OK the "stereo" K&K seems to a preamp/mixer which will take the piezo PU in one channel, the mag PU n the other; and mix them with a single 3K output impedance. This is a friendly output impedance for the input of any vacuum tube guitar amp. Focusing on the guitar amp, for acoustic guitar amplification, IMHO, the Power Amp section is largely irrelevant; i.e., any configuration will do. The preamp will shape the tone. Marshal's aren't known for good clean tone, but this is a subjective thing. In my experience, acoustic guitars sound great through Fender amps with their FMV tonestack. That tonestack can be modified with a RAW control to lessen the mid frequency cut. Or, instead, a Baxandall or James tonestack can be used for a default flat EQ. Maybe the simplest thing is to play your guitar > K&K preamp > various guitar amps to see what you like.
Note that when 2 or more sound sources (here, PU's) are used, issues might develop: 1. The PU's may pickup the same signal from the guitar strings at slightly different times - a phasing issue -- causing signal cancellation when blended. 2. The PU's frequency response may overlap over part of the guitar's frequency range, thereby "boosting" those frequencies especially for certain resonant frequency peaks, unique to your particular setup (and possibly the ambiance of the particular venue). This can skew your EQ; and cause feedback. Notch filters can target the offending resonance frequencies to eliminate this cause of feedback. Ironically, phase cancellation may also help with this specific issue, but might also thin-out all the tone of the guitar's signal. It is not clear that the K&K product deals with these specific issues. There are no hard and fast solutions here. The point is to build-in the solutions for issues that may foresee-ably arise in the field.