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I need it to be a comboBass waves are BIG.
To get the air to shake with bass, you either need a BIG amp or BIG speakers.
(Or both.)
"Usually" this leads to a 2-part construction, because otherwise it's too much for your roadies.
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this will be for my wifeI have a niece could probably roadie a combo DC300 and two-15" box. But even she would break-out the saw after the first gig.
I sure would not screw a 200-watt tube amp to any bass speaker worthy of that kind of power.
You sure your bassist really cares tube or transistor? Most don't. Others keep the old SVT in the garage and carry the G-K or SWR or Hartke to shows-- after the 3rd drink, the audience sure doesn't know the difference.
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she has an Ashdown 500 watt with a Goliath III cab, 4 ohms, 800 watt.Does it suck? Back in the day, we woulda creamed our jeans with a rig like that.
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an Ampeg B-15NGreat amp; but won't do
Yes in any venue larger than a cellar.
Roundabout is a lot about the running bass-stomp, little of
Yes is bassless. I imagine in the early years,
Yes had trouble getting a live sound in large rooms which compared to what was on vinyl. Big _reliable_ transistor amps (and piles of speakers) was the answer.
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having euphoric recall, but my memory tells me the old Ampeg I had sounded better. I think we had better drugs then. Even the beer was better (my beer is Rheingold).
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