First "Ampeg" amp: 1946. First Ampeg-branded amp: 1948. First "Fender" amp: 1946. First Fender-branded amp: 1948.
Last year an Ampeg featured an Input labeled "ACCORDION": 1973 or 74, on the mighty GU-12. Which was the EXACT same amp as Ampeg's last Accordion amp, the AC-12. They just took out the negative feedback loop.
I don't think it had as much to do with chronology of the companies (they were basically contemporaries) as the willingness (or lack thereof) of the owners to work with the musicians of the day. Leo brought in POPULAR musicians for consultation, of many styles - he didn't care WHAT you played, as long as you did it on a Fender. He also understood aiming at EVERY level of musician - Champ to Twin. Everett Hull brought in JAZZ musicians. We can probably tell which there are more of, and when you are trying to run a growing company to reach a broad customer base, there has to be SOME provision for pleasing as many people as possible.
There's an anecdote about a harmless pop-rock group visiting Ampeg sometime in the mid-60s, and Mr. Hull told the associate with them, "get them out of here by lunch."
I think it's THAT attitude that killed Ampeg, or at least put them at a severe disadvantage. By the time the opposition to Loud Crunchy Guitar got out of the way, Fender and Marshall were already ruling the world... Ampeg was set free to embrace R&R way too late. They also suffered the ravages of the mid-60s buyouts and mergers, but where Fender was bought by a legitimate firm with money to put behind the company, Ampeg was bought by an investment firm who didn't know what the hell they were doing...
Justin
Last year an Ampeg featured an Input labeled "ACCORDION": 1973 or 74, on the mighty GU-12. Which was the EXACT same amp as Ampeg's last Accordion amp, the AC-12. They just took out the negative feedback loop.
I don't think it had as much to do with chronology of the companies (they were basically contemporaries) as the willingness (or lack thereof) of the owners to work with the musicians of the day. Leo brought in POPULAR musicians for consultation, of many styles - he didn't care WHAT you played, as long as you did it on a Fender. He also understood aiming at EVERY level of musician - Champ to Twin. Everett Hull brought in JAZZ musicians. We can probably tell which there are more of, and when you are trying to run a growing company to reach a broad customer base, there has to be SOME provision for pleasing as many people as possible.
There's an anecdote about a harmless pop-rock group visiting Ampeg sometime in the mid-60s, and Mr. Hull told the associate with them, "get them out of here by lunch."
I think it's THAT attitude that killed Ampeg, or at least put them at a severe disadvantage. By the time the opposition to Loud Crunchy Guitar got out of the way, Fender and Marshall were already ruling the world... Ampeg was set free to embrace R&R way too late. They also suffered the ravages of the mid-60s buyouts and mergers, but where Fender was bought by a legitimate firm with money to put behind the company, Ampeg was bought by an investment firm who didn't know what the hell they were doing...
Justin
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