Guitar Magazine

AYNSLEY LISTER SIGNATURE

Like many of the best things in life, it all began with lunch. Aynsley Lister has been a customer of Rift Amplification’s Chris Fantana for a number of years, bringing in various pieces of vintage gear for service and repair.

“We started talking about doing a signature amp over lunch one day and what that might look like, what tones it needed to capture,” Chris remembers. “Crucially, it needed to offer Aynsley the touch response and feel that he wanted, being one of the handful of guitarists who rarely, if at all, uses pedals.”

Initial inspiration for the circuit came from Bletchley, via Switzerland. “Aynsley found a very rare 1979 Marshall JMP 50-watt 2x12 combo, model 2144, in a music shop in Switzerland,” Chris reveals. “The 2144 is unique in that it was one of only two Marshall amplifiers from that era to have onboard spring reverb, the other being the 100-watt head, model 2959.

“A few years later, he took it into Marshall for a service and the tech looked at it and proclaimed: ‘That’s not right, at all!’. It had, as he then discovered, been modified away from the original circuit in the past. Incredibly, these modifications are not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guitar Magazine

Guitar Magazine5 min read
Trent Model 1
Straight out of the box, this guitar smells different. But you get used to it. And besides that, there isn’t much to dislike about the Trent Model 1, a stylish, surprisingly affordable solidbody crafted in a one-person workshop on the south coast of
Guitar Magazine2 min read
Fretbuzz
Join the conversation Email us at editors@guitar.com Hi, over the past few months you’ve been asking for examples of home-build guitars. I thought I’d send in mine, as they are certainly a little different to what others have submitted so far: jerry
Guitar Magazine7 min read
Shop Talk: Colleen Fazio
As we find ourselves thrust deep into the digital era, one hoary old amp dog after another has opined that we’ll likely lose our understanding of analogue circuits entirely if the knowledge isn’t handed down to the next generation. One problem though

Related Books & Audiobooks