Marshall BluesBreaker Guitar Cabinet

Bluesbreaker, Marshall’s first combo amp

the originator of stacked amps which are loved by many great guitarists..

Marshall BluesBreaker introduction

The UK’s Marshall is considered on par with the famous American brand, Fender. The founder, Jim Marshall, was once a musician himself, and later established the Marshall Shop as a retail store. Originally, the store specialized in drums, but as the number of customers increased, the store began to specialize in the maintenance of guitar amplifiers. The guitar amps of the time were prone to breakdowns, so he decided to build his own amp, the Marshall JTM-45, based on the Fender Bassman circuit, and it was the beginning of the Marshall brand.

In the 1960s, before the establishment of live stage PA systems as we know them today, the role of instrument amplifiers was to amplify the sound of instruments on stage. Therefore, the four-cabinet stack was designed to increase the output of amplifiers and speaker cabinets so that the sound would travel farther.

After the introduction of the Marshall brand, the 1959/100W amp and 1987/50W amp were introduced, which were quickly adopted by British and American guitarists and can be heard on many stages and classic recordings. The amp had four inputs, one for each of the Treble and Normal channels, and the need for more gain led to the use of patch cables to link the two inputs together (channel linking).

Then, in 1981, came Marshall’s biggest hit the JCM800. Because of the transition from the 1959 to 1987 models, a so-called transitional period, there were several models of the JCM800. Characterized by its circuit board, the JCM800 was later subdivided into the 2203, 2204, 2205, and 2210 models. Also, at that time, the PA at the live stage had already evolved and there was no problem as long as the instrument was producing a certain volume, so Master Volume came to be attached to the amplifier from this time.
When the JCM800 was in its infancy, guitarists were seeking more gain and were creating their own signature sounds by boosting with pedal effects pedals and using high-power pickups. The JCM900, the successor to the JCM800, was introduced by Marshall with a gain-boosting circuit in the first stage, allowing for a gain-boosted sound without the use of pedals.

In 2000, the JCM-2000 DSL/TSL, which had been improved to meet the needs of today’s music scene, was reintroduced as the JVM of the VintageModern series. The 1959HW is a hand-wired reissue of a classic model, as reissued models and products with a stronger vintage flavor are quite popular.

Marshall is considered a founding father of guitar amps, and many new brands were created by various engineers based on Marshall’s work. Marshall is a giant in the guitar amp world, and has made music history with some of the greatest musicians.

The Bluesbreaker was a combo amp that first appeared as the Model 1962. Eric Clapton later performed with this amp alongside John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, where the amp’s nickname comes from. Equipped with an American 5881 vacuum tube and a GZ34 (5AR4) rectifier tube for the power tube, this amp is attractive for its natural tube overdrive sound in an exquisite sound range.

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