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Wikipedia

Ampeg

Ampeg ("amplified peg") [1][2] is a manufacturer best known for its bass amplifiers.

Ampeg
FormerlyMichael-Hull Electronic Labs
Company typePrivate
IndustryMusical instruments
Founded1946; 78 years ago (1946)
FounderEverett Hull,
Stanley Michaels
HeadquartersCalabasas, California, US
Area served
Global
ProductsBass & guitar amps
Electric & acoustic upright basses
pickups
Bass guitars
Electric guitars
ParentYamaha Corporation
SubsidiariesDan Armstrong
WebsiteAmpeg.com

Originally established in 1946 in Linden, New Jersey by Everett Hull and Stanley Michaels as "Michael-Hull Electronic Labs," today Ampeg is part of the Yamaha Guitar Group. Although specializing in the production of bass amplifiers, Ampeg has previously manufactured guitar amplifiers and pickups and instruments including double basses, bass guitars, and electric guitars.[3]

History edit

Early years (1946―1959) edit

Everett Hull (born Charles Everitt Hull), a pianist and bassist from Wisconsin working with bandleader Lawrence Welk in Chicago, had invented a pickup for upright bass in an effort to amplify his instrument with more clarity. Hull's design placed a transducer atop a support peg inside the body of his instrument, inspiring his wife Gertrude to name the invention the "Ampeg," an abbreviated version of "amplified peg." On February 6, 1946, Hull filed a patent application for his "sound amplifying means for stringed musical instruments of the violin family," for which U.S. patent 2,430,717 was awarded the following year. The Hulls relocated to New Jersey, and Everett met electrical engineer and amp technician Stanley Michael, who was selling a bass amplifier of his own design, soon renamed the Michael-Hull Bassamp. In 1946, they established Michael-Hull Electronic Labs in Newark, New Jersey, to sell their two products. Michael left the company in 1948, leaving it to Hull, who relocated the company the following year to 42nd Street in Manhattan, above the New Amsterdam Theatre, renaming it "The Ampeg Bassamp Company."

Michael-Hull advertised in DownBeat magazine, listing bassists like Chubby Jackson and Johnny Frigo as endorsers. Additionally, Eddie Safranski signed on with Michael-Hull to promote Ampeg products, receiving a royalty payment for equipment sold by their influence. After Michael's departure, Hull continued to leverage connections with well-known musicians to increase awareness of his products within the New York jazz community; Ampeg's new location between Carnegie Hall, NBC Studios in 30 Rockefeller Plaza, and the Paramount Theatre helped establish relationships with bassists like Oscar Pettiford, Joe Comfort, Amos Milburn and Don Bagley.

In 1955, local musician and electrician Jess Oliver visited Ampeg's offices to purchase an amplified peg, and upon easily making the installation himself, Hull offered him a job. Oliver didn't join Ampeg on a full-time basis until 1956, the same year that Ampeg's name was simplified to "The Ampeg Company." In 1959, the company was incorporated as "The Ampeg Company, Inc.," with Everett Hull as President, Gertrude Hull as Secretary, and Jess Oliver as Vice President.[4]

Growing pains and a changing market (1960―1967) edit

In 1960, Ampeg introduced the B-15, a bass combo amplifier with an innovative flip-top function, invented and patented by Oliver. The B-15 was the first in the company's Portaflex series, and after becoming the preferred studio amp of session musicians like James Jamerson and Chuck Rainey. The B-15 and its subsequent variants went on to become the most-recorded bass amplifier in history.[5][6] By 1963, the Portaflex series business had grown to 44% of Ampeg's amplifier sales. In 1962, Ampeg introduced the plastic-bodied Baby Bass, a compact upright electric bass created from the Zorko bass, whose design Ampeg had acquired from the Dopera brothers,[7] along with a unique Oliver-designed, Ampeg-patented pickup.

In 1962, Ampeg and its 40 employees moved to a new manufacturing facility in Linden, New Jersey. At 8,000 square feet, it was three times larger than their previous home. In June of the following year, after continued struggles to meet production demands and maintain cash flow, Ampeg announced an initial stock offering and became a publicly held company. By 1964, Ampeg had 100 employees and needed more space, relocating to a larger space one block away.

The combination of the rising popularity of rock and roll and the shift of bassists from upright bass to electric bass guitar during this time posed a challenge to Ampeg’s core business. The company's ads continued to feature prominent classical, jazz, and country artists, but with a notable absence of rock artists, and Hull strove to minimize rock musician visits to Ampeg's facilities. Hull's distaste for rock and roll music was further compounded by the success of Ampeg's chief competitor, Fender, as they continually bested Ampeg in overall sales.[3] Through the 1960s, Ampeg amplifiers were designed for "clean, undistorted sound", with Hull saying "we will never make anything for rock 'n' roll".[8]

The company continued to experience growing pains – by October 1966, with 200 employees and 40,000 square feet of space, Ampeg's production capacity had increased to $350,000 per month, yet had $3.5 million in unfulfilled backorders.[citation needed] Amidst company struggles related to growth and manufacturing, as well as disagreements with Hull, Oliver resigned from Ampeg. Hull began to seek potential buyers for the company.

