It got me to thinking. And over my many years with the engineering staff at the now defunct RCA corporation, it became an object of discussion many times concerning musical instrument amplification.
The consensus was, "I would NOT want to be a musical instrument amplifier design engineer!"
Why is this? Well, I know of nothing as subjective as perceived sound! NOTHING!
Here is an example: IF I gave a brand new and brilliant young engineer the task of designing the perfect steel guitar amplifier, in all likelyhood he would design it so it reproduded the sound coming out of a steel exactly as it was. That is; "100% true fidelity". And then I would have to fire him!

Reason is, we steelers do NOT want it to sound like it came out of our steel. Because it sounds awful! Yes it really does!
So, at this point what would a more experienced design engineer do?
He would turn in his badge!

Not really! In all likelyhood, he would realize the delima and design in wide equalization (tone) circuits to permit the player to vastly change the sound of his beloved instrument to satisfy his tastes.
And thinking back over the years, I must conclude that the "shift"/"mid-band" circuit has to win first prize in this scenario. Here is why. The natural sound of a PSG is not pleasant if amplified perfectly. And the frequencies around 800 Hz is the problem.
That is why the Peavey amps has, IMHO, become sooooo very popular amongst steelers. Those two controls permits a player to instantly correct (from a sound perception point of view), + or -, the "unsatisfactory", albeit natural sound coming out of the steel.
Or at least this is my observation.
Many will no doubt vehemently dissagree.
God bless them and you,
carl