Friday, July 17, 2015

The Ugly Truth About Roland Jazz Chorus 40

For those of you uninformed, Roland announced they they are making a new model of the Jazz Chorus Stereo Guitar Amplifier. Just like no one asked for. This Amp is a blast from the past that has seen usage from big names. Chiefly among the more famous users of the Jazz Chorus series were the police. (although it is more likely they use the stereo chorus effect unit rather than the amp) Still there are users and fans of the amps. These amps peaked back when the keytar was still considered a legitimate instrument, so why are they bringing out more of them?

They Are Solid State. 

Ask anybody who has played more than a few guitar amps and they will tell you, tube amps have great tone. Not all tube amps sound awesome. Not all solid state amps sound bad. I have a little Vox combo that sounds awesome and it uses a solid state power section. I'm not a huge fan of the Night Train series of amps by Vox and they are all tube. Of course this is all subjective, but hey. Solid State amps can sound great. By all accounts, the Jazz Chorus amps have great clean tones. They all, historically, have terrible overdrive and distortion channels. Do the new Jazz Chorus combos have bad drive channels? I don't know, I did see a video put out by Roland that didn't exactly thrill my when they demonstrated the overdrive.



It Doesn't Play Well With Others

So here some more hearsay, Pedals don't have the same effect when running into the front of this amp. Some amps are better through the effects loop, but dirt usally goes in front to push the pre-amp. It has a stereo input. To quote Roland, "In addition to a normal mono input, the JC-40 features a true stereo input that allows players using stereo effects devices to achieve wide, inspiring sound without having to carry around two separate amps. The rich JC clean tone is a perfect palette for external stereo pedals like delays, reverbs, and various modulation effects. It’s also ideal for advanced gear that employs amp modeling, multi-effects, and/or synth capabilities, such as the GT-100, GP-10, and ME-80 from BOSS, and GR-55 guitar synth from Roland." Notice any missing from that list of effects? Dirt. Yes Stereo effects are great, but this amp is in need of some "D". 

Roland Says That They've Fix All Of These Things

Roland might be the company that never left the 1980's. They still produce the DS-1 for crying out loud. That thing sell just because it is almost mandatory that a beginner buy one with their first electric. Roland is obviously very proud of their new Jazz Chorus, and if great clean tones and rugged dependability of solid state power appeal to you, then you might want to check out the JC-40 By Roland. They are built this amp around what Jazz musician seek in an amplifier, but they have made it dynamically diverse enough to serve many purposes. 

1 comment:

  1. Run your overdrive and distortion pedals straight in, but put a compressor in the effects loop (and crank it up). This will mimic the tube compression that’s missing from the solid-state amp, It’s the reason people don’t like the way distortion pedals sound with the JC. This is the way.

    ReplyDelete