Guitar Player

Eminence DV-77 Speaker and Kristian Kohle Metal IR Pack

DV-77 Mick Thomson signature speaker and Kristian Kohle Metal IR Pack

- TESTED BY DAVE HUNTER

WITH THE QUEST for modern metal tones becoming an ever-more-refined adventure, Eminence has thrown down the gauntlet with the new DV-77 Mick Thomson Signature model. Designed in collaborat­ion with the Slipknot guitarist and Mike Smith of Omega Ampworks, the DV-77 uses Eminence’s popular CV-75 (think of the earlier English Vintage 30 platform) as a springboar­d to recalibrat­e the formula for an ideal aggressive, yet balanced heavy rock performanc­e.

While accepting that plenty of guitarists achieve their speaker sounds in the virtual realm these days, Eminence-Digital has almost simultaneo­usly released the DV-7–laden Metal IR Pack, a selection of metal-minded impulse responses created by Kristian Kohle of Kohlekelle­r Studio in Germany. We tested the actual and virtual to see how they performed.

Though its foundation lies in existing technology, Eminence tells us they designed the DV-77 from the ground up, using new voice coil and spider designs, a carefully selected U.K.-made Kurt Mueller cone and a hefty 50-ounce ceramic magnet. A higheffici­ency of 100.6 db (1W/1M) and 70-watt power handling round out the specs list.

Tested in both closed- and open-back cabs with a Les Paul into a Friedman Small Box and Boogie Mark III, the DV-77 took high gain extremely well, punching out a voice that’s lush, meaty and extremely well balanced, with no mush at the low end or stridency at the top. Where some players find a certain spiky upper-mid harshness in the Vintage 30, for example — justifiabl­e classic though it is — the DV-77’s midrange is thick and full, just a little bit creamy when overdriven, and not the least bit fatiguing. More to the point, it chugs and sings with equal aplomb while feeling dynamic and playable through all settings.

Used with either amp set clean, the DV-77 was impressive, and even at lower volumes it exhibited a linearity that beautifull­y threw back whatever you put into it. There’s a little bark from the open G and D strings that might be just a bit obtrusive for some styles, but it isn’t intended for country twanging. All in all, the Eminence DV-77 is simply a very likable and versatile performer, and a real winner for rock in particular.

KRISTIAN KOHLE METAL IR PACK

In addition to several great DV-77 IRs, this pack includes files generated using Eminence’s Swamp Thang and CV-75, plus blends, and the selection proves a real boon to any rockers going the digital route. Flipping between speaker IRs always requires an aural readjustme­nt to the surprising­ly dramatic EQ shifts, but once I’d played with them a bit via a Mesa CabClone IR+ and the Neural DSP Quad Cortex I found most options both extremely useful, and they were great-sounding captures by any measure.

I liked the various DV-77 IRs in particular, and the DV-77 Fat WAV became one of my new all-round favorites. Like the physical speaker, it’s big, full, aggressive and muscular, yet well balanced and impressive­ly musical all at the same time. All in all, this is a great selection of well-judged emulations, and worth grabbing for heavy and moderate IR needs.

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