Guitarist

Another bolt From The blue

Supro extends its Classic series to include an additional legendary combo

- Words Nick Guppy Photograph­y Joseph Branston

Among those lost amplificat­ion brands returned from retirement in recent years, there’s none more welcome than Supro. Now under the wing of New Yorkbased Absara Audio of Pigtronix pedals fame, Supro’s roots go right back to the beginning of the electric guitar’s history, while its amps have been used on many highly influentia­l recordings. Supro pays a special tribute to its glory days with the Classic Series, which also includes the 1695T ‘Black Magick’ 1x12 combo (reviewed in issue 407) and is now joined by the Supreme 1600 we have here, a tribute to the original Chicago-built amplifier reputedly used by The Rolling Stones for many of their studio recordings.

Our 1600 Supreme looks the part, with its period-correct styling and control panel. The cabinet is almost square and quite shallow front to back, making it easy to tuck away in even the smallest bedroom. The retro vinyl work is top-notch. Like some other Supros, the original 1600 used a pair of 6973 output valves, which aren’t so common on guitar amps but are well known to restorers of old jukeboxes. There was an ‘Oahu’-branded 1600 that ran the superior and more commonly available 6V6, and it’s a pair of these valves you’ll find in the reissued version. The modern 6V6 is very reliable, more so than the current batch of 6973s, which is a good thing all round, because the 1600’s design means you can’t easily access the valves for quick replacemen­t – the whole chassis has to come out.

Underneath the control panel, the modern 1600’s electronic­s are all printed circuit,

using one large very high-quality board for everything, including the front panel controls. Top-quality components include Wima ‘pink brick’ capacitors and metal film resistors throughout, for low noise and longterm reliabilit­y. The board layout, wiring and soldering are excellent, which all adds up to an amp that’s built to take the knocks of realworld touring while continuing to perform night after night.

The 1600’s preamp features two parallel channels with separate volume controls and a single tone control. Two input jacks let you plug into Channel 2, or Channel 1 and 2 together, which increases gain and adds extra tone shaping with both volume controls active. There’s no effects loop, channel switching or any other feature that might be loosely construed as ‘modern’ – the 1600’s vintage appeal comes from its simple, straightfo­rward controls and quirky preamplifi­er design, which go a long way towards defining the kind of sounds it makes.

Feel & Sounds

The 1600 Supreme may be small but its tones are anything but, thanks to the pair of cathodebia­sed 6V6 output valves, a generously sized

output transforme­r and a very powerful 10-inch custom-designed loudspeake­r with a disproport­ionately punchy bass response. At lower volume levels, plugged into input 2, you can roll off the top-end and get a superb earthy jazz tone, which sounds great with our Ibanez archtop, especially as there’s practicall­y zero hum and hiss. Adding treble and swapping to a Tele yields some excellent country twang, with just a hint of growl as you dig in. Turn up the volumes even more, plug into both channels and swap to humbuckers, and the 1600 becomes a very capable and loud blues/ rock amp, with plenty of harmonic overtones and easily controlled feedback when you stand close to the speaker. If you play your guitar in Keef tuning, you’ll find all those classic Stones riffs sound astounding­ly authentic, with a strong USA influence.

The 1600 Supreme’s low-ish front end gain and superb low noise performanc­e also make an excellent platform for pedals, where it can sound as modern or vintage as you like, depending on what stompboxes you hook up. Slide players take note – a good compressor and overdrive will give you some truly great sounds that sit firmly in Sonny Landreth territory.

It may be small but its tones are anything but, thanks to the pair of cathode-biased 6V6 output valves, a generously sized output transforme­r and a very powerful 10-inch loudspeake­r

Verdict

Overall, the 1600 Supreme is a worthy addition to Supro’s reborn modern

catalogue: it’s built to a very high standard and blends vintage looks and tones with modern reliabilit­y. It may be a little on the pricey side, but we think you’re getting your money’s worth here.

It’s going to be particular­ly attractive to blues, classic rock and country players, with the obvious inclusion of Rolling Stones/Keith Richards fans. Meanwhile, slide players and pedal users looking for a compact low-noise platform should also look this one up. It’s small and very portable but no lightweigh­t thanks to heavy-duty transforme­rs and that amazing loudspeake­r, and the excellent low noise performanc­e makes for a very versatile studio partner.

It will be particular­ly attractive to blues, classic rock and country players, with the obvious inclusion of rolling Stones/ Keith richards fans

 ??  ?? 3 You can plug into Channels 1 and 2 simultaneo­usly, or Channel 2 alone for the original Supro sound. A standard A/B footswitch lets you swap between the channels for more flexibilit­y The master tone control has a lot of range and is perfectly dialled...
3 You can plug into Channels 1 and 2 simultaneo­usly, or Channel 2 alone for the original Supro sound. A standard A/B footswitch lets you swap between the channels for more flexibilit­y The master tone control has a lot of range and is perfectly dialled...
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 2
2
 ??  ?? 1
1
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 4 4
4.The Supreme’s superb 10-inch loudspeake­r is key to its volume and bass response
4 4 4.The Supreme’s superb 10-inch loudspeake­r is key to its volume and bass response
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia