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Description

During its long and storied run the princeton line of amps with 2 band tone controls udnerwent few significant revisions. Fender played fast and loose with the use of 5AR4 or 5U4 rectifier tubes as evidenced by exampels with originals tube sintact with tube charts that do not match the factoryisntalled rectifier tube! The effect on the response of a 12 watt amp is very subtle at anything less than full volume and the tubes can be interchanged freely if you have both types and a bias adjustment will probably not even be needed. The other significant change came during the silverface CBS period when the volume pot was converted to a push-pull gain boost. Most people ignore this feature. Every other change had to do with the layout of the circuit. CBS made changes to all of the amps to streamline production. These changes defintiely icnreased the noise floor but its debatable whether they influence the sound of the amp. Fender also varied OEM speakers a lot during the 60s and 70s. While many will claim jensen was the original OEM for a princeton it seems to vary from year to year with OEM ceramic 10" speakers being supplied by Oxford, Utah and later CTS and Eminence.

Fender

Fender

Jim Campilongo Fender Princeton Reverb Amplifier | Fender

Video thumbnail for Jim Campilongo Fender Princeton Reverb Amplifier | Fender by Fender

Jim Campilongo Fender Princeton Reverb Amplifier | Fender

Fender

Fender

Reviews

PROS

  • Iconic 1960s clean and edge-of-breakup tones

  • Highly responsive to playing dynamics

  • Classic Fender tremolo and reverb effects

  • Takes pedals well, ideal for a wide range of genres

  • Compact and manageable for gigging musicians

  • Unique touch-sensitive feel similar to brownface amps

  • Versatile for both home and studio use

  • Classic 2-band EQ and tube-driven sound

  • Can be modified or upgraded, like with different speakers

CONS

  • Original issue's reverb can bog down the circuit

  • Not built for high-gain or heavily distorted tones

  • Some find the non-reverb models to sound better

  • Volume taper can be violent and unpredictable without mods

  • May require external speaker for full projection with a drummer

Critic Reviews

The History of the Fender Princeton Part III: The Blackface and Silverface Years 1964-1981 — Carl's Custom Amps

carlscustomamps.com

The Fender Princeton Reverb from the Blackface and Silverface years (1963-1981) stands as a bright, clean gem in Fender's legacy, cherished by studio and small-stage musicians for its spanky cleans and rich reverb. While the distinct tonal clarity and tremolo are praised, the amp's lack of screen resistors, non-adjustable bias, and grounding issues necessitate beneficial modifications like adding screen resistors and a bias pot. Despite these flaws, the Princeton’s solid pine cabinetry and classic circuit design make it a revered classic, offering a light overdrive when pushed. With some tweaks, it continues to earn rave reviews, underscoring its status as a timeless piece in the Fender lineup.

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5.0 out of 5

Based on 5 Reviews and 16 Ratings

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jimmarchi1

studio workhorse

This was my 1st amp. Not my 1st tube amp, my 1st amp. It was given to me by one of my uncles who is primarily a classical guitarist. At first I played it with my 1st guitar, an mij squire strat. Classic 60s tones. Fender Princeton Reverbs feature 1 channel with volume, treble, bass, trem speed, trem intensity and reverb controls. The 2 effects can be controlled via the classic 2 button footswitch with an RCA jack. The back features a courtesy outlet for another amp or whatever (but its non-polarized with no ground pin) and an external speaker jack to add a 2nd cab for more projection. The preamp is classic blackface 2 band EQ like channel 1 on a bandmaster head feeding a cathodyne phase inverter instead of a long-tailed pair that keeps the preamp tube count down to 3 12ax7es (2 stages for preamplification, 1 stage trem oscillator for the swampy bias-vary tremolo, 1 stage phase inverter, and 2 stages for reverb drive and recovery). The amp runs 2 6V6 tubes in fixed bias for a respectable 15 watts of clean tone through a 10" speaker (the PI structure probably cuts the wattage a bit, but its part of the sound) and she is tube rectified. The tube chart calls for a 5U4 rectifier (which is way overspec for a 15 watter, Leo was the man), but mine had the stock RCA rectifier, the robust and manly GZ34 (that can easily power a 40 watt amp with only a hint of tasteful sag). I have seen many 60s Princetons and they always have a GZ34, whereas the silverface ones have 5U4s.