Ampeg enters the rock market (1967―1970) edit

In September 1967, Ampeg became a subsidiary of Unimusic Inc. when the newly formed investor group acquired a majority share of Ampeg stock. Unimusic consisted of investors interested in capitalizing on opportunities in the highly fragmented music equipment market of the time, not unlike CBS (which owned Fender and Rhodes), or later Norlin (which owned Gibson Guitars, Lowrey and Moog Music).[9] While Hull was retained as President of Ampeg, Unimusic had purchased the company with the intention of using as a starting point for change. After a year of conflict between Hull and Unimusic, Hull tendered his resignation on October 3, 1968.[4] Unimusic introduced a redesigned Ampeg logo and a new series of advertisements targeted at the rock market. In an effort to establish an Ampeg presence in key music markets, Ampeg opened regional offices: in Chicago; in Nashville near the Ryman Auditorium; and in the Hollywood Palladium in Hollywood.[citation needed]

Ampeg chief engineer Bill Hughes and Roger Cox, with input from Bob Rufkahr and Dan Armstrong (a New York session guitarist and guitar expert hired as a consultant), were developing what Cox envisioned as the “biggest, nastiest bass amplifier the world had ever seen.” The Rolling Stones anticipated using Hiwatt DR-103 amps, as during their 1969 Hyde Park gig, which they brought from England. Their road manager, Ian Stewart, contacted Rich Mandella at the Ampeg office in Hollywood, and Rich arranged for the band to use five prototype amplifier heads of this new high-output model. These employed a 14-tube design to generate 300 watts of power in an era when most tube amps generated less than 100. The Rolling Stones took these prototypes and Mandella on tour, playing all guitars and basses through them for the entire tour. After the tour, Ampeg put the design into production as the SVT, introducing it at the NAMM Show in 1969.[10][11][12][13][14][15]

After Armstrong and his amp tech Tom Duffy began modifying B-25 bass heads for rock guitar, the design team responsible for the SVT created the V series, introducing the V-3, V-2 and V-4 heads, VT-22 and VT-40 combos in 1970. The V-2, V-4 and V-22 were adopted by high-profile guitarists like Ron Wood and Keith Richards; both would use Ampeg SVT heads and cabs until 1981, when they replaced the SVTs with Mesa Boogie Mark I and Coliseum 300 amps.

Armstrong designed a transparent plastic guitar and bass for Ampeg. The guitar was used by Keith Richards with The Rolling Stones during the same 1969, 1970, and 1971 tours and some early shows of the 1972 tour, and the bass version by Bill Wyman on the 1972 tour and some of the 1973 Winter tour shows. In 1971, citing lack of compensation for his contributions to the V-series amplifiers, Armstrong left Ampeg, and refused to renew the agreement allowing manufacture his guitar and bass.[16]

Changes in ownership (1971―1985) edit

In 1971, Ampeg was acquired by Magnavox,[17][18] which owned musical instrument manufacturer Selmer, but was better known for televisions, radios and hi-fi components. The following year, Magnavox dissolved Ampeg’s incorporation and moved Ampeg’s management to the Selmer-Magnavox offices in Elkhart, Indiana. In 1974, amidst economic struggles and production capacity surpluses, Magnavox closed Ampeg’s Linden plant, moving production to a portion of a Magnavox electronics factory there. In 1978, SVT designer Bill Hughes left the company.

In 1980, Ampeg was acquired by Music Technology, Inc. (MTI), a wholesaler specializing in amplifiers from Japan and keyboards from Italy looking to expand. Under MTI management, SVT and V series amps were prototyped for production in Japan (though V series were never produced). MTI also introduced five new solid-state amps and six new tube amps for Ampeg, and a series of effects pedals. But after production issues and substandard sales, MTI declared bankruptcy a few years later.[when?]

St. Louis Music and LOUD (1986―2018) edit

In 1986, St. Louis Music (SLM) acquired the assets of Ampeg,[17] including the rights to the name and all remaining MTI inventory. SLM converted leftover V5 heads into SVT-100s and set out to re-create the SVT, setting aside a room at SLM Electronics for an intensive development project. Working from original SVT drawings and parts purchase orders from 1969, the team created a run of 500 amplifiers in 1987 dubbed the Limited Edition SVT-HD amps.[19] SLM then re-established Ampeg manufacturing in its Borman Avenue factory in St. Louis, introducing fourteen new Ampeg guitar and bass amps and the world’s largest bass amplifier at the 1987 summer NAMM Show.[citation needed]

In 2005, LOUD Technologies Inc. purchased St. Louis Music and its brands, including Ampeg[17] and Crate amplifiers, ending their production at the Yellville, Arkansas facility in March 2007, outsourcing amplifier manufacture to contract manufacturers in Asia.[18]

In May 2018, following the purchase of Loud Technologies Inc. by Transom, the Ampeg brand was acquired from the restructured LOUD Audio LLC by Yamaha Guitar Group, Inc.[20][21]

The current Ampeg company is mainly known in the field of bass amps.[22] They also have a line of guitar amplifiers and a remake of the Dan Armstrong guitar and bass.[23]

Ampeg holds six U.S. patents under the Ampeg brand name.[20]

Amplifiers edit

 
Ampeg Portaflex B-15N (early 1970s)

Ampeg Portaflex edit

In the late-1950s Jess Oliver invented[3] a combo amplifier with a chassis that could be inverted and tucked inside the speaker enclosure to protect the vacuum tubes. This combo bass amp was introduced in 1960 as the Portaflex, and remained a popular choice through the 1960s.

