SWR Sound Sound Room Bass Player User Manual

Sw r redhea d

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I T ’S E ASY TO F O RG E T N O W, W H AT W I T H

the re c e n t glut of high-tech bass amps and
cabinets, but when SWR released the origi-
nal Redhead in 1988, it signaled a transition
between eras. In a sense, much of what char-
acterizes contemporary high-end bass combo
designs—high fidelity preamps with pre c i s e
signal shaping, gig-worthy power, and multi-

driver cabinets—began with the Redhead. It
quickly became the hip amp to have, and
while subsequent years found other manu-
f a c t u rers entering the increasingly compet-
itive category and diminishing the Redhead’s
dominance, the Redhead is still one of a
handful of seminal amp designs.

To bring the Redhead in line with the

S W R • D A N E L E C T R O • D R S T R I N G S • T E C H 2 1 • F U T U R E S O N I C S

S O U N D

R O O M

SOUNDROOM POLICY

We test pro ducts in real-world enviro n me nt s, evalua t i ng them with re g a rd to price and the ma nu fa c t u rer’s de s ign int e nt . Advertising does not influence our product

coverage. We invite manufacturers to fact-check product reviews prior to publication, and we print dissenting opinions when applicable. Street prices are approximate.

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B A S S P L A Y E R | M A Y 2 0 0 8

SW R

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B Y J O N AT H A N H E R R E R A

SWR REDHEAD

List $2,349

Street $1,650

Pros Punchy, loud, and articulate combo with

excellent connectivity and stage-to-studio

versatility

Cons A bit heavy by contemporary standards;

slick sound not for everyone

Bottom Line A classic gets refurbished, with

stellar results.

CO N TAC T

(480) 596-9690

www.swrsound.com

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