Guitarist

Blackstar HT Venue MkII Club 40 6L6 combo

An alternativ­e sonic direction for Blackstar’s best-selling valve combo, with 6L6 valves, power reduction, speaker emulation, direct recording outputs, effects loop and USB audio

- Words Nick Guppy Photograph­y Neil Godwin

Blackstar’s long-running HT Venue series has been one of the world’s most popular amplificat­ion choices for more than a decade now, and it’s around three years since Blackstar took the brave move to update it. Not just a case of adding ‘MkII’ to the front panel, every feature was painstakin­gly explored and improved, with several new functions to facilitate modern home recording, including USB audio, balanced DI outputs with speaker emulation, and a brand-new digital reverb. The update proved to be a major success, cementing the HT Venue’s reputation as the go-to mid-priced valve amp.

Meanwhile, Blackstar never stands still and, following significan­t customer demand, there’s been a recent addition in the shape of the HT Club 40 MkII 6L6, which swaps the standard-issue EL34 power valves for a pair of 6L6s. For many players the 6L6 is a fundamenta­l part of the ‘American sound’, although its origins are a lot closer to home. Back in the early 1930s, British companies EMI and Marconi-Osram Valve funded an R&D project to design a new power valve

that would circumvent European patents on pentodes, which were held by Philips. The research was a success. However, M-OV’s management decided the new valve, called a beam tetrode, would be too expensive to produce and cut its losses, licensing the R&D to Radio Corporatio­n of America. RCA promptly turned it into the 6L6, which went on to become the world’s most popular power valve, used in all kinds of applicatio­ns including guitar amplifiers, where it’s been around in one shape or another for 70 years.

This 6L6-equipped HT Club 40 is distinguis­hed from the rest of the range by a coat of immaculate­ly applied basketweav­e vinyl and black chickenhea­d control knobs – apart from which it’s identical in form and function, with a generously sized plywood cabinet housing a single Celestion Seventy 80 12-inch loudspeake­r.

Inside the robust steel chassis, most of the electronic­s reside on a large highqualit­y through-plated circuit board, laid out with typical Blackstar attention to detail, minimising noise while maximising reliabilit­y. There are two channels each with two voices, and all four sounds can be accessed from the supplied footswitch. These four voices are far from simple tone presets; for each one the preamp voicing, EQ, gain structure and power amp damping simultaneo­usly shift to maximise each sound’s capability.

The Clean channel offers volume, bass and treble controls, while the Overdrive channel has gain, volume, bass, mid, treble and ISF. Unique to Blackstar, the Infinite Shape Feature continuous­ly varies the Club 40’s EQ network between British and American configurat­ions, considerab­ly widening the amp’s tonal range.

The Club 40’s master section includes a level control for its digital reverb, an overall volume control and a useful power reduction switch that drops output to around four watts for home and studio use.

Rear panel goodies include a trio of speaker outlet jacks and speaker-emulated balanced DI and stereo line/headphones outputs, together with a push-button switch that offers 1x12 or 4x12 cabinet emulations. Another push button selects between two reverb presets: one a bright plate, the other a warm room with plenty of jazz club ambience – nice.

A button selects two reverb presets: one a bright plate, the other a warm room with plenty of jazz club ambience – nice

There’s a series effects loop with switchable levels and two footswitch sockets. One is for the supplied two-button unit, which changes channels and toggles voice settings, while the other is for Blackstar’s optional FS-14 five-button controller, which accesses channels and voices, as well as toggling the reverb and a global boost.

Lastly, on the far right, there’s a USB audio socket that lets you connect the Club 40 directly to a computer or DAW for recording. The USB sends four independen­t channels simultaneo­usly: a fully processed left and right with speaker emulation and stereo reverb, a preamp out with no reverb or speaker emulation, and a dry, unprocesse­d guitar signal as received by the amp. The USB can also receive audio in on a stereo pair, taken via the emulated output.

Overall, as you’d expect from Blackstar, the HT Club 40 MkII 6L6 is a good-looking and well-built combo, compact and portable enough for home and studio use, while ready for any size of stage.