Reverberocket edit

 
Ampeg R-12-R Reverberocket

In 1961, Ampeg became the first company to incorporate reverberation (reverb) in an amplifier with its Reverberocket, which preceded Fender's Vibroverb amp by nearly two years.[25] Despite Hull's distaste for rock and roll and resistance to distortion, the Reverberocket employed 6V6 -type power tubes which sounded "Fendery" and did break up in a way that rock and roll players could use.[26]

Super Valve Technology edit

 
Ampeg SVT VR "Vintage Reissue"

During the 1960s Ampeg only produced fairly low wattage combo amplifiers. Rock concerts were becoming increasingly large affairs and bigger amplifiers were needed. In 1969, Ampeg's Chief Engineer Bill Hughes designed the Super Valve Technology circuitry for the amplifier of the same name. At 85 lb (39 kg), the Ampeg SVT provided 300 watts of RMS power, considerably more than most other bass amplifiers of the era. The high power rating made the SVT a candidate for use in larger venues. The SVT saw widespread use by rock acts in the 1970s and is still considered by many to be the world standard reference bass amp. The SVT-VR (Vintage Reissue) is almost identical in design and construction and the closest thing to any of the original SVT models produced by Ampeg.

Recent amplifiers (after 1990s) edit

In the mid-1990s, SLM issued several guitar amplifiers under the Ampeg name. Some of these, the "Diamond Blue Series," used the names of vintage Ampeg models (such as Jet and Reverberocket) and featured the bluish-colored diamond-checkerboard covering associated with Ampeg amps of the 1960s. The circuit designs of these amplifiers, however, were new. The Portaflex bass amp was reissued, with updates intended to make it more appealing to modern bass players.

The Ampeg GVT series, introduced around 2010, is a series of tube amplifiers built in South Korea, employing the Baxandall tone circuit.[27][jargon]


Instruments and accessories edit

Ampeg also manufactured (or had manufactured for them) lines of quirky but distinctive instruments to complement their amplifiers.

 
Zorko Bass
 
Ampeg Baby Bass

Baby Bass edit

Baby Bass, introduced around 1962, was an electric upright bass with a full-size wooden neck and a cello-sized Uvex plastic body. The design was purchased from Zorko, re-engineered by Jess Oliver, and manufactured in a corner of Ampeg's Linden, New Jersey factory. It appeared in Ampeg's price list until about 1970, though popular only with bassists in Latin and salsa bands.[citation needed]

Guitars by Burns edit

In the early 1960s, Ampeg-branded guitars and basses were produced by Burns of London. These instruments did not sell well because import costs made them too expensive compared to Fenders and Gibsons. Baldwin's purchase of Burns in 1965 ended the association with Ampeg.

 
Ampeg AEB-1 Horizontal Bass
 
Dan Armstrong see-through (1970)

Horizontal Bass and Devil Bass edit

1966–1969, designed by Dennis Kager, etc.

In 1966, Ampeg introduced their home-built line of long-scale "Horizontal Basses" (aka "scroll" or "f-hole" basses), both fretted and fretless (reputed to be the first production fretless electric bass)[citation needed]. Some with different bodies were produced as the "Devil Bass" with distinctive horns, but the circuitry was identical. Originally using a transducer below the bridge, they were redesigned around 1968 to use a conventional magnetic pickup. At the same time, short-scale fretted and fretless basses, with magnetic pickups, were also produced.[28]

Dan Armstrong "see-through" edit

In 1969, the Horizontal Basses were replaced by the Dan Armstrong-designed "see-through" guitars and basses, with bodies carved from colorless acrylic plastic.[29][30] The transparent bodies contributed to long sustain but were heavy. The guitars incorporated slide-in user-changeable pickups, and the short-scale basses used two stacked coils with a "pan" pot[jargon] for a wide range of tones. Production of the "see-through" instruments ended in 1971 when Armstrong left the company.

Stud series edit

 
Big Stud electric bass (1973-1975)

In the mid-1970s, Ampeg had a line of Japanese-made guitars and basses under the "Stud" name. The guitars included the Stud, Heavy Stud, and Super Stud, and the basses included the Big Stud and Little Stud. The Studs were knock-offs of popular Fender and Gibson instruments (although the Fender copies sported rather incongruous 3/3 and 2/2 guitar and bass headstocks). Some of the Stud instruments were poorly built (e.g. the plywood bodies and necks on the Little Stud), while others had good-quality features (e.g., gold-plated hardware on the Super Stud).

Hagström distribution edit

 
Swede Patch 2000 (1976-79)

In 1971, Ampeg was acquired by Magnavox, which led to a distributorship deal with the Swedish guitar company, Hagström. In 1975, Ampeg and Hagström collaborated to develop their first guitar/synthesizer hybrid using the contact of the strings on the frets as electric switches: In 1976 the Swede Patch 2000 was released, which required Ampeg Patch 2000 Pedals and an external synthesizer (Steiner-Parker Microcon was designed for it).[31]

Effects pedals & Accessories edit

Ampeg also produced effects pedals, including stand-alone reverb units in the 60s, the Scrambler (distortion) from 1969 (a resurgence in interest resulted in an updated Scrambler being reissued in 2005 along with Sub-Blaster (octaver) that produced a note one octave down), the Phazzer (phaser) from the mid- to late-70s, and a line of nine stomp boxes produced in Japan in the mid-80s.

There were also Ampeg branded accessories that included covers, picks, strings, straps, polish, as well as two practice amps, the Sound Cube and the Buster (a Pignose clone). Currently, Ampeg mostly offers covers, some outerwear, and a few other accessories with their logo.

Recent instruments (after 1990s) edit

In the mid- to late-1990s, Ampeg reissued the Baby Bass, the Horizontal Bass,[3] and the "See-Through" instruments, as well as wooden instruments based on the "See-Through" design.

