleas dissepointed me.... (maybe cause of the EMG81
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I cant use it alone because of the CLEAN that almost doesn't exist...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never caled roland....
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I bought this amp thinking it would be a good option to my gr30 sinth but it just doesn't work...
if anyone has any idea about fixing it please, gimme a hand...
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 01/14/2005
at 04:53am
by Ronald Henny
Email: ronaldjanhenny<at>hotmailcom
Features
:
8
I bougt the amp somewhere in the 80's, second hand, so I think it was made in the early 80's. I bought it because I was smashed by the heavenly sound of a clean Stat over the JC-120. I ran into this 77, is was cheaper, and easyier to transport..
I used this amp on stage, studio and rehearsals. Enough info on features on this site. Only comments: a headphone jack would be nice, and: can anybody tell me whij 90% of the volume hits you between 1 and 3 or so! 4-10 is almost useless. This is uncomfortable for home-use!
This amp has defenitly anough power for average gigs.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use it with a modified Fender Lead and an standard Fender USA Strat with a build in pre-amp (so active). Style is diverse, mainly rock-based, with some funk(y), Jazz and also small pieces of metal.
I combine it with the BOSS-GT3. I miss some low, for that reason I will maybe switch to a JC-120. The distortion...who designed this?? It must be a joke from Roland.... I only used it sometimes when I used an external distortion (the boss stomp box SD-1) for a backgound sound and needed some extra power for a solo.
But the chorus.. The best!!
The clean channel is really clean , only you ears will distort it when the amp is open!
Reliability
:
10
As fas as technically possible...100%
in 20 years I once had o broken cable from the reverb!
Customer Support
:
2
I realy don't know...never needed.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play the thing for about 20 years... After bying the boss-gt3 I bougt a used Peavey Bandit112 because it gives some more body (low). That is the only advantage (besides when using it without external effects, the Bandit has much better cruch/distortion possibilites). But for nice sound (studio) forget the Bandit and use the JC!! No doubt about it.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $175 used
Submitted 09/25/2004
at 06:37pm
by Anonymous
Email: wtrix at aol<dot>com
Features
:
9
I own 2 JC 77's, and i love them! I believe these amps were made sometime in the 90's, not too sure though. the best part about these amps are that they are just like their big brother, the JC-120. VERY CLEAN. of course the distortion sucks, but who uses it anyways? i've always used my own distortion through these amps and it can hold it's own even for being a solid state amp. i like how it has a treble and a hi-treble EQ. (no mid though, they should've put one in)I'll stack up both JC-77's and run them both at the same time for bigger gigs, or I'll set them on either side of the stage and run it in stereo for that true stereo effect. (delays sound really cool when they're in stereo)
Sound Quality
:
8
i play an 86' PRS custom guitar, a 72'fender strat (USA), and a 01' gibson les paul standard. the JC's are perfect for reggae, cuts through nicely.
Reliability
:
10
never really had a problem with them. never bring a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to call them.
Overall Rating
:
9
been playing for 14 years. as for amps, i own a JC-120, Fender PRO 185, a Fender deville 4x10, and a roland cube 30. i play through a digitech 2101 processor, and a crybaby wah pedal.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $225 plus shipping used
Submitted 09/01/2004
at 04:22pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
6
Dont know the year this thing was made, but early 90's, late 80's sounds about right. could be horribly wrong tho. As i'm sure you all know from even thinking about the amp, it's CLEAN. clean clean clean clean clean! pedals sound great through it. with a tweaked eq, and a tweaked/modded ds-1, it's some great disto. very milky smooth, but with plenty of crunch. Single channel doesn't offer much variety, but for it's main purpouse, it's fine. the only thing about this thing i wish it had was a recording out jack, but...i guess it wouldn't capture the true stereo chorus...so mic placement is the only way. Reverb and Chorus are great! the chorus is the best part of this amp, and it's just so great. for being 77 watts(i think) it's pretty damned loud...would get you through an outdoor gig at 5 or 6.
I'd give this amp an 8 or a 9, but since it's got no recording out, or headphones jack, i'm giving it a 6.
Sound Quality
:
8
I play a schecter c-1 with a duncan Jazz and JB combo in it, as well as a '66 Gibson Es-125 with 2 stock p-90's through the amp, the p-90's really shine through the amp. they let the naturally woody tone shine through, and the amp just well, amplifies the sound. the schecter sounds great when i'm running the modded ds-1 through it, the humbuckers just push the whole thing a little bit further. the onboard distortion sucks, so lets leave it at that.