This amp is almost a single channel deluxe reverb, but the difference in the style of tremolo phase inverter and plate voltage on the 6V6es give this fender a softer, touch sensitive sound and feel that's closer to the brownface amps preceeding it. This was my only amp from '92 to around '99 and remained my go-to until '02. I paid my dues, jazz, rock and blues on this little demon. I particularly liked it paired with a Guild SF1 or my Carvin sh225. I pretty much ran her right at the edge of overdrive in all scenarios with both tone controls around 5 and then added drive and level with a conservatively set tubescreamer (at 1st a TS5, later a TS9). A guy I was in a rock band with collects all different princetons from brownface to silverface chasing my old sound. Go figure.

Mine had an alnico JBL speaker installed by the guy who sold it to my family (who I know personally, what a crazy, awesome dude). Stock it had an oxford, so I was happy to have the JBL. The story goes that this cat who installed the JBL had done some tech work for Blood Sweat & Tears and wasn't paid, so he swiped this from the guitrarist in payment. Being a bassist he didn't want to keep it, so he upgraded the speaker and gave it to my dad who promptly sold it to my uncle. Then I was born and the rest is history.

In the blackface line I feel there are no amps sweeter than the princetons. Being older and wiser I now know that the non-reverb models sound better. The reverb bogs the circuit down. Unless you are a die hard Fender surfy reverb fanatic (and don't have scratch for a Fender outboard reverb), get a non-reverb. They are cheaper and better. Ask Mike Campbell of Tom Petty's Heartbreakers.

I do not recommend turning this amp way up into distortion. As you get her past a semi-dirty tone she exhibits the boxy and ill-defined power-amp saturation that most blackface amps have. The dimed small amp thing is not her forte because she is not built or voiced like a small, student amp. If you want that sound get a tweed deluxe or Gibson equivalent (like the ga14 or ga6).That said, her edge-of-breakup tones are to die for and the clean sound is pure 1960s Americana. Through a larger cabinet wired for 8 ohms she can keep up with a drummer set dead clean (unless you have really hot tubes in V1 and V2). I used to keep a handful of different tubes with me for V1 (12au7, 12at7, 12ax7 and super hot European ecc83 ax7 varieties) to vary my gain for each gig. Also, the bias vary trem on this amp (erroneously termed vibrato by fender) is to die for. This is the tweed tremolux and vibrolux sound you have heard so much about. In fact, the preceeding brownface and white knob princetons with their single tone control are direct descenats of those late 50s tweeds with trem. Pretty much any version of the Princeton from 1960/61 until about 1981 (when Rivera added lame-o overdrive circuits to everything and put a 2 after their model names... GAAAAH! damn you mooooooother-FUCKER!) is a total winner and you should buy one if you see one for under a grand these days.

jimmarchi1

I thought I didn't need to include in the review that this amp was virtually indestructible. It only went down once in 10 years when the ORIGINAL blackplate RCA 6V6es from 1960-whatever finally got weak and then started to cut out. The amp was still technically working, it just lost headroom, definition and had some randome volume drops and crackles. The actual circuit Rand from the mid-60s until the mid-2000s with virtually no maintenance (there was a power tube swap and rebias). This amp just kept trying to work and succeeded no matter what kind of abuse I threw at it. And I got her as a pre-teen, so you can imagine my lack of knowledge and respect at first.

olliecater

Sweet Vintage Tone

The reissues fix a lot of original issues like notoriously violent and unpredictable volume taper. Don't let the wattage fool you, this thing bites back! I've struggled to find a gig this won't serve, certainly given a quality PA with good monitoring. This, for practical reasons, though has now become a home/studio amp. Given shipping expenses, I largely go out with a digital rig now, but there are times I long for this little baby to be shouting at me from the backline. It's one of those amps where you go direct with your guitar, dial in some reverb and just let the notes ring. It's a delight.

