Tone King

Summary

Tone King is a manufacturer of vacuum tube guitar amplifiers and stand-alone attenuators located in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S. Tone King was founded by Mark Bartel in 1993 in Kingston, New York, after studying vintage fender amplifiers with blues guitarist Ben Prevo.[1] In 1994 Mark moved the company to Baltimore. Tone King is one of the boutique "vintage" amplifier companies making Fender style amps. Tone King was owned by the company Premier Builders Guild (PBG). In 2016 PBG went out of business and sold the Tone King brand to Boutique Amps Distribution (BAD), which now manufacturers these amps in Huntington Park, California.

Tone King
Founded1993; 31 years ago (1993) in Kingston, New York
FounderMark Bartel
Headquarters,
United States
Owner
  • Premier Builders Guild (until 2016)
  • Boutique Amps Distribution (from 2016)
Websitetoneking.com

In January 2016, Tone King introduced the new Royalist 45 Mk II amplifier, an updated version of Tone King's Royalist amplifier, known for its low-gain British sound qualities.[2] That same month, Tone King introduced an updated version of its Ironman attenuator, the Ironman II Mini.[3][4]

There are 4 different amplifiers in the current lineup that all feature the Ironman compensated reactive load attenuation: Gremlin Combo, Falcon Grande Combo, Imperial Head and Combo, Sky King.

Critical acclaim edit

Of the Tone King Ironman II Mini attenuator, Guitar Player magazine reviewer Dave Hunter said this in a June 28, 2016 review: "The Ironman II Mini will go down to whisper-quiet, and sound reasonably good in the process, but the better test was in knocking off a reasonable 6dB to 9dB, at which levels I found it impressively accurate and unobtrusive."[5][6]

References edit

  1. ^ "About – Bartel Amplifiers LLC".
  2. ^ "Tone King Amplification Releases the Royalist 45 Mk II and the Ironman II Mini Precision Reactive Power Attenuator - Premier Guitar". Premier Guitar. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  3. ^ "Tone King Amplification Releases the Royalist 45 Mk II and the Ironman II Mini Precision Reactive Power Attenuator - Premier Guitar". Premier Guitar. February 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  4. ^ Mark Bartel demos Tone King Royalist 45 Mk II and Ironman II Mini at 2016 NAMM
  5. ^ "Review: Tone King Ironman II Mini & Radial Engineering Headload Attenuators - Guitar Player". Guitar Player. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  6. ^ Guitar Player Ironman II Mini Video Review

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Guitar Player review
  • Harmony Central reviews
  • Kenn Fox interview Describes using a Tone King amp.
  • Guitarist James Bay references his use of Tone King amplifiers.