References edit

  1. ^ "Ampeg – Bass guitar amplification".
  2. ^ "Ampeg Amplifiers | Musician's Friend". www.musiciansfriend.com.
  3. ^ a b c d Hopkins & Moore (1997).
  4. ^ a b Hopkins & Moore (1999), p. 175.
  5. ^ Fuchs, Andy; Hopkins, Gregg (July 30, 2011). "Remembering Jess Oliver, Inventor of the Ampeg B-15". Premiere Guitar. Retrieved 2019-04-18.
  6. ^ Fjestad, Zachary (August 17, 2010a). "Ampeg B-15N Portaflex". Premier Guitar. "the B-15 underwent constant change, and the B-15 was replaced by the B-15N in 1961. In 1962, Ampeg updated the B-15N with a solid-state rectifier called the B-15NB and introduced their famous “blue check” vinyl covering to their entire amp line. Ampeg went back to a tube rectifier and changed to a printed circuit board in 1964 (B-15NC). This model lasted until mid 1965, when they introduced the B-15NF with fixed bias tubes and a single-baffle cabinet. ... Ampeg went through numerous ownership changes over the next two decades with Unimusic taking over in 1967, Magnavox in 1971, and MTI in 1980. / St. Louis Music bought Ampeg in 1985 and finally returned some stability and respect to the brand. The company also reissued the B-15N Portaflex with blue check covering in 1995. Ampeg was purchased by LOUD Technologies in 2005, and in 2010, they introduced the new Heritage Series that is produced in the US."
  7. ^ Hopkins & Moore (1999), p. 101.
  8. ^ Hunter, Dave (2012). Amped: The Illustrated History of the World's Greatest Amplifiers (First ed.). London, England: Voyageur Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0760339725. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  9. ^ Barnhart, Bill (February 2, 1986). "Financial Printing Firms Press Hard to Outsell the Competition". Chicago Tribune. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2023-07-20.
  10. ^ Massey, Sylvia (October 25, 2010). "Gear Stories With Sylvia Massey: Her Satanic Majesty's SVT Beast: The Dangerous Ampeg Tone". Mix. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  11. ^ Rotondi, James. "Learn the Differences and History of Three Iconic Ampegs". Universal Audio. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  12. ^ Henry, J. P. (September 28, 2016). "American Muscle: The Ampeg SVT". Voodoo Guitar. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  13. ^ Herrera, Jonathan (February 20, 2018). . BassPlayer. Archived from the original on 2019-04-30. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  14. ^ Fliegler, Ritchie; Eiche, Jon F. (1993). Amps! The Other Half of Rock 'n' Roll. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation. p. 38. ISBN 9780793524112.
  15. ^ Kies, Chris (May 11, 2013). "1969 Ampeg SVT Head and 8x10 Cabinet". Premier Guitar. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  16. ^ Feser, Phil (April 2007). "Ampeg Dan Armstrong Plexi Guitar". Vintage Guitar. Retrieved 2019-04-30.
  17. ^ a b c Fjestad (2010a).
  18. ^ a b Fjestad (2010).
  19. ^ Bober, Jeff (May 12, 2017). "Ask Amp Man: Limited Edition Ampeg SVT". Premier Guitar. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  20. ^ a b "Yamaha Guitar Group Announces Acquisition Of Legendary Bass Amp Brand, Ampeg" (PDF) (Press release). Yamaha Guitar Group. May 10, 2018. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
  21. ^ Astley-Brown, Michael (May 11, 2018). "Yamaha announces acquisition of Ampeg". MusicRadar. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  22. ^ Herrera, Jonathan (January 8, 2020). "Review: Ampeg Classic Analog Bass Preamp and Scrambler Bass Overdrive". BassPlayer. Retrieved 2020-12-10.
  23. ^ Moore, Adam (November 11, 2008). "Ampeg AMG100 Review". Premier Guitar. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  24. ^ Hopkins & Moore (1999), p. 118, "Solid-State in the Garden State".
  25. ^ Hunter, Dave (May 2016). "Ampeg's Jet Reverb Prototype". Vintage Guitar. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  26. ^ Hunter, Dave (January 2013). "The Ampeg R-12-R Reverberocket". Vintage Guitar. pp. 58–60. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  27. ^ Thompson, Art (February 13, 2012). . Guitar Player. Archived from the original on 2019-04-17. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  28. ^ Hopkins, Gregg; Moore, Bill (March 1997). . Vintage Guitar. Archived from the original on 2007-11-14.
  29. ^ . Ampeg. March 10, 2008. Archived from the original on 2011-07-07.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-29. . Archived from the original on 2014-09-29.
  31. ^ "Patch 2000". Hagstrom.org.uk. from the original on 2020-12-10. Retrieved 2020-12-10.

Bibliography edit

  • Hopkins, Gregg; Moore, Bill (1999). Ampeg: The Story Behind the Sound. Musical Instruments Series. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation. ISBN 978-0-7935-7951-8.
  • Fjestad, Zachary R. (2009). "Ampeg/Dan Armstrong Ampeg". Blue Book of Electric Guitars (12th ed.). Blue Book Publications. ISBN 978-1-886768-93-2.
  • Fjestad, Zachary R. (2010). "Ampeg". Blue Book of Guitar Amplifiers (4th ed.). Blue Book Publications. ISBN 978-1-936120-05-5.

Further reading edit

  • . Ampeg History. Archived from the original on 2018-02-21.
  • . Ampeg History. Archived from the original on 2018-01-24.
  • . Ampeg History. Archived from the original on 2018-04-30.

