Jimmy Page vs Angus Young

Side-by-side rig comparison at every budget — signal chains, gear lists, and total cost for each tier.

At a Glance

Jimmy Page

RockHard Rock1960s

Thick, saggy Les Paul through a modified Marshall Super Bass — from gentle acoustic picking to howling feedback, Page's tone captured both delicacy and unbridled power.

VS

Angus Young

Hard RockBlues-Rock1970s

SG through a Marshall Super Lead at maximum volume — Angus's raw, punchy crunch is all about the humbucker meeting a pushed amp with zero pedals.

Jimmy Page vs Angus Young: Thick, saggy Les Paul through a modified Marshall Super Bass — from gentle acoustic picking to howling feedback, Page's tone captured both delicacy and unbridled power. SG through a Marshall Super Lead at maximum volume — Angus's raw, punchy crunch is all about the humbucker meeting a pushed amp with zero pedals. Both share Hard Rock roots, but their gear choices and era create distinctly different sounds. Use the budget tiers below to compare complete signal chains at £200, £500, £1,000, and £2,500.

Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page

1960s · Rock, Hard Rock

Thick, saggy Les Paul through a modified Marshall Super Bass — from gentle acoustic picking to howling feedback, Page's tone captured both delicacy and unbridled power.

Angus Young

Angus Young

1970s · Hard Rock, Blues-Rock

SG through a Marshall Super Lead at maximum volume — Angus's raw, punchy crunch is all about the humbucker meeting a pushed amp with zero pedals. Pure, simple, devastating.

Jimmy PageJimmy Page
Angus YoungAngus Young
£200 · Beginner~£178vs~£149
£500 · Sweet Spot~£478vs~£487
£1,000 · Pro-Level~£886vs~£857
£2,500 · Premium~£2495vs~£2476

Start with the £500 sweet spot

The £500 tier is where the signal chain logic starts to work properly — a real valve amp, the key overdrive pedal, and a complete rig that captures the essential character of the tone.

Jimmy Page Full Guide →Angus Young Full Guide →All £500 Rigs →

Hear The Difference — Songs to Compare

Listen to these tracks to understand the tonal difference before choosing an approach. Each song highlights a different characteristic.

Jimmy Page

Whole Lotta LoveLed Zeppelin II

Les Paul into Marshall Super Lead cranked — the proto-metal high-gain tone.

Stairway to Heaven (Solo)Led Zeppelin IV

Telecaster into a backward-wired Supro amp — uniquely raw lead tone different from his Les Paul sound.

Angus Young

Back in BlackBack in Black

SG into Marshall Plexi — the defining hard rock rhythm tone, almost entirely amp-driven.

ThunderstruckThe Razors Edge

Tapping intro into heavy rhythm — hear the single-coil character of the SG bridge pickup.

Jimmy Page vs Angus Young — Common Questions

Jimmy Page: Thick, saggy Les Paul through a modified Marshall Super Bass — from gentle acoustic picking to howling feedback, Page's tone captured both delicacy and unbridled power. Angus Young: SG through a Marshall Super Lead at maximum volume — Angus's raw, punchy crunch is all about the humbucker meeting a pushed amp with zero pedals. The key difference is in genre, era, and gear — compare their signal chains at each budget tier below.

Yes — both Jimmy Page and Angus Young share Hard Rock and Blues-Rock influences. Their gear approaches differ significantly however.

Both tones are achievable on a budget. The key is matching the guitar family and amp voicing correctly — not buying the exact same brand. Review the £500 rigs below for the most cost-effective entry point for each style.

At £500: Jimmy Page's rig totals ~£478, Angus Young's rig totals ~£487. Both are achievable from £200 with entry-level gear, up to £2,500 for professional-grade setups.

Final Verdict — Jimmy Page vs Angus Young

Jimmy Page is a Rock/Hard Rock player — natural amp saturation, built around lp guitars into british crunch-voiced amplifiers.

Angus Young brings Hard Rock/Blues-Rock — natural amp saturation, with sg instruments and british crunch amp character.

Both rigs cost roughly the same to build at the £500 level — ~£478 versus ~£487.

Best for beginners

Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page's Rock/Hard Rock style uses natural amp saturation — the techniques are widely documented and the gear is forgiving at lower budgets.

Best for metal tones

Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page's natural amp saturation approach and Rock/Hard Rock roots provide the gain structure and technique library closest to metal playing.

Best value to recreate

Jimmy Page

Jimmy Page's £500 rig totals ~£478 — roughly equal to the ~£487 alternative. Both deliver authentic character at this tier.

At a Glance

Jimmy PageAngus Young
Era1960s1970s
GenreRock, Hard RockHard Rock, Blues-Rock
Gain structurenatural amp saturationnatural amp saturation
Guitar typelpsg
Amp voicingbritish crunchbritish crunch
£500 rig total~£478~£487

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