Amplifier
Sites Results (Showing 1-10 of 22) | |
Mad Professor (Mar 23, 2014 - 93 hits)
Mad Professor is a finland based company that has made premium quality guitar and bass pedals and amplifiers since 2002.
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Tone King (Mar 16, 2014 - 66 hits)
Makes High Performance Vacuum-Tube Guitar Amplifiers for Tone Fanatics
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65 Amps (Jan 27, 2012 - 74 hits)
Guitar amplifiers
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Fargen (Jan 5, 2012 - 41 hits)
Fargen Amplification has progressed from a small one man operation, into a thriving boutique company that ships world class guitar amplifiers to discerning players on three continents. Benjamin Fargen also provides consultant design work as well as world tour amp support, to many of the world's most celebrated guitarists.
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Blackheart (Jun 1, 2010 - 185 hits)
Guitar amp manufacturer based in the USA.
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Bogner (Mar 13, 2010 - 156 hits)
Fabriquant américain d'amplis guitares, fondé par Reinhold Bogner en 1989 à Los Angeles, connu pour sa série d'amplis guitares Shiva, Ecstasy, et Uberschall.
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Hartke (Mar 4, 2010 - 152 hits)
Hartke est une marque du groupe Samson Technologies qui fabrique du matériel sonore tel que des amplificateurs, principalement pour guitares basses. Hartke propose aussi de nombreux accessoires, tels que des cordes ou des pédales à effets.
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Gallien-Krueger (Feb 15, 2010 - 133 hits)
Bass Amplifiers manufacturer
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SWR (Feb 12, 2010 - 114 hits)
Fabriquant américain d'ampli basses et d'amplis pour guitares acoustiques.
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Ampeg (Feb 5, 2010 - 92 hits)
Ampeg is a musical instrument amplifier manufacturer headquartered in Woodinville, Washington. Although the company specializes in the production of electric bass guitar amplification, Ampeg also manufactures electric guitar and double bass amplifiers. Ampeg first existed under the name 'Michaels-Hull Electronic Labs', as a partnership between Everett Hull, an accomplished pianist and bassist, and Stanley Michaels. The original goal of the company was to produce both a new microphone pickup that Hull designed, and to produce instrument amplifiers with a minimum of output distortion. In general, tube amplifiers will break up into a distorted sound when overdriven, an effect that Hull, a jazz musician, disliked. The pickup was intended to fit onto the end of an upright bass, and was dubbed the 'Amplified Peg' or 'Ampeg' for short. After gaining sole proprietorship of the company, Hull changed the company’s name to 'Ampeg Bassamp Company'.
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