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Fryette Deliverance realisation (Salvation praise)
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<blockquote data-quote="buriedorburned" data-source="post: 149706" data-attributes="member: 1259"><p>So I've recently been playing with a Fryette Deliverance and it's a great amp. Earlier this year I owned a Sig X briefly, that while excellent, wasn't quite my tone.</p><p>I've wanted to try a D120 for years, it's highly regarded and had that aggressive Marshall flavor I love, with enough of Fryette's own tone to make it stand out. I honestly thought it might be my holy grail, I love it's versatility and sheer brutality. That said, as with all Fryette products, it is a bit stiff for my liking and in the end that will be the downfall for me. </p><p></p><p>Now comes the "but". I have to be totally honest about this. As with a lot of amps I play, one thing always stands out. I play them, I'm impressed by their tone (be it a Mesa, Marshall, Bogner, Soldano or whatever), but ultimately all I can think is "Salvation can build me this easy". </p><p></p><p>I've owned several Engl's, his Angel nailed it. I've owned a Soldano HR+, his Salvado surpassed it. The Benzin was about as Diezel as modules can honestly get. The Legend was a Steve Vai Carvin, and the Camerock may be one of the best musician products of the last decade. </p><p></p><p>I just thought it had to be said.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="buriedorburned, post: 149706, member: 1259"] So I've recently been playing with a Fryette Deliverance and it's a great amp. Earlier this year I owned a Sig X briefly, that while excellent, wasn't quite my tone. I've wanted to try a D120 for years, it's highly regarded and had that aggressive Marshall flavor I love, with enough of Fryette's own tone to make it stand out. I honestly thought it might be my holy grail, I love it's versatility and sheer brutality. That said, as with all Fryette products, it is a bit stiff for my liking and in the end that will be the downfall for me. Now comes the "but". I have to be totally honest about this. As with a lot of amps I play, one thing always stands out. I play them, I'm impressed by their tone (be it a Mesa, Marshall, Bogner, Soldano or whatever), but ultimately all I can think is "Salvation can build me this easy". I've owned several Engl's, his Angel nailed it. I've owned a Soldano HR+, his Salvado surpassed it. The Benzin was about as Diezel as modules can honestly get. The Legend was a Steve Vai Carvin, and the Camerock may be one of the best musician products of the last decade. I just thought it had to be said. [/QUOTE]
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Fryette Deliverance realisation (Salvation praise)
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