Roles:
dane_constant

Amazing cleans, incredible responsiveness, beautiful OD at bedroom level

I got this amp after deciding to downsize from my 60 watt 2x12 Fender Hot Rod Deville. The 68' custom shop Princeton Reverb RI is without a doubt the cleanest amp I have ever played and is also by far the most responsive to my guitar's volume, and subtle variations in playing dynamics. VERY strongly recommend this amp to the guitar player that wishes to have a great sound for anything from country, to jazz, and yes, even metal. It's also got modern tweaks that eliminate noise and plays well with my large pedalboard.

jimmarchi1

vintage examples are not noisey at all, be they reverb, non-reverb, blackface or silverface... I cut my teeth on a 1964 reverb model and even at 10 it was dead silent if you turned your guitar volume to sero with nothing in line.... not even a ghost of a power hum like marshall and vox amplifiers of the era, though it definitely lacked the cajones of the old british amps I later acquired

dominic_goss

More people should use this amp!

It has some of the smoothest cleans I've ever heard and takes pedals brilliantly. Can't say enough great things about the princeton!

magnus_melliander

Best amp ever!

Best amp ever! Best amp ever! Best amp ever!

jimmarchi1

My 1st amp was a '64 Princeton reverb and I miss it. Maybe not the best amp ever but one of the greats for sure and without a doubt the best sounding blackface fender amp unless you need to be really loud and stay clean and/or you don't care for reverb (then I give it to the non-reverb princetons which are a bit more lively and the brownface deluxe which has better harmonic content and midrange).

Artist usage

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See how Ben Monder uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Ben Monder

Guitarist

Theo Bleckmann and Ben Monder

...
Verified via Guitarplayer

Ben mentions in the article that he often uses this amp.

See how Mary Halvorson uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Mary Halvorson

Guitarist

Ches Smith & These Arches

...
Verified via Premierguitar

Mary's 1966 Fender Princeton Reverb is mentioned in this interview.

See how Steve Gunn uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Steve Gunn

Guitarist

Golden Gunn

...
Verified via Guitar.com | All Things Guitar

“Guitar wise, I used a new Fender American Professional Jaguar through a vintage Fender Princeton amp. There are a few songs that feature some wah leads on the album, and these effects were my primary set up for that. This is the first song on the album, and I wanted to establish this sound early on by cutting this lead at the end. The smaller Princeton amp breaks up nicely, along with the wah with a cranked overdrive, and a bit of compression is a sound that runs throughout the album.”

See how Charlie Sexton uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Charlie Sexton

Guitarist

Arc Angels

...
Verified via Photo

In this Instagram post, Charlie Sexton show his Princeton Reverb amp from Fender.

See how Ronnie Montrose uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Ronnie Montrose

Guitarist

The Edgar Winter Group

...
Verified via WoodyTone!

In a couple of comments on the February 17, 2010 WoodyTone article “Ronnie Montrose’s ‘Rock Candy’ Tone…”, Gary “Mick” Lazer shares that he traded Montrose himself for a modified blackface Fender Princeton shortly after Paper Money was recorded. Lazer even identifies the amp in a 1974 video of Montrose performing “I Got the Fire” in the studio (it first appears at 0:22).

WoodyTone, March 8, 2012 comment by Mick Lazer on “Ronnie Montrose’s ‘Rock Candy’ Tone…” (February 17, 2010)

The Fender combo amp, in the video recorded at the record plant for the paper money session in Sausalito; was a Fender Princeton, which I traded Ronnie some Marshall equipment for, right after those sessions. It was modified by Ronnie himself, and had a 12″ JBL D120 and a Bassman transformer, so it was pretty loud. It sounded great! this amplifier was stolen from me in 1980 and yes, I still want it back after all these years. It is stenciled #2 Montose on the back of the amplifier. I continue to offer a $500 dollar reward for information that leads to its return.