External links edit

  • Ampeg.com ― Official Site

ampeg, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2012, lear. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ampeg news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ampeg amplified peg 1 2 is a manufacturer best known for its bass amplifiers AmpegFormerlyMichael Hull Electronic LabsCompany typePrivateIndustryMusical instrumentsFounded1946 78 years ago 1946 FounderEverett Hull Stanley MichaelsHeadquartersCalabasas California USArea servedGlobalProductsBass amp guitar amps Electric amp acoustic upright bassespickups Bass guitars Electric guitarsParentYamaha CorporationSubsidiariesDan ArmstrongWebsiteAmpeg comOriginally established in 1946 in Linden New Jersey by Everett Hull and Stanley Michaels as Michael Hull Electronic Labs today Ampeg is part of the Yamaha Guitar Group Although specializing in the production of bass amplifiers Ampeg has previously manufactured guitar amplifiers and pickups and instruments including double basses bass guitars and electric guitars 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1946 1959 1 2 Growing pains and a changing market 1960 1967 1 3 Ampeg enters the rock market 1967 1970 1 4 Changes in ownership 1971 1985 1 5 St Louis Music and LOUD 1986 2018 2 Amplifiers 2 1 Ampeg Portaflex 2 2 Reverberocket 2 3 Super Valve Technology 2 4 Recent amplifiers after 1990s 3 Instruments and accessories 3 1 Baby Bass 3 2 Guitars by Burns 3 3 Horizontal Bass and Devil Bass 3 4 Dan Armstrong see through 3 5 Stud series 3 6 Hagstrom distribution 3 7 Effects pedals amp Accessories 3 8 Recent instruments after 1990s 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editEarly years 1946 1959 edit Everett Hull born Charles Everitt Hull a pianist and bassist from Wisconsin working with bandleader Lawrence Welk in Chicago had invented a pickup for upright bass in an effort to amplify his instrument with more clarity Hull s design placed a transducer atop a support peg inside the body of his instrument inspiring his wife Gertrude to name the invention the Ampeg an abbreviated version of amplified peg On February 6 1946 Hull filed a patent application for his sound amplifying means for stringed musical instruments of the violin family for which U S patent 2 430 717 was awarded the following year The Hulls relocated to New Jersey and Everett met electrical engineer and amp technician Stanley Michael who was selling a bass amplifier of his own design soon renamed the Michael Hull Bassamp In 1946 they established Michael Hull Electronic Labs in Newark New Jersey to sell their two products Michael left the company in 1948 leaving it to Hull who relocated the company the following year to 42nd Street in Manhattan above the New Amsterdam Theatre renaming it The Ampeg Bassamp Company Michael Hull advertised in DownBeat magazine listing bassists like Chubby Jackson and Johnny Frigo as endorsers Additionally Eddie Safranski signed on with Michael Hull to promote Ampeg products receiving a royalty payment for equipment sold by their influence After Michael s departure Hull continued to leverage connections with well known musicians to increase awareness of his products within the New York jazz community Ampeg s new location between Carnegie Hall NBC Studios in 30 Rockefeller Plaza and the Paramount Theatre helped establish relationships with bassists like Oscar Pettiford Joe Comfort Amos Milburn and Don Bagley In 1955 local musician and electrician Jess Oliver visited Ampeg s offices to purchase an amplified peg and upon easily making the installation himself Hull offered him a job Oliver didn t join Ampeg on a full time basis until 1956 the same year that Ampeg s name was simplified to The Ampeg Company In 1959 the company was incorporated as The Ampeg Company Inc with Everett Hull as President Gertrude Hull as Secretary and Jess Oliver as Vice President 4 Growing pains and a changing market 1960 1967 edit In 1960 Ampeg introduced the B 15 a bass combo amplifier with an innovative flip top function invented and patented by Oliver The B 15 was the first in the company s Portaflex series and after becoming the preferred studio amp of session musicians like James Jamerson and Chuck Rainey The B 15 and its subsequent variants went on to become the most recorded bass amplifier in history 5 6 By 1963 the Portaflex series business had grown to 44 of Ampeg s amplifier sales In 1962 Ampeg introduced the plastic bodied Baby Bass a compact upright electric bass created from the Zorko bass whose design Ampeg had acquired from the Dopera brothers 7 along with a unique Oliver designed Ampeg patented pickup In 1962 Ampeg and its 40 employees moved to a new manufacturing facility in Linden New Jersey At 8 000 square feet it was three times larger than their previous home In June of the following year after continued struggles to meet production demands and maintain cash flow Ampeg announced an initial stock offering and became a publicly held company By 1964 Ampeg had 100 employees and needed more space relocating to a larger space one block away The combination of the rising popularity of rock and roll and the shift of bassists from upright bass to electric bass guitar during this time posed a challenge to Ampeg s core business The company s ads continued to feature prominent classical jazz and country artists but with a notable absence of rock artists and Hull strove to minimize rock musician visits to Ampeg s facilities Hull s distaste for rock and roll music was further compounded by the success of Ampeg s chief competitor Fender as they continually bested Ampeg in overall sales 3 Through the 1960s Ampeg amplifiers were designed for clean undistorted sound with Hull saying we will never make anything for rock n roll 8 The company continued to