A classic from Marshall"s museum.
Earn [points_amount] when you buy this item.
There is perhaps no other amplifier more vital to the history of rock & roll than the Marshall Plexi Super Lead 1959. We took Marshall-s own museum-piece Plexi (a pristine model from 1967) under extremely careful security and supervision, and modeled each and every component to produce the most textured, detailed software version imaginable. At any setting it responds exactly like the hardware, and it-s sensitive to your playing style like you wouldn-t believe.
Extreme sound quality and authenticity
Component-modeled for the most accurate possible recreation of Marshall's own reference unit.
AC/DC's own engineer
Cabinet responses recorded at Kore Studio, London, with mic selections and positions by AC/DC engineer Tony Platt (Highway to Hell, Back in Black).
The guitar hero's choice
Angus Young, Jimmy Page, Graham Coxon, Johnny Ramone, John Frusciante, Slash, Pete Townshend, Eric Clapton, Jimi Hendrix - they all used a Plexi Super Lead.
The history of Rock & Roll
The Plexi-s design was essentially commissioned by Pete Townshend of The Who, looking for more power, volume, and grunt as true high-voltage rock began to explode in the mid -60s. Eric Clapton traded in his -Bluesbreaker- combo for a Super Lead when he founded Cream in 1966. Jimi Hendrix, for goodness sake, played a Super Lead at Woodstock. Need we say more?
The first Marshall full stack was created for the Plexi. Initially the super-powerful, 100 watt amp was paired with a huge 8x12 speaker cabinet, but soon the preference shifted to two 4x12s, one straight and one angled. It-s hard to overstate how much of a cornerstone this amp is. Rock simply wouldn-t look or sound the same without it.
Your own personal legendary engineer
We retained the services of Tony Platt, engineer for AC/DC on some of the most face-meltingly rocktastic albums of all time, to capture impulse responses from a perfect era-appropriate 1960BHW cabinet with a variety of expertly placed vintage microphones. Nothing comes close to the mix-ready magic of these sounds. We built a world-class engineer, who knows the amp like an old friend, right into the plug-in.
The channel strip
In addition to the amp itself, the plug-in provides a complete setup and workflow for getting mix-ready sounds. Three different microphone combos - FET, Valve, and Dynamic - were recorded by Platt at Kore Studios in London, and the results can be blended and tweaked in the side panel of the plug-in.
Each microphone has its own volume and pan settings, just as you'd expect working in a top-class studio, so you can mix your own ideal sound right there in the plug-in. This is more than just an amp sim. It's a complete workflow for an amazing mix-ready guitar tone.
Detailed and versatile tone
Two channels, a lead and a rhythm, each with both high and low gain inputs, can be combined (or 'jumped') for a wide-range of sounds. Go from a warm, gritty twang right up to a searing wailing rock god solo scream, and never let The Man stand in your way.
Angus Young played one in AC/DC. Jimmy Page played one in Led Zeppelin. Graham Coxon, Johnny Ramone, John Frusciante, Slash. The versatility of the 1959 (-1959-, by the way, being a model number rather than a production year), and the ease with which it produces fantastic harmonically rich sounds, defined a genre and a movement.
Don-t compromise with lesser rigs. Don-t put up with pretenders. Get the one and only Plexi Super Lead 1959, and ground your tone in pure rock.
In short