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1955 Twin-Amp, model 5E8. Dual rectifiers and 6L6 power tubes, twin 12" speakers. After the preceding looks of the early 1950s (TV front from 1950 to 51/2; wide panel '52–54), Leo Fender changed the cabinet design again, this time opting for no extra wood on the front of the amp, except for the narrow top and bottom panels that hold the baffle board to the cabinet.
In 2013, Fender released the silverface '68 Custom amplifiers as a part of their Vintage Modified series, modeled after the original drip-edge silverfaced amps of 1968. Models included the Twin Reverb, Deluxe Reverb, Quad Reverb, and Princeton Reverb , and a Vibrolux Reverb was added to the line the following year.
Fender Toronado; Electric Guitar Series (Discontinued) Lead Series (reissued as Player Series since 2020) Steel Guitars. Lap and Console Steel Guitars.
During his early career, Santana used a GMT transistor amplifier stack and a silverface Fender Twin. The GMT 226A rig was used at the Woodstock concert as well as during recording Santana's debut album. During this era, Santana also began to use the Fender Twin, which was also used on the debut and later at the recording sessions of Abraxas.
The Fender Bandmaster Reverb was a tube amplifier made by Fender. ... These series amps offer the designations AA768, AA568, AA1069 and TFL5005.
The Fender Concert was a guitar amplifier made by Fender Musical Instruments. Its production can be split over 2 phases. Its production can be split over 2 phases. The first of these running from 1960 and until approximately 1965, at which time a typical Fender Concert was priced at $315.
A pre-1969 "Silvertop" Fender Rhodes Electric Piano. Fender was bought by CBS in 1965. [36] Rhodes stayed with the company, and released the first Fender Rhodes piano, a 73-note model. The instrument comprised parts — the piano, and a separate enclosure underneath containing the power amplifier and loudspeaker.
Donald Dean Randall was born in Kendrick, Idaho, on Oct. 30, 1917, to Earnest and Osie Violet Randall. The family moved to California when Randall was 10 years old, and he developed an interest in radios and audio amplifiers while still in high school (he earned his ham radio operator license at age 16 in 1934).