experience growing pains by October 1966 with 200 employees and 40 000 square feet of space Ampeg s production capacity had increased to 350 000 per month yet had 3 5 million in unfulfilled backorders citation needed Amidst company struggles related to growth and manufacturing as well as disagreements with Hull Oliver resigned from Ampeg Hull began to seek potential buyers for the company Ampeg enters the rock market 1967 1970 edit In September 1967 Ampeg became a subsidiary of Unimusic Inc when the newly formed investor group acquired a majority share of Ampeg stock Unimusic consisted of investors interested in capitalizing on opportunities in the highly fragmented music equipment market of the time not unlike CBS which owned Fender and Rhodes or later Norlin which owned Gibson Guitars Lowrey and Moog Music 9 While Hull was retained as President of Ampeg Unimusic had purchased the company with the intention of using as a starting point for change After a year of conflict between Hull and Unimusic Hull tendered his resignation on October 3 1968 4 Unimusic introduced a redesigned Ampeg logo and a new series of advertisements targeted at the rock market In an effort to establish an Ampeg presence in key music markets Ampeg opened regional offices in Chicago in Nashville near the Ryman Auditorium and in the Hollywood Palladium in Hollywood citation needed Ampeg chief engineer Bill Hughes and Roger Cox with input from Bob Rufkahr and Dan Armstrong a New York session guitarist and guitar expert hired as a consultant were developing what Cox envisioned as the biggest nastiest bass amplifier the world had ever seen The Rolling Stones anticipated using Hiwatt DR 103 amps as during their 1969 Hyde Park gig which they brought from England Their road manager Ian Stewart contacted Rich Mandella at the Ampeg office in Hollywood and Rich arranged for the band to use five prototype amplifier heads of this new high output model These employed a 14 tube design to generate 300 watts of power in an era when most tube amps generated less than 100 The Rolling Stones took these prototypes and Mandella on tour playing all guitars and basses through them for the entire tour After the tour Ampeg put the design into production as the SVT introducing it at the NAMM Show in 1969 10 11 12 13 14 15 After Armstrong and his amp tech Tom Duffy began modifying B 25 bass heads for rock guitar the design team responsible for the SVT created the V series introducing the V 3 V 2 and V 4 heads VT 22 and VT 40 combos in 1970 The V 2 V 4 and V 22 were adopted by high profile guitarists like Ron Wood and Keith Richards both would use Ampeg SVT heads and cabs until 1981 when they replaced the SVTs with Mesa Boogie Mark I and Coliseum 300 amps Armstrong designed a transparent plastic guitar and bass for Ampeg The guitar was used by Keith Richards with The Rolling Stones during the same 1969 1970 and 1971 tours and some early shows of the 1972 tour and the bass version by Bill Wyman on the 1972 tour and some of the 1973 Winter tour shows In 1971 citing lack of compensation for his contributions to the V series amplifiers Armstrong left Ampeg and refused to renew the agreement allowing manufacture his guitar and bass 16 Changes in ownership 1971 1985 edit In 1971 Ampeg was acquired by Magnavox 17 18 which owned musical instrument manufacturer Selmer but was better known for televisions radios and hi fi components The following year Magnavox dissolved Ampeg s incorporation and moved Ampeg s management to the Selmer Magnavox offices in Elkhart Indiana In 1974 amidst economic struggles and production capacity surpluses Magnavox closed Ampeg s Linden plant moving production to a portion of a Magnavox electronics factory there In 1978 SVT designer Bill Hughes left the company In 1980 Ampeg was acquired by Music Technology Inc MTI a wholesaler specializing in amplifiers from Japan and keyboards from Italy looking to expand Under MTI management SVT and V series amps were prototyped for production in Japan though V series were never produced MTI also introduced five new solid state amps and six new tube amps for Ampeg and a series of effects pedals But after production issues and substandard sales MTI declared bankruptcy a few years later when St Louis Music and LOUD 1986 2018 edit In 1986 St Louis Music SLM acquired the assets of Ampeg 17 including the rights to the name and all remaining MTI inventory SLM converted leftover V5 heads into SVT 100s and set out to re create the SVT setting aside a room at SLM Electronics for an intensive development project Working from original SVT drawings and parts purchase orders from 1969 the team created a run of 500 amplifiers in 1987 dubbed the Limited Edition SVT HD amps 19 SLM then re established Ampeg manufacturing in its Borman Avenue factory in St Louis introducing fourteen new Ampeg guitar and bass amps and the world s largest bass amplifier at the 1987 summer NAMM Show citation needed In 2005 LOUD Technologies Inc purchased St Louis Music and its brands including Ampeg 17 and Crate amplifiers ending their production at the Yellville Arkansas facility in March 2007 outsourcing amplifier manufacture to contract manufacturers in Asia 18 In May 2018 following the purchase of Loud Technologies Inc by Transom the Ampeg brand was acquired from the restructured LOUD Audio LLC by Yamaha Guitar Group Inc 20 21 The current Ampeg company is mainly known in the field of bass amps 22 They also have a line of guitar amplifiers and a remake of the Dan Armstrong guitar and bass 23 Ampeg holds six U S patents under the Ampeg brand name 20 Amplifiers edit nbsp Ampeg Portaflex B 15N early 1970s Ampeg Portaflex edit Main article Ampeg Portaflex In the late 1950s Jess Oliver invented 3 a combo amplifier with a chassis that could be inverted and