Guitar Player Editors Pick
Transcription
Guitar Player Editors Pick
Originally printed in the April 2016 issue of Guitar Player. Reprinted with the permission of the publishers of Guitar Player. Copyright 2016 NewBay Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Guitar Player, 1111 Bayhill Dr., St. 440, San Bruno, CA 94066. T. 650.238.0300. Subscribe at www.guitarplayer.com Originally printed in the April 2016 issue of Guitar Player. Reprinted with the permission of the publishers of Guitar Player. Copyright 2016 NewBay Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Guitar Player, 1111 Bayhill Dr., St. 440, San Bruno, CA 94066. T. 650.238.0300. Subscribe at www.guitarplayer.com GEAR reverb dialed in anywhere from subtle to surf’s it there at the flick of a switch when you need it. up splashy—but I think I enjoyed the lead channel Perhaps the Lincoln won’t give you the gut- even more. This option, which Carr says “makes thump of a bigger combo or stack, but it’ll get the Lincoln the highest-gain amp we make you rockin’ just fine in a packed club on a Friday right now”—packs a surprising roar for such an night, while delivering great dynamics at man- unassuming amp. Gain levels rolled easily from ageable volume levels in the process. The dual pushed-Vox to pseudo-plexi to JCM800 hair reverb controls also proved handy for dial- CONTACT carramps.com metal roar to floored-Vox Brian May-like vocal ing down the splash in hotter lead tones with- PRICE $2,830 with black covering; wail—all easily nailed on the fly thanks to the out having to switch it off entirely. All in all, the extra footswitchable boost and a very usable Lincoln is a cool and superbly functional amp, Master control (which is dedicated to this chan- one that offers a boatload of fun for any player CHANNELS nel alone). While the attenuator isn’t the most in need of a compact, versatile, and easy-to- transparent I have tried, it’s still handy to have use 18-watter. g . S P E C I F I C AT I O N S LINCOLN $2,980 for two-tone covering CONTROLS 2 Rhythm channel: Volume, Treble, Bass, Normal/Bright switch. Lead channel: Drive, Tone, Master, Carr Lincoln POWER 18/6 watts T ESTE D BY DAVE HU NT ER TUBES Four 12AX7s, two EL84s (solid- High/Low gain switch. Reverb 1 and Reverb 2 (individual levels for each channel). 18/6 attenuator switch state rectification) CARR HAS BEEN ON A MAJOR RUN are presented as an 18-watt, dual-EL84 engine smaller feet at the rear of the cab’s underside. with its lower-wattage offerings in recent years. behind rhythm and lead channels, with inde- Inside the chassis, the Lincoln displays Carr’s for rhythm/lead channel switch- The Sportsman and Skylark are American-lean- pendent Reverb controls for each, and a built- usual mix of point-to-point and turret-board ing and lead high/low gain. ing combos that quickly won a broad fan base. in attenuator to cut the output to 6 watts. All circuit construction, all hand wired using top- Built-in attenuator reducing Now the newly released Lincoln aims at EL84- that, and it’s done with admirable simplicity, notch components, with a few small printed powered British flavors. The inspiration for the which is Carr’s trademark. circuit cards used for switching functions only. EXTRAS Two-button footswitch (included) output to 6 watts. SPEAKER 12" Celestion G12M Creamback WEIGHT 40 lbs Lincoln came from a 1964 Vox AC10 combo The finger-jointed, solid-pine cab is entic- I tested the Lincoln with a Stratocaster, a Les that Steve Carr recently acquired, but since this ingly compact for a 1x12 at 24" x 16" x 9". Nift- Paul, and a Thorn SoCal C/S with staple-top- BUILT USA maker doesn’t copy anything, the Lincoln is in ily styled, too, with an integral dual-fin speaker style GT90 pickups. The rhythm channel was KUDOS Unique styling and superb build no way a clone. “I took all the vibe elements I baffle and several options of basic black or crisp and bouncy when kept shy of breakup, quality. A surprisingly versatile liked in the AC10 and incorporated them into custom two-tone covering (one of which we and enticingly chimey and chewy when pushed and great-sounding grab ’n’ go something brand new with lots of features that see here, at a $150 upcharge). The box houses slightly beyond, with a voicing that confidently combo. Particularly good lead expand the tone palette by a huge amount,” a Celestion G12M Creamback speaker, which roamed territory ranging from blackface to Top Carr explained. “I wanted to retain the sim- you should hear clearly on stage thanks to the Boost (although its circuit topology isn’t pre- plicity and ‘just the thing you need when you use of high-quality Analysis Plus speaker cable, cisely either). It’s an extremely agile performer need it’ honesty of that old amp.” The results and to the slight tip-up provided by the use of in and of itself—especially with the excellent 100 G U I TA R P L A Y E R . C O M / A P R I L 2 0 1 6 tones. CONCERNS Built-in attenuator is not especially transparent. A P R I L 2 0 1 6 / G U I TA R P L A Y E R . C O M 101
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