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Comments
I just love the Fender Bassman sound... It's worth mentioning that Alexander Dumble
designed his most famous amp for Robben Ford after hearing Robben play through a
Fender Bassman. It's easy to guess that Dumble took the Fender circuit and made his amp
using upgraded components and great tubes. But the sound of that Bassman was the
trigger for a whole generation of "clean blues based" players like Ford, Hendrix, etc.
Now I need to run the numbers on the cost to be able to use this bundle.
Well Played!![:) :)](https://forum.loopypro.com/resources/emoji/smile.png)
Thanks for listening guys!
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Here is Ford talking about the story:
![](https://img.youtube.com/vi/JlWrkqChSVk/0.jpg)
I've heard him tell the story in a couple of other interviews I've heard/read. Short version: Ford was not a super early Dumble owner. He didn't know that Dumble had been inspired by his tone until after he picked up a completed amp sometime in the early 80. Dumble lived in Santa Cruz (California) in the 60s and 70s. Ford is from the SF Bay Area and used to have a semi-regular gig in Santa Cruz in the early 70s. Dumble (was hot-rodding Fenders at the time -- much like Randall Smith-- of Mesa fame -- who was also in the Bay Area) used to go hear Ford play and dug his tone and wanted to come up with an amp that sounded like Ford did.
(There is some question as to whether Ford was playing through a blackface Bassman or a blond piggyback model.)
Apparently, Dumble amps first got on Ford's radar when he got to know Larry Carlton after moving to L.A. Carlton had recently switched to Dumble but Ford couldn't afford one -- so he rented them for a while for sessions before he bought is first one in the early-ish 80s.
You are an exceptional guitar player.
I could listen to this for hours on end.
Many thanks for your kind words.
Flo