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The Amazing History of Dumble Amplifiers

The Amazing History of Dumble Amplifiers

Discover the man behind the myth and the origins of his famous Overdrive Special amp.

Few guitar amp designers have achieved the same notoriety as the musicians who made their amps famous. Sure, Leo Fender and Jim Marshall are exceptions, but then there's Alexander "Howard" Dumble.

Here, we'll learn about the man behind decades of rare handmade custom tube amps that bore his name — and routinely fetch prices of $200,000 or more — and delve into the history of his most iconic creation, the Dumble Overdrive Special.

Building a Foundation for Greatness


Alexander Dumble came from humble beginnings. A football player for Bakersfield California’s East High School, he was inspired to explore electronics after repairing his school’s PA system.

“He was a tinkerer,” explains James Santiago, Senior Product Designer at Universal Audio. "Dumble read the books and could execute.”

It didn’t take long for Dumble to make a name for himself as a savvy electronics specialist. By the age of 20 he was contracted by fellow Bakersfield native Semie Mosley to build a series of Amplifiers for influential instrumental giants The Ventures under the Mosrite brand.

"The Ventures played through them and were really interested, but it was a little too much rock for them," Dumble told Guitar Player in 1985. "They wanted me to go into business with them, but I decided against it, and went back to playing in studios and in rock bands."

Touring as a bassist with Canadian singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marrie, Dumble eventually raised enough funds to open a workshop in his new environs, Santa Cruz, California on East Cliff Dr.

And in 1969, the first Dumbles were born.

Dubbed the “Explosion” amps, these models took inspiration from the PA heads and Fender amps Dumble modded and repaired over the years.

By the 1970’s, with a growing reputation for modding and repairing Fender-style amplifiers, Dumble was on the verge of exciting new opportunities. And he was on the move.

“He didn't go to school. Dumble just read the books and could execute.”

— James Santiago
UA Sr. Product Manager

1970’s: Birth of the Overdrive Special


Throughout the early '70s, Dumble moved between Los Angeles and Santa Cruz, making connections with various pro guitarists who had emerged in California in the wake of the West Coast rock and roll and counterculture movement of the late-’60s.


A '70s 50-watt ODS 1x12 combo. Dumble was just as meticulous with his cabinet construction as he was with amp circuits. (Image: Scottie McInnes, Wikimedia Commons)

“At some point, he and a friend decided to move to Santa Cruz because it was a much better scene, with more musicians than Bakersfield,” says Santiago.

One of Dumble's most famous Santa Cruz builds from this time is the Overdrive Special Reverb built for Little Feat legend Lowell George in late '75, early '76.

"It's like a Fender made right," George told Guitar Player in 1977. "It's the best amp I've ever played through."

This clip shows the Rock n' Roll Doctor himself putting his ODS Reverb (now owned by Joe Bonamassa serial # 009) through its paces. Note that George slammed the front end of the amp with +20 dB using an Alembic Blastor preamp.

During this time, Dumble developed a friendship with Jackson Browne, staying at his property in Los Angeles while working on the first prototypes of the Overdrive Special. Soon after, Browne and his band were rocking ODS amps.

“The Running on Empty solo was a landmark,” says Santiago of the title track from Jackson Brown's 1977 album. “That was actually a live recording, and the early Dumble ODS that David Lindley played had this classic slide tone.”

One of the first tracks to feature an Overdrive Special, this incomparable slide performance by David Lindley was captured at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Maryland in 1977.

These first ODS amps featured a 6L6-driven power tube section and cascading gain stages, a feature which would become a hallmark of the Dumble sound.


The late David Lindley's extensive Dumble collection included these 50-watt Overdrive Specials. The amp on top was used for "Running on Empty." (Image: Fretboard Journal)

“Some of the early Mesa Boogie Mark I and Mark II amps had cascading stages as well, very similar to Dumbles,” says Santiago. “But who did it first? You've got two California guys basically fighting it out for who invented it.”

While there’s still debate as to who invented this feature — whereby repeating tone stacks progressively amplify gain for added clipping and overdrive — both Dumble and Randall Smith are considered the first to employ cascading tone stacks.

“Players went to Dumble because no other amp was as sensitive and fine-tuned to their playing”

— James Santiago
UA Sr. Product Manager

As Dumble’s reputation grew throughout the 1970s, so too did his amplifier designs. In this period he built numerous custom amps for session players and prominent studios in LA, each with bespoke qualities specific to their needs.

Perhaps the most notable of these custom features was the addition of a master volume, as well as the “Hot Rubber Monkey” circuit.

This feature was essentially an internally-adjustable tone stack located after the clipping section of the preamp, which allowed the player to sculpt the distorted sound of the amp, while maintaining a master volume for both the clean and overdrive channels.

“With the HRM circuit, he disconnected the second master volume,” explains Santiago. “So he got rid of a bunch of loading by not going to that second master.”

1980’s: Widespread Recognition


By the 1980s, Dumble had cemented himself as the custom amp builder for a cadre of legendary A-List tone hounds.

And If you turned on the radio in the '80s, you definitely heard a Dumble.

Who knew a '59 Les Paul plugged right into an Overdrive Special could make this track even smoother? Cross was an early-'80s Dumble adopter along with his buddies Eric Johnson and Stevie Ray Vaughan.

Jackson Browne’s collection of Dumbles started appearing on an impressive roster of hits throughout this period.

While Stevie Ray Vaughan used dozens of amps in the studio, he employed Jackson Browne's Dumbleland Special (now owned by John Mayer serial #005) for various tracks on Texas Flood and In Step albums.

