Amplifier
An amplifier is where your instrument’s character is shaped and brought to life, turning the signal from your guitar into something you can truly feel and hear. Different amplifiers respond in very different ways, from clean, detailed headroom to natural break-up, warm overdrive, or full-on distortion. Factors like valve or solid-state design, wattage, speaker configuration, and built-in controls all influence how an amp reacts to your playing dynamics and pedals. A good amplifier doesn’t just make things louder – it becomes part of your sound, responding to your touch, your guitar, and the way you play, whether you’re practising at home, recording, or playing live.
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12-String
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7-String
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8-string
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aby
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Acoustic
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acoustic amp
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Acoustic Bass Guitars
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Acoustic Guitar
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Acoustic Guitars
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amp head
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amp sim
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Amplifier
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Baritone
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Bass
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bass amp
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Bass Guitars
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Boost
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Buffer
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cab sim
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Cabinet
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Chorus
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Classical
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classical guitar
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combo amp
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Compressor
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Delay
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DI
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Distortion
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Dreadnought
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electric
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Electric Guitar
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Electric Guitars
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Electro Acoustic Guitars
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Electro-Acoustic
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envelope filter
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EQ
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Expression
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Filter
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Flanger
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Folk
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Fuzz
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Guitar
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guitar amp
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Guitar Effect Pedal
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harmoniser
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headless
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hollowbody
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ir loader
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Jumbo
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Left-Handed
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Looper
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MIDI
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mini amp
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modelling amp
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Multi
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Multi-FX
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multi-scale
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noise gate
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nylon
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Octave
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Overdrive
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Pedal
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Phaser
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Pitch
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power supply
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practice amp
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preamp
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Reverb
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rotary
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Semi-Hollow
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Solid State
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speaker configuration
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Switcher
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Synth
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Tremolo
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Tuition
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tuner
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valve amp
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VIBE
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Vibrato
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Volume
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Wah
oh blimey.
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