Feel & Sounds

Along with our Duncan Alnico Pro-loaded Strat and PAF-equipped Les Paul Standard, we borrowed a Gibson ’63 ES-335 CS replica to put the Club 40 through its paces. It’s practicall­y noiseless in operation, making it ideal for use at home or in the studio where Blackstar’s speaker emulation, digital reverb and USB audio interface make it easy to connect to computers or DAWs.

This new 6L6 option is really about taking a different tonal direction, and given its wide-ranging tone controls we were interested to see how much of a difference the valve makes. The Club’s ‘American’ clean voice setting already produces the kind of sounds you’d expect to hear from 6L6-powered amplifiers: clean, bright highs and a solid yet tight low-end, with plenty of headroom to accommodat­e pedalboard­s. Meanwhile, the ‘British’ voice has a warmer midrange and responds more

to player dynamics. We tended to favour the American clean voice setting, which we felt was enhanced by the 6L6, with a sweeter treble and better-defined lows.

The Club 40’s two overdrive voices are best described as ‘vintage’ and ‘modern’, with a variety of circuit changes producing two very different sounds. Our preference was the vintage voicing, which is tight and highly responsive with medium damping. Used with that ES-335 and the gain set to around halfway, this channel was instant vintage Larry Carlton, right on the money for recreating Mr 335’s back catalogue and perfect for any jazz/fusion style.

Swap to the Les Paul or Strat, add a little more gain and you can sound equally authentic playing any classic rock hit from the late 60s and early 70s. The higher gain modern overdrive voice has a boosted midrange, with a more aggressive feel that’s ideal for modern rock and metal – we felt this one might be better with EL34 power, while to our ears the other three voices all sounded better in 6L6 guise.

From warm, vintage jazz to snappy country and funk, and indie chime to classic and modern rock, the HT Club 40 6L6 has an uncanny knack of sounding perfectly dialled in, no matter what style you choose – something that’s usually more associated with boutique designs that only zero in on one or two specific tones.

Verdict

We’ve encountere­d the new improved HT Club 40 MKII on several occasions over the last couple of years and it gets better every time, with inspiratio­nal sounds and practicall­y boundless versatilit­y. The 6L6 subtly shifts the Club’s tonal centre, adding sonic authentici­ty for American-influenced genres yet taking little, if anything, away from textures normally associated with the EL34. Currently, both valve options cost the same so the choice is simple – go for whichever sounds best to your ears.

Compared with the competitio­n, either version is still hard to beat when it comes to bang for buck, with instant pro-quality tone for home recording or internet broadcasti­ng. When grassroots live music returns, you can relax knowing the Blackstar you bought during these strange times will handle any gig you can throw at it, with volume to spare and all the tone you’ll ever need. Bring it on!

The HT Club 40 6L6 has an uncanny knack of sounding perfectly dialled in, no matter what style you choose

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 ??  ?? 1 1. The 6L6-powered Club 40 has subtly different visuals, with basket-weave vinyl and chickenhea­d knobs
2. The speaker-emulated line-outs on the rear panel offer a choice of two cabinet voicings, with a balanced mono DI on XLR and stereo line out/phones on jack. These outputs remain active in standby for silent recording
1 1. The 6L6-powered Club 40 has subtly different visuals, with basket-weave vinyl and chickenhea­d knobs 2. The speaker-emulated line-outs on the rear panel offer a choice of two cabinet voicings, with a balanced mono DI on XLR and stereo line out/phones on jack. These outputs remain active in standby for silent recording
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 ??  ?? 4 3. Each of the two channels has two voices, covering a wide range of genres. The channels and voices are both foot-switchable
4. Blackstar’s patented ISF (Infinite Shape Feature) continuous­ly varies the EQ network from British to American configurat­ion, adding extra versatilit­y
4 3. Each of the two channels has two voices, covering a wide range of genres. The channels and voices are both foot-switchable 4. Blackstar’s patented ISF (Infinite Shape Feature) continuous­ly varies the EQ network from British to American configurat­ion, adding extra versatilit­y
 ??  ?? The USB audio can output four channels simultaneo­usly, including a left/right pair with stereo reverb, a mono preamp out without the reverb or speaker emulation, and a dry guitar in
The USB audio can output four channels simultaneo­usly, including a left/right pair with stereo reverb, a mono preamp out without the reverb or speaker emulation, and a dry guitar in

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