tucked inside the speaker enclosure to protect the vacuum tubes This combo bass amp was introduced in 1960 as the Portaflex and remained a popular choice through the 1960s nbsp BT 15 transistor bass amp 1966 1967 24 nbsp Portaflex 2011 PF 350 Class D HeadReverberocket edit nbsp Ampeg R 12 R ReverberocketIn 1961 Ampeg became the first company to incorporate reverberation reverb in an amplifier with its Reverberocket which preceded Fender s Vibroverb amp by nearly two years 25 Despite Hull s distaste for rock and roll and resistance to distortion the Reverberocket employed 6V6 type power tubes which sounded Fendery and did break up in a way that rock and roll players could use 26 Other vintage models nbsp Gemini II G 15L 1965 1968 nbsp GT 10 solid state guitar amp 1971 1980 nbsp vintage Ampeg ampsat RCA Studio BSuper Valve Technology edit Main article Ampeg SVT nbsp Ampeg SVT VR Vintage Reissue During the 1960s Ampeg only produced fairly low wattage combo amplifiers Rock concerts were becoming increasingly large affairs and bigger amplifiers were needed In 1969 Ampeg s Chief Engineer Bill Hughes designed the Super Valve Technology circuitry for the amplifier of the same name At 85 lb 39 kg the Ampeg SVT provided 300 watts of RMS power considerably more than most other bass amplifiers of the era The high power rating made the SVT a candidate for use in larger venues The SVT saw widespread use by rock acts in the 1970s and is still considered by many to be the world standard reference bass amp The SVT VR Vintage Reissue is almost identical in design and construction and the closest thing to any of the original SVT models produced by Ampeg Other separate head models nbsp V4 1970s nbsp B 25 c 1969 and V 4B 1970s bass headsRecent amplifiers after 1990s edit In the mid 1990s SLM issued several guitar amplifiers under the Ampeg name Some of these the Diamond Blue Series used the names of vintage Ampeg models such as Jet and Reverberocket and featured the bluish colored diamond checkerboard covering associated with Ampeg amps of the 1960s The circuit designs of these amplifiers however were new The Portaflex bass amp was reissued with updates intended to make it more appealing to modern bass players The Ampeg GVT series introduced around 2010 is a series of tube amplifiers built in South Korea employing the Baxandall tone circuit 27 jargon nbsp SVT Classic SVT 350H head SVT 410HLF cab nbsp SVT Pro SVT 3 Pro head Classic SVT 610HLF 6x10 cab nbsp Bass rig with Ampeg SVT 6 Pro nbsp PortaBass 800 head with custom cab nbsp Diamond Blue B 200R bass ampInstruments and accessories editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ampeg also manufactured or had manufactured for them lines of quirky but distinctive instruments to complement their amplifiers nbsp Zorko Bass nbsp Ampeg Baby Bass Baby Bass edit Baby Bass introduced around 1962 was an electric upright bass with a full size wooden neck and a cello sized Uvex plastic body The design was purchased from Zorko re engineered by Jess Oliver and manufactured in a corner of Ampeg s Linden New Jersey factory It appeared in Ampeg s price list until about 1970 though popular only with bassists in Latin and salsa bands citation needed Guitars by Burns edit In the early 1960s Ampeg branded guitars and basses were produced by Burns of London These instruments did not sell well because import costs made them too expensive compared to Fenders and Gibsons Baldwin s purchase of Burns in 1965 ended the association with Ampeg nbsp Ampeg AEB 1 Horizontal Bass nbsp Dan Armstrong see through 1970 Horizontal Bass and Devil Bass edit 1966 1969 designed by Dennis Kager etc In 1966 Ampeg introduced their home built line of long scale Horizontal Basses aka scroll or f hole basses both fretted and fretless reputed to be the first production fretless electric bass citation needed Some with different bodies were produced as the Devil Bass with distinctive horns but the circuitry was identical Originally using a transducer below the bridge they were redesigned around 1968 to use a conventional magnetic pickup At the same time short scale fretted and fretless basses with magnetic pickups were also produced 28 Dan Armstrong see through edit In 1969 the Horizontal Basses were replaced by the Dan Armstrong designed see through guitars and basses with bodies carved from colorless acrylic plastic 29 30 The transparent bodies contributed to long sustain but were heavy The guitars incorporated slide in user changeable pickups and the short scale basses used two stacked coils with a pan pot jargon for a wide range of tones Production of the see through instruments ended in 1971 when Armstrong left the company Stud series edit nbsp Big Stud electric bass 1973 1975 In the mid 1970s Ampeg had a line of Japanese made guitars and basses under the Stud name The guitars included the Stud Heavy Stud and Super Stud and the basses included the Big Stud and Little Stud The Studs were knock offs of popular Fender and Gibson instruments although the Fender copies sported rather incongruous 3 3 and 2 2 guitar and bass headstocks Some of the Stud instruments were poorly built e g the plywood bodies and necks on the Little Stud while others had good quality features e g gold plated hardware on the Super Stud Hagstrom distribution edit nbsp Swede Patch 2000 1976 79 In 1971 Ampeg was acquired by Magnavox which led to a distributorship deal with the Swedish guitar company Hagstrom In 1975 Ampeg and Hagstrom collaborated to develop their first guitar synthesizer hybrid using the contact of the strings on the frets as electric switches In 1976 the Swede Patch 2000 was released which required Ampeg Patch 2000 Pedals and an external synthesizer Steiner Parker Microcon was designed for it 31 Effects pedals amp Accessories edit Ampeg also produced effects pedals including stand alone reverb units in the 60s the Scrambler distortion from 1969 a resurgence in interest resulted in an updated Scrambler being reissued in 2005 along with Sub Blaster octaver that produced a note one octave down the Phazzer phaser from the mid to late 70s and a line of nine stomp boxes produced in Japan in the mid 80s There were also Ampeg branded accessories that included covers picks strings straps polish as well as two practice amps the Sound Cube and the Buster a Pignose clone Currently Ampeg mostly offers covers some outerwear and a few other accessories with their logo Recent instruments after 1990s edit In the mid to late 1990s Ampeg reissued the Baby Bass the Horizontal Bass 3 and the See Through instruments as well as wooden instruments based on the See Through design References edit Ampeg Bass guitar amplification Ampeg Amplifiers Musician s Friend www musiciansfriend com a b c d Hopkins amp Moore 1997 a b Hopkins amp Moore 1999 p 175 Fuchs Andy Hopkins Gregg July 30 2011 Remembering Jess Oliver Inventor of the Ampeg B 15 Premiere Guitar Retrieved 2019 04 18 Fjestad Zachary August 17 2010a Ampeg B 15N Portaflex Premier Guitar the B 15 underwent constant change and the B 15 was replaced by the B 15N in 1961 In 1962 Ampeg updated the B 15N with a solid state rectifier called the B 15NB and introduced their famous blue check vinyl covering to their entire amp line Ampeg went back to a tube rectifier and changed to a printed circuit board in 1964 B 15NC This model lasted until mid 1965 when they introduced the B 15NF with fixed bias tubes and a single baffle cabinet Ampeg went through numerous ownership changes over the next two decades with Unimusic taking over in 1967 Magnavox in 1971 and MTI in 1980 St Louis Music bought Ampeg in 1985 and finally returned some stability and respect to the brand The company also reissued the B 15N Portaflex with blue check covering in 1995 Ampeg was purchased by LOUD Technologies in 2005 and in 2010 they introduced the new Heritage Series that is produced in the US Hopkins amp Moore 1999 p 101 Hunter Dave 2012 Amped The Illustrated History of the World s Greatest Amplifiers First ed London England Voyageur Press p 62 ISBN 978 0760339725 Retrieved 2019 04 29 Barnhart Bill February 2 1986 Financial Printing Firms Press Hard to Outsell the Competition Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune Retrieved 2023 07 20 Massey Sylvia October 25 2010 Gear Stories With Sylvia Massey Her Satanic Majesty s SVT Beast The Dangerous Ampeg Tone Mix Retrieved 2019 04 29 Rotondi James Learn the Differences and History of Three Iconic Ampegs Universal Audio Retrieved 2019 04 29 Henry J P September 28 2016 American Muscle The Ampeg SVT Voodoo Guitar Retrieved 2019 04 29 Herrera Jonathan February 20 2018 A Brief History of Bass Amplification BassPlayer Archived from the original on 2019 04 30 Retrieved 2019 04 29 Fliegler Ritchie Eiche Jon F 1993 Amps The Other Half of Rock n Roll Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation p 38 ISBN 9780793524112 Kies Chris May 11 2013 1969 Ampeg SVT Head and 8x10 Cabinet Premier Guitar Retrieved 2019 04 29 Feser Phil April 2007 Ampeg Dan Armstrong Plexi Guitar Vintage Guitar Retrieved 2019 04 30 a b c Fjestad 2010a a b Fjestad 2010 Bober Jeff May 12 2017 Ask Amp Man Limited Edition Ampeg SVT Premier Guitar Retrieved 2019 04 29 a b Yamaha Guitar Group Announces Acquisition Of Legendary Bass Amp Brand Ampeg PDF Press release Yamaha Guitar Group May 10 2018 Retrieved 2018 05 10 Astley Brown Michael May 11 2018 Yamaha announces acquisition of Ampeg MusicRadar Retrieved 2018 11 05 Herrera Jonathan January 8 2020 Review Ampeg Classic Analog Bass Preamp and Scrambler Bass Overdrive BassPlayer Retrieved 2020 12 10 Moore Adam November 11 2008 Ampeg AMG100 Review Premier Guitar Retrieved 2018 11 05 Hopkins amp Moore 1999 p 118 Solid State in the Garden State Hunter Dave May 2016 Ampeg s Jet Reverb Prototype Vintage Guitar Retrieved 2018 11 05 Hunter Dave January 2013 The Ampeg R 12 R Reverberocket Vintage Guitar pp 58 60 Retrieved 2018 11 05 Thompson Art February 13 2012 Ampeg GVT5 110 GVT15H and GVT52 112 Guitar Player Archived from the original on 2019 04 17 Retrieved 2018 11 05 Hopkins Gregg Moore Bill March 1997 Ampeg Horizontal Basses From Liden NJ to Linden Avenue Burbank CA Vintage Guitar Archived from the original on 2007 11 14 I Can Play Clearly Now The Wood Is Gone New Ampeg Dan Armstrong Plexi Bass Ampeg March 10 2008 Archived from the original on 2011 07 07 Intro Archived from the original on 2014 09 29 Dan Armstrong The Man and His Guitars Archived from the original on 2014 09 29 Patch 2000 Hagstrom org uk Archived from the original on 2020 12 10 Retrieved 2020 12 10 Bibliography editHopkins Gregg Moore Bill 1999 Ampeg The Story Behind the Sound Musical Instruments Series Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation ISBN 978 0 7935 7951 8 Fjestad Zachary R 2009 Ampeg Dan Armstrong Ampeg Blue Book of Electric Guitars 12th ed Blue Book Publications ISBN 978 1 886768 93 2 Fjestad Zachary R 2010 Ampeg Blue Book of Guitar Amplifiers 4th ed Blue Book Publications ISBN 978 1 936120 05 5 Further reading edit 300 Watts Of Bass Amp Glory The SVT Story Ampeg History Archived from the original on 2018 02 21 Through The Years Clearly The Story of the Dan Armstrong Series Ampeg History Archived from the original on 2018 01 24 Ampeg Milestones Ampeg History Archived from the original on 2018 04 30 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ampeg Ampeg com Official Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ampeg amp oldid 1175391467 Dan Armstrong 22see through 22, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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