Not many people seemed to mention the noise of the amp. there's a constant fuzz when the amp is turned on, no matter how loud. but the amp is solid state and that's to be expected. no 10 here because of the hum and crappy distortion, but...i didn't buy the amp for the distortion...so...
Reliability
:
10
this thing is a TANK! VERY sturdy. this thing could survive a nuclear holocaust. i've not had any problems in the couple of months i've had it. i cleaned all the pots, and got all the dust out of the component board when i first got it, and only 1 pot is scratchy...not bad. i dont think this thing will need much attention as time wears on.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
dunno...never had to work with them.
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing for close to 5 years, with this piece as my first real good piece of equipment. played through the crate line, not so good. glad i picked this thing up. as i stated earlier i've got a schecter c-1 and a '66 gibson es-125, and both of these guitars are suited well to the amp. if it were lost, i'd cry. then i'd hit up ebay again and hopefully pull another one out. the thing is great. the most lush stereo chorus you've ever heard. and for the price, it was just right. very happy with my purchase.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/17/2004
at 10:47pm
by Benjie Loveless
Features
:
10
Sound Quality
:
10
Reliability
:
10
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
This is just an update. You can read my old review a little further up. It has beeen over a year now and everything is still great. The thought or even the fantasy of owning a different amp has not crossed my mind. I am now very curious about other roland products simply because of the quality of this amp. Still a 10!!!!
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 12/31/2003
at 10:52am
by BL
Features
:
10
year... late 80ish
jazz, funk, r&b
single channel with a high & low input. variable and fixed chorus settings. and a 4 band eq.
built in distortion (who needs it? get a boogie or marshall for that!)
77 watts of solid state clean!
Sound Quality
:
10
Les Paul Standard, Kramer T-neck, Fender Strat.
perfect fit for mean clean, if you need the distortion sound, pedals will do nice. as for loud, this baby will rip your ears out without distortion, unbelievably crisp sound and high volumes for a double 10.
Reliability
:
10
I've only had this unit (bought used) for around 6 mo's. however I've have a jc120 since 84' and used it for gig's 5 nites a week for years without even "thinking" it could give me any problems. 'except for the occasional spill of drink on the cab!' Have played live only 1x with the 77 and it was flawless.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
(never called)
Overall Rating
:
10
playing 25 yrs. have the suite of JC's 55, 77, 120, dont have or want the 160 (too big). GK 250ml2, a handful of Peavey heads.
I have played with the JC's since the 80's when I fell in love with the sound, at first it took some getting used to as far as the extreme crispness coming out of 2 12's, I have used cab's with horn's tweeter banks, and while it doesnt reach the ultra high ping of the tweeters, it comes close. Always used pedals for lead distortion, so as everyone has written the built in isnt very useful.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $240.00 used
Submitted 12/23/2003
at 01:34pm
by Funkdafied Stank
Features
:
8
This amp packs a punch! very versatile in style, is doesn't matter what you play it all sounds good! This amp pack 80 watts of power! one channel. The only draw back is that this amp lacks a headphone jack but it doesn't matter! Loud enough to gig with!
Sound Quality
:
10
This amp suits all styles from clean to distorted. The distortion is much better than the JC-120 model. Stereo sound, very crisp clean notes. can range from crunchy, bassy to classy. It wouldn't hurt to invest in a distortion pedal just to have it sound the way you want it otherwise it isn't that bad.
Reliability
:
9
This amp is very reliable, I would truck this baby around and it isn't as heavy as the 120! It also has caster wheels so that i can push this baby around. No problems yet and i don't expect to, Roland is awesome! I should get the pots cleaned but I just got her and I want to play around with it plus I don't have the extra $ to do so. Solid state, no tube changing either! less hassels.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No problems, I know Roland has a website. I don't know what they would do but probably nothing because the amp is discontinued.
Overall Rating
:
10
I own the JC-120 but actually prefer the 77. this little baby rocks! sounds great with many guitars. I play fender, jackson, gibson, musicman, you name it, it all sounds good! I use a Boss OS-2 pedal for distortion but that is it. The amp is worth every penny and i would definitely invest in another one if this one was lost, stolen or broken. I wish it had headphone jack! thats it! If you can, get one!!
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: $150 (Canadian (what a deal!!)) used
Submitted 09/26/2003
at 01:23pm
by Marc Henwood
Features
:
9
A big brick of an amp. 2 channels, high and low...go with the high...trust me. Comes with a footswitch to turn Distortion, Chorus, and Reverb....LOUD!!!!