Gary “Mick” Lazer

WoodyTone, March 20, 2012 comment by Mick Lazer on “Ronnie Montrose’s ‘Rock Candy’ Tone…” (February 17, 2010)

Ronnie owned 2 small amps at the time that he recorded the first album. He owned the modified blackface Princeton that I mentioned on the earlier post, and also a mint 1958 tweed Champ with an 8″ JBL speaker. The tweed Champ was part of the trade for the Marshall equipment. I still own the 8″ JBL, but stupidly traded off the Champ for some recording equipment and a new Rockman amplifier. If he found the bandmaster, it was after our trade. He may have used either small amp or both for recording. The Champ was the small amplifier that Sammy Hagar mentioned plugging into in his book while auditioning in Ronnie’s small Sausalito living room. The Princeton would have been way too loud to sing over. Ronnie claimed that the Champ was now putting out 15 watts, so he may have modified it in some way. We didn’t get into that, at the time of the trade. I had no reason to doubt that. It was plenty loud.

See how Nathaniel Rateliff uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Nathaniel Rateliff

Singer, Guitarist

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats

...
Verified via Guitar.com | All Things Guitar

In this article from guitar.com, Rateliff says he and sideman Luke Mossman both uses Fender Princeton Reverbs. Nathaniel's is a black panel, unclear which year.

See how Grace Potter uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Grace Potter

Singer, Guitarist

Grace Potter and the Nocturnals

...
Verified via YouTube

Grace Potter, after identifying a Fender Vibrolux, comments on its going "in and out of commission". So, she says that she uses a Fender Princeton Reverb amp.

See how Tom Dumont uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Tom Dumont

Guitarist

No Doubt

...
Verified via GuitarPlayer.com

Tom talking about dreamcar and the tone he used "A lot of the sounds started with a Fender Princeton model that had a really clean and chime-y tone. Then, I’d heavily compress the signal with a Kemper compressor, and I’d also plug in an old Ibanez chorus. Another patch we used a lot was called Walking Moon. It had a swirly, saturated lead sound."

See how Tessa Murray uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Tessa Murray

Singer, Keyboardist

Still Corners

...
Verified via Undertheradarmag

"(for their song "The Message") The guitar was two different amps, for the first guitar part we used my trusty Fender Princeton and for the second guitar solo we used a Roland Jazz Chorus JC-40, which has a super dry sound that I love."

See how Valerie June uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Valerie June

Singer, Guitarist

...
Verified via Premierguitar

According to the Premier Guitar's interview with Valerie June, her "gear list" also includes the Fender Princeton Reverb.

See how Avi Bortnick uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Avi Bortnick

Guitarist

...
Verified via avi bortnick

On his web site Bortnick details the collection of amps that he uses, including this one.

See how Ryan Lerman uses Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981)

Ryan Lerman

Guitarist, Bassist

Scary Pockets

...
Verified via YouTube

Ryan's YouTube channel description has a list of gear he uses, including a "1964 Fender Princeton Reverb Amp".

Genre Usage

Based on how artists on Equipboard use this gear, it is most commonly found in the following genres.

Used With

Based on how musicians on Equipboard use Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981), it is most commonly used with the following gear.

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Community setups

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justineisenbraun

justineisenbraun

Gear IQ 148

1 alternative for Fender Princeton Reverb (original issue, 1963-1981), curated by the Equipboard community.

3rd Power Amplification KITCHEN SINK 6VEL Head

 

similar sound cheaper alternative

The Kitchen sink has a "Blackface" switch that when engaged, it will emulate a classic blackface or black panel fender amp.

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