"The rich clarity of a Fender Deluxe, the ballsiness of a Marshall 20 and the sparkle of a Vox AC15." We reviewed the Dixon Hummingbird 15 tube combo and decided less is definitely more

Boasting top-notch build and minimal features, it's an ideal pedal platform and a solid performer that morphs from rhythm to lead via your picking or guitar volume

A photo showing a line of Dixon Hummingbird 15 combos in different colors. (from left) Valentine, Ice Cream, Indigo and Nonemore
(Image: © Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)

GuitarPlayer Verdict

Former touring guitarist Colin Decket has captured the best aspects of the tube-powered combos he played over the years and brought them together in one amp. The Hummingbird 15 is loud enough for gigs and has enough headroom to keep your sound tight and focused when you need to grind. The spartan control set is ideal for pedals, and the amp's highly responsive nature makes it easy to move from rhythm to lead via your picking or guitar volume. We appreciate the excellent build and top-quality components, all of which make the Dixon Hummingbird 15 an excellent choice for those who believe that, when done right, less really is more.

Pros

  • +

    Simple controls and a top-notch build yield a wide range of touch-responsive tones

  • +

    Great for pedal users thanks to the abundant headroom

Cons

  • -

    Minimal features, although that's a main point of its design

You can trust Guitar Player. Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing guitar products so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about how we test.

Colin Decket started down the road of amp making while working as a touring musician in the 1990s, where having the ability to repair amps on the road was a real plus. Over the next three decades years he says he took advantage of playing the many amps that recording studios had on offer and learning all he could about amplifiers — especially the tube-powered combos that captured his imagination and eventually inspired him to build amplifiers under his own name.

Hand built in Northern California, the Dixon line currently consists of the Hummingbird 15, a compact and easy-to-carry 1x12 combo that’s inspired by iconic British and American combo amps from the ’50s and ’60s that embody what Colin calls the “three pillars of the Dixon sound — punch, clime and bloom.” As such, it features a cathode-bias circuit with a complement of two JJ 12AX7s, two TAD Redbase 6V6 power tubes and a TAD GZ34 rectifier, all of which plug into chassis-mounted, rubber-isolated phenolic sockets. The circuit is hand-wired on tag strips using high-grade components that include carbon-comp resistors, Jupiter and Mallory capacitors and Sprague and F&T electrolytic caps.

A photo of a Dixion Hummingbird 15 tube combo in Valentine red.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)

Other details include Carling switches and jacks, Mercury Magnetics transformers and cloth insulation on the speaker lead, which is nice vintage touch. It’s all packed into a 16-gauge aluminum chassis with welded corner-seams that is topped with a polished steel faceplate carrying the volume, low and high controls and the on/off switch. There’s no standby function, which isn’t an issue because of the slow warm-up of the tube rectifier.

Measuring 22 by 18 by 10 inches (WxHxD), the finger-jointed cabinet is constructed of Eastern yellow pine, with a Baltic birch baffle and rear panel and pine/poplar interior bracing. My review sample was covered in red Valentine Tolex (one of four color options, along with Ice Cream, Indigo and Nonemore) and has a matching handle embossed with “Dixon.” The grille cloth is classic salt-and-pepper and highlighted with silver piping around the edges. Stainless-steel hardware is used throughout the build, with wood screws securing the lower rear cover and machine screws for all of the metal-to-wood attaching points.

A photo of a Dixion Hummingbird 15 tube combo in Valentine red.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)

The Hummingbird 15 I tested came with the stock Royal 12-inch ceramic-magnet 50-watt speaker which is based on a classic British design. For a $150 upcharge you can order it with a Jubilee 50, a Brit-voiced speaker that uses an Alnico magnet. Dixon offers two other speakers: the Coronado 65, an American-style speaker for those who favor the vintage Oxford and Utah sound, and the Springfield 70, which is a replacement for the Jensen C12N and well suited for Fender blackface and silverface amps as well as players seeking to tighten up the response of their tweed amps.

I played the Hummingbird 15 using a Gibson 1963 Les Paul Junior, a Historic 1959 ’Burst, a PRS Dustie Waring and a Buzz Feiten T-style, and it delivered impressive tones with all of them. The amp sounds great clean, and it segues nicely into toothy distortion as the volume is cranked up. The low and high controls offer plenty range to accommodate single-coils or humbuckers, and I found that diming all three knobs yielded killer distortion tones from a Tele and a Les Paul alike when using the rear pickups.

A photo of a Dixion Hummingbird 15 tube combo in Valentine red.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)

The amp is very responsive to the touch, so adjusting your picking and/or riding the guitar volume knob is all it takes to morph between rhythm and lead when running straight into the amp. The Hummingbird churns out increasingly gutsy distortion as the volume is pushed past half-way, and I liked pairing it with a Fulltone tube tape echo to boost the guitar signal and enhance it all with juicy tape textures. It’s a cool setup for blues and rock, and for heavier grind I added a Fulltone OCD in tandem with a UAFX 2241 compressor pedal to take things into the soaring lead realm.

The Hummingbird 15 is plenty loud for gigs and has enough headroom to keep it all sounding tight and focused when you’re cranking. To my ears, it embodies much of what I like about low-watt tube combos — the rich clarity of a Fender Deluxe, the ballsiness of a Marshall 20 and the sparkle of a Vox AC15. The Hummingbird is a pricey affair, but if you subscribe to the less-is-more theory when it comes to guitar amps you’ll absolutely dig what it has to offer.

A photo of a Dixion Hummingbird 15 tube combo in Valentine red.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)

SPECIFICATIONS

CONTACT dixonamplifier.com

PRICE $3,249

CHANNELS 1

CONTROLS Volume, low, high

POWER 15 watts

TUBES Two 12AX7s, two 6V6s, GZ34 rectifier

EXTRAS Available colors include Indigo, Ice Cream, Nonemore Black and Valentine

SPEAKER 12” Royal Ceramic 50 8Ω, made by WGS. Also availed with Jubilee Alnico 50 for $150 extra

WEIGHT 37.3 lbs (as tested)

KUDOS Simple controls and a top-notch build yield a wide range of touch-responsive tones. Great for pedal users thanks to the abundant headroom

CONCERNS Minimal features, although that's a main point of its design

A photo of a Dixion Hummingbird 15 tube combo in Valentine red.

(Image credit: Courtesy of Dixon Amplifier)
Categories
Art Thompson
Senior Editor

Art Thompson is Senior Editor of Guitar Player magazine. He has authored stories with numerous guitar greats including B.B. King, Prince and Scotty Moore and interviewed gear innovators such as Paul Reed Smith, Randall Smith and Gary Kramer. He also wrote the first book on vintage effects pedals, Stompbox. Art's busy performance schedule with three stylistically diverse groups provides ample opportunity to test-drive new guitars, amps and effects, many of which are featured in the pages of GP.