any Marshall amp.
Depends what you mean by "rock", but a Marshall stack with vintage tube heads and 4x12 cabinets will give you that standard wall of sound. I used to swear by Mesa Boogie but there are a lot of up&coming tube amp makers out there. Definitely go tube for the amp, with at least 4 12-inch speakers to fill the room.
A guitar, amp, pick, and ability to rock out!!
Depends if you have a good guitar or not, if not get a guitar if you do get an amp and just buy a new guitar when your current one is not worth having anymore :)
Absolutely. A guitar amp is designed to amplify the guitar and related frequencies and as a consequence, sounds nice with guitar. Vocals through a guitar amp sounds bad most the time, as does guitar straight into PA speakers.
You need two guitar cables. One from the guitar to the pedal and then another from the pedal to the amp.
Your speakers will blow out. A guitar amp is not meant to handle the low register of a bass. Even on a practice amp.
we will we will rock it
A guitar, amp, pick, and ability to rock out!!
The Behringer GMX210 True Analog Modeling 60W Guitar Amp ia a good starter amp.
Depends if you have a good guitar or not, if not get a guitar if you do get an amp and just buy a new guitar when your current one is not worth having anymore :)
Absolutely. A guitar amp is designed to amplify the guitar and related frequencies and as a consequence, sounds nice with guitar. Vocals through a guitar amp sounds bad most the time, as does guitar straight into PA speakers.
I assume you mean guitar amp. The Fender "Blues Junior" is a small amp that gets consistently good reviews.
No, a guitar amp is designed to amplify the signal from a guitar, not a microphone. Using a microphone with a guitar amp can damage both the microphone and the amp.
Very much so.
You know when you have a good guitar amp when it still sounds good cutting through the mix playing live. Many of the solid state amps sound ok on their own, but few can cut it live. Play it loud, in a band, and if it sounds good and distinct in the mix, you have a good amp.
Possibly. In my experience the bass will not work through a guitar amp?
For rock music, the best electric guitar amp settings typically involve setting the gain or distortion higher for a gritty sound, adjusting the equalization to boost the midrange frequencies for presence and clarity, and setting the volume to a level that provides a good balance between power and clarity without causing distortion.
you might need a guitar amp first