Sound Quality
:
9
Well, I use a Les Paul, and an SG (Gibson, baby!!) with a Korg AX100g multi-effects pedal, and a Boss GE-10 eq through this amp, and BLAMMO!! Great sound. The reverb is real spring-y, and the Chorus....ohhhhh the chorus....I've never heard one like it. Heavenly. The distortion.....well, let's just say....get a Boss DS-1, or an MT-2. The distortion is not unlike the sound of a mud puddle on a warm day....not good. The cleanest of the the clean sounds with no effects though. A beauty.
Reliability
:
10
Like all Roland-Boss things...even weapons of mass destruction (where are they, anyway?) could not blow this amp up. Go ahead. Pull a Letterman, and throw it off a tall building....it'll still work. The knobs tend to come off easily though......did that sound right?
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I think the Roland-Boss customer support team are figments of imagination....has anybody really ever needed them?
Overall Rating
:
9
It sounds like a dream...and LOUD!! I love it. I just don't like the distortion. 'Tis crap. but everything else is awesome. I would only use a Marshall stack otherwise. It's an ace friggin' amplimaphone-fier-thing. *ahem* If it were lost, or stolen....an A.P.B. would be put out immediately. I'd find that thing quicker than we found Osama.....oh wait.....DAMN!!
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/15/2003
at 03:15pm
by Anonymous
Features
:
10
have this amp for at least 15 years and it has been in its not been used for ten years like wine its only sounding better i have never regreted the day i lay my hands on it (new)
by now you know all its ups and downs by reading the revieuws
distortion sucks i dont use the chorus or the delay
but the amps own voise
and believe me this is the best solid state their is
i play a les paul whit p90 and it sounds like the tone
Sound Quality
:
9
see above give it only 9 for that no good distortion
Reliability
:
10
this is made to stand on when your painting and let someone els play on it while you move it around
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
you will not need that ever so dont know
Overall Rating
:
10
if you can lay your hands on this one take it
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: 400 (euros) used
Submitted 06/11/2003
at 08:58am
by Anonymous
Features
:
8
I use this with Fender Blues Deluxe to widen the sound. Has high and low inputs, high is more jangley. Also there's a footswitch for separate distortion, reverb and chorus controls.
Sound Quality
:
9
The best chorus sound I've heard. This combo is very clear and has a deep sound. The chorus is stereo-it sounds a lot like Cure's sound on "Disintegration" and "Wish". Better than any chorus pedal. The reverb is ok, but the distortion is quite useless. It is a typical solid state distortion: annoyingly buzzing. I don't use it. Amp makes white noise when power is on.
I play with Sheraton and Riviera, both are equipped with humbuckers. Both guitars have a mellow sound, but JC-77 sharpens them very clear. I don't know how good it would work with single coil guitars. Musical preferences are indie/post rock and shoegaze.
It would be a tenner if the dist wouldn't be so bad.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I haven't had it for so long yet.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playin ten years now. I think I would buy it again if somebody would consider it to be their right to nick it. It delivers what I needed, I don't think any amp could provide everything. But this most certainly wasn't a let down as amps sometimes are.
Product: Roland JC-77 Jazz Chorus
Price Paid: US $299 used
Submitted 04/06/2003
at 10:32pm
by Benjie Loveless
Features
:
10
Don't know the year, just bought it yesterday, way cooler than my 69' twin reverb! I was looking for a solid amp that would alow me to hear every note, scrape, bang, crash, movement of my finger,....ALLOW ME TO HEAR EXACTLY WHAT I WAS PLAYING...and I found it. Thats all the features that I needed.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play with a parker nightfly, ususally on the bridge but suddenly every position sound wonerful. I play big round clean rock inside an agular box under an old bluesmans foot. Ventures, Tom waits, Lungfish, Jango Rinehardt(sp.?), Pixies, Captain Beefheart,Elvis Costello, ....the JC-77 satisfies my hungers. I have'nt played without frustrations vien punching through my forehead in quite sometime, this amp is a stress reliever. I am diognosed with obsessive compulsive dissorder(seriously) and I can't find any imperfections with the beautiful CRYSTAL CLEAR BELL LIKE TONE of this amp. I can play rough or gentle, chords or solo or chordal solos, and evey note shines through unless I choose for it not to.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Again, I've only had it three days, but the other reviews sound promising.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
bought it used $299 US no idea as to customer service
Overall Rating
:
10
So far I love it. Wish I had found it when I had bought my twin to replace my musicman 7 years ago. NO MORE FREAKIN TUBES TO DEAL WITH. FREEDOM. PERFECT. SIMPLE.EASY. LIGHTWIEGHT. Blows away my fender twin, blows away any digital modeling B.S.etc. etc. etc. etc.!!!!!!!!
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