The following year, session legend Rick Vito used Browne’s Overdrive Reverb on solos for "Tender Is the Night" and "For a Rocker" from Browne's album, Lawyers in Love.

In the early '80s, Rick Vito was a Dumble power user, with his tasty solos and rhythm playing at the top of the charts.

And although it wasn't included on the record, Vito's work on the track "Somebody's Baby" highlights the ODS's cleanish grind.

Rick Vito's soulful double stops (on the left) through his 100-watt Overdrive Reverb through a 2×12 cabinet loaded with EVs.

Later, in 1986, Vito used the ODS on an even bigger hit, for the lyrical slide solo on Bob Seger's "Like a Rock."

Armed with a '56 Les Paul TV Jr., a Lowell-George-approved Sears 5/8" socket for slide, and a late '70s Dumble Overdrive Reverb, Vito cut this iconic solo in 10 minutes.

Of course the guy who played on more hits than any other guitarist in the '80s, Steve Lukather, here with a wound-up ODS.

Steve Lukather's solo on Boz Scaggs "Breakdown Dead Ahead" on the 1980 album Middle Man shows off the more aggressive side of the Dumble ODS.

Luke praised his ODS for its clean tones too, pointing to his work on Quincy Jones' album, The Dude.

Don't sleep on the solo for this one at 2:05. Luke gets all he can in eight bars with textbook ODS singing overdrive.

Throughout this era, Dumble created various iterations of the preamp circuit in the ODS, using different tone stacks such as Skyliner, Bluesmaster, and Ripper.

From the '80s Onward: The Tone Connoisseur's Amp


Robben Ford discovered the ODS while renting one for session work in the early-’80s. Ultimately, Ford purchased his first Overdrive Special in 1983, and had another built around ’93 or ’94.

Ford quickly bonded with the amp, not surprisingly, as allegedly Dumble was inspired to create the ODS after seeing Ford perform at a bar gig playing through a piggyback Fender Bassman on a 2x12 cab in the early '70s.


Robben Ford's original 1982 Overdrive Special #102 with accompanying 2x12 cabinet loaded with loaded w/ Celestion G12-65 speakers. (Image: Neil Zlozower)

"The tone curve on my ODS is so perfect," Ford told Vintage Guitar in 2007. "The lows are low, but don’t get woofy and mushed out. The mids are punchy and very strong, and the high end is clear but not ear piercing. All the frequencies somehow are just so righteous and very even."

Robben Ford’s original Dumble ODS can be heard across his live and studio recordings from the late 80’s to the present.

Another famous Dumble user, studio legend Larry Carlton, relied on his ODS for three decades. His 1987 album Last Nite, is regarded by many as the definitive example of "Dumble tone."

Recorded live at the Baked Potato in North Hollywood, "Mr. 335" played a Valley Arts solidbody loaded with EMGs for these seminal Dumble ODS tones.

And even though he's mainly associated with the Dumble Steel String Singer, Eric Johnson used an ODS on this classic track, recorded at Ocean Way Studios.

Johnson used a borrowed Gibson ES-335 for this Grammy-nominated instrumental.

"There are hundreds, perhaps thousands or millions, of valid guitar tones. When the air becomes electric, that's the right sound, no matter what the one is. It's that sound exciting the senses."

— Howard Dumble to Guitar Player, 1985

The 1990s brought about a dip in the popularity of Dumble amps.

With the landscape of guitar-driven music shifting to favor higher gain tones, many mainstream guitarists opted for Marshall JCMs, Mesa-Boogie Dual Rectifiers, or external effects pedals to get more distortion from their amps.

Still, many of the session players who had grown loyal to their Dumbles held fast to the versatility and reliability of the amps. Players like Sonny Landreth and Carlos Santana continued to champion Dumble amplifiers throughout the 1990’s and 2000’s.

Sonny Landreth’s 1995 release South of I-10 blended blues, zydeco, and swamp rock influences, and featured his Dumble ODS paired with a Klon Centaur and Boss DD-2 delay stompboxes.

This was also a period of experimentation for Dumble. With many long-term clients coming to him for repairs or new amplifier orders, he was able to further refine his circuits to suit the needs of his impressive roster of pro players, including Carlos Santana.

Using his signature PRS through an Overdrive Reverb and Marshall 4x12, Santana brought Dumble tone back to the top of the charts.

Along with Santana, there is currently no greater exponent of Dumble tone and lore than John Mayer, who over the past two decades has been known to scoop them up every chance he gets.

Mayer has been known to use multiple Dumbles onstage along with a variety of other amps. Here you can see his ODS in the middle.

These days, it’s rare for the everyday guitarist to have seen a Dumble amp in person, let alone played through one.

The exceedingly rare and coveted nature of his creations owes to Dumble’s mastery of his craft, but also a seemingly spiritual bond that he formed with each amp, as James Santiago explains.

“If you were lucky enough to own a Dumble, you didn’t own that amp. It was still Alexander’s until the end.”

With Howard Dumble’s passing in 2022, original ODS amps have never been more coveted, and his vision ultimately lives on through the classic recordings and players who continue to use his amps on stage and in the studio.

“Dumble didn't give a shit about running a company,” says James Santiago. “That guy wanted to build one amp at a time.”

“He was a singular force. And there’s something to be said for someone whose artistic vision was so high that he only wanted to work with guitarists who were doing new things. He didn’t want to make a Fender or a Marshall or a Vox — there was no going backwards.”

— Austin Lyons and UA Staff