Again, nice tone. Couldn't tell a great deal difference between the two Fenders. I could tell a difference with the Marshall but I was listening with my eyes. Blindfolded I don't think I'd be able to pick out which amp was which.
Bassbreaker 15 with the greenback speaker. The perfect mix of Marshall plixi and fender bassman. Use a extension cab with vintage greenback. Amazing amp.
I got the British green edition it comes with the greenback it’s awesome. I have both these blues juniors too , and a Marshall blues breaker. Lmao I know I am sick. Blues breaker is obviously the best , but I find myself plugging into the little fenders the most. Try the little 7 watt basssbreaker it’s an awesome little amp. I have that too.
I was going to buy the Blues Junior IV but now the Marshall origin combo sounds the most bang for the buck given it has the iconic plexi tone, does cleans fairly well (British sounding) and takes pedals great too. Thanks for the vid!
@@leandershah1617 Of course. Without pedals it comes very close to my 1974 X without that loud volume. I always have to use my 1974 X with an amp attenuator from Palmer. It is very loud. The Origin 20 C can be used at rather low master volume and you can use the built in power stem to reduce the output volume, too. Gain is set at eight with Les Pauls for sort of bluesbreaker sound and by using a boost like Marshall Bluesbreaker pedal you get great Stratocaster tones. By reducing gain around half way you get beautiful clean tones.
I have an Origin 50c, and it has a great bass sounding. I don't know why the 20c give's me a different impression. The 50c is a GREAT amp for that vintage sounding marshall amp, especially with Cream tones, Zeppelin style or even that very bluesy with plenty of dynamics. It really does it's job
thank you for your comment. 20c is different cause of the 10 inch speaker, but it got a nice clean sound with Strats. The master volume was set very low on this vid. Here a Les Paul vid th-cam.com/video/iQPQIOWsQ7k/w-d-xo.html
I have the 50c. It is a great sounding amp and really cuts at band volume. I have only ever set mine in medium power as it is so loud!! Best value amp period. The juniors are good though. Love fender on fender tones.
20C MUST have the FX loop jumped and activated, otherwise you bypass the third pre-amp tube and the sound is absolutely terrible. Fizzy and weird. Once you activate the loop, it's a different amp and as good sounding as a real vintage Marshall with the stock 10 inch V type
It is a real quick ( too short!) sampling. But based on the old school blues phrasing I'm hearing- I liked the breakup of the Tweed BJ. ( I own a 1999 blonde 1999 that sounds similar, or can be dialed in to...)
Not easy to answer, depends what sound or music genre you prefer. BJ is always a good choice. Got a 12 inch speaker for more bass sounds but with a lot of trebls, too. Origin 20 C got a really good clean sound and a typical Marshall crunch. With origin´s effect loop you can easily use reverb or delay pedals, the built in reverb of the BJ is nice. Origin´s power reduction isn´t bad either, same for the direct out for silent recording. Origin is a bang for the buck. I never used the Origin with full master volume. I got great sounds with low master volume at 9/10 o clock and using marshall´s guvnor or bluesbreaker pedal for extra crunch. It takes pedals better here than BJ after my opinion. Both are great amps for blues. Hope I could help, try both amps in a guitar shop.
You ´re welcome. You have to try out. Marshall´s Origin line delivers sparkling clean tones (very nice to play with Strat or Les Paul), Fender Jr gets a bit crunchier warm blues tone. Go to the marshall homepage. There are some video soundfiles of the Origin amps. The higher the Origin´s master volume the more crunchier (AC/DC-like) the tone. Both amps are great.
Again, nice tone. Couldn't tell a great deal difference between the two Fenders. I could tell a difference with the Marshall but I was listening with my eyes. Blindfolded I don't think I'd be able to pick out which amp was which.
Thank you for your comment. Much appreciated. Especially Blues J. IV got more bass than the two others. I love them all.
All 3 sound good to me but there's something about the tone of the Marshall. I like it a lot.
Bassbreaker 15 with the greenback speaker. The perfect mix of Marshall plixi and fender bassman. Use a extension cab with vintage greenback. Amazing amp.
I got the British green edition it comes with the greenback it’s awesome. I have both these blues juniors too , and a Marshall blues breaker. Lmao I know I am sick. Blues breaker is obviously the best , but I find myself plugging into the little fenders the most. Try the little 7 watt basssbreaker it’s an awesome little amp. I have that too.
