Ah, the good stuff. Saw the listing, couldn't find any info, just assumed it was another underpowered, sweet sounding tweed type, heavy compression amp. Had played a few '60s Silvertones, interesting, good sound, joke reverb, decent but nothing to make me act foolish. Always wanted to try older Silvertones. Cool shop, really nice guy. He asked to check out my guitar, plugged into the 1336 and played a few low volume licks. DAMN. I was a goner right then. Just the sweetest tube sound. I did plug in, found a way louder, altogether different amp than I'd expected. Big sound presence, lots of clean right up into pretty loud, little of the mid-volume compression of smaller cathode bias tweeds. A lively, organic feel, highly responsive to pick force and right hand position. Get it loud, mostly clean, dig in a little harder, the drive is right there. Get a little louder, into light, airy OD. A soaring sustain. So pretty. Not that dense, but you can feel the air moving. Clear, singing, with real pop from palm muting and right hand dynamics. Lively, balanced tone, as much or more treble as you'd want, plenty of bass. Not every amp loves strats. This one does.
I bonded with this thing in under a minute. Had no idea it would sound this good. Couldn't pay the guy fast enough. I play mostly blues, lots of slide in open E, lap steel. All single coils for now, but my old, unplayable 335 will be back soon from the shop. I use a Fender outboard reverb, with some analog delay in front. The amp has a unique voice, very much tweed, but with a tough core, sort of brownface fender-like. My reference point for great tweed tone is the Clark Tyger (Bandmaster replica.) The Tyger sings with a soft edge, completely transparent and warm, even very loud it's not too hard on the ears. The 1336 sings not quite as softly, has just as much warmth and clarity. No lack of cut, I'm guessing this will be just as powerful a stage amp as the Tyger.