I love my 20C best amp ever.
Nice fenders kill on cleans. Need more of that Marshall origin 20c videos. On the fence on grabbing one. Not too many videos on them.
Thank you. Will upload more videos next week.
Yes, total agreement and too many distorted ACDC like ones.
@@tenguitar7450 perfect for Ac Dc sound.... Origin 20c got it!
I was going to buy the Blues Junior IV but now the Marshall origin combo sounds the most bang for the buck given it has the iconic plexi tone, does cleans fairly well (British sounding) and takes pedals great too. Thanks for the vid!
it is a great amp.
@@reflectormate4814 Does it Blues well?
@@leandershah1617 Of course. Without pedals it comes very close to my 1974 X without that loud volume. I always have to use my 1974 X with an amp attenuator from Palmer. It is very loud. The Origin 20 C can be used at rather low master volume and you can use the built in power stem to reduce the output volume, too. Gain is set at eight with Les Pauls for sort of bluesbreaker sound and by using a boost like Marshall Bluesbreaker pedal you get great Stratocaster tones. By reducing gain around half way you get beautiful clean tones.
@@reflectormate4814 thanks so much man. Means a lot! Post more!
@@leandershah1617 Here is a comparison I made. Short vid 1974 X and Origin 2C th-cam.com/video/R39iswuv0XM/w-d-xo.html
I have an Origin 50c, and it has a great bass sounding. I don't know why the 20c give's me a different impression. The 50c is a GREAT amp for that vintage sounding marshall amp, especially with Cream tones, Zeppelin style or even that very bluesy with plenty of dynamics. It really does it's job
thank you for your comment. 20c is different cause of the 10 inch speaker, but it got a nice clean sound with Strats. The master volume was set very low on this vid. Here a Les Paul vid
th-cam.com/video/iQPQIOWsQ7k/w-d-xo.html
I have the 50c. It is a great sounding amp and really cuts at band volume. I have only ever set mine in medium power as it is so loud!! Best value amp period.
The juniors are good though. Love fender on fender tones.
20C MUST have the FX loop jumped and activated, otherwise you bypass the third pre-amp tube and the sound is absolutely terrible. Fizzy and weird. Once you activate the loop, it's a different amp and as good sounding as a real vintage Marshall with the stock 10 inch V type
I’d know that Tweed BJr anywhere. Had mine for years, I’ve had a few amps come and go and that lil guy will be with me forever.
The tweed Blues Junior sounded the best to me.
Cool man 👏
It is a real quick ( too short!) sampling. But based on the old school blues phrasing I'm hearing- I liked the breakup of the Tweed BJ. ( I own a 1999 blonde 1999 that sounds similar, or can be dialed in to...)
How do you personally compare the Origin 20c and the BJ? I'm thinking of buying either one.
Not easy to answer, depends what sound or music genre you prefer. BJ is always a good choice. Got a 12 inch speaker for more bass sounds but with a lot of trebls, too. Origin 20 C got a really good clean sound and a typical Marshall crunch. With origin´s effect loop you can easily use reverb or delay pedals, the built in reverb of the BJ is nice. Origin´s power reduction isn´t bad either, same for the direct out for silent recording. Origin is a bang for the buck. I never used the Origin with full master volume. I got great sounds with low master volume at 9/10 o clock and using marshall´s guvnor or bluesbreaker pedal for extra crunch. It takes pedals better here than BJ after my opinion. Both are great amps for blues. Hope I could help, try both amps in a guitar shop.
@@reflectormate4814 Thanks for replying! I think I'll opt for the Marshall.
Definitely the lacquer tweed.
Marshall was a little less twangy I guess you would say.
Once that Jensen gets broken in the Tweed jnr is a killer little amp
Love it. thank you for comment.
@@reflectormate4814 no worries. You made both Juniors sound good. Most demos don't :)
im between a fender blues jr iv and the marshall origin 50, which one should i get if i love clean stuff and dirty fuzz sounds?
You ´re welcome. You have to try out. Marshall´s Origin line delivers sparkling clean tones (very nice to play with Strat or Les Paul), Fender Jr gets a bit crunchier warm blues tone. Go to the marshall homepage. There are some video soundfiles of the Origin amps. The higher the Origin´s master volume the more crunchier (AC/DC-like) the tone. Both amps are great.
@@reflectormate4814 thank you so much for all the info man!!
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muy corto el video, has uno mas largo y microfoniado pls