Re: Kemper - what's the point?
The Kemper profiler is a great product. Being able to create a profile from a favorite amp that you may not want to take on the road is a great thing these days. Even if it's 95% there, that's more than good enough in a band setting and for many playing at home. Mark Kendall of Great White used one on the last GW album. Sounds killer to me.
A buddy of mine has a AxeFX II. He runs it to a Seymour Duncan PowerStage 170 amp and then to an Orange 1x12 for stage reference. There's also a direct feed to the FOH from the AxeFX II. It's a great lightweight setup and sounds really really good.
My last 2 amps have been modelers. A Vox AD50VT and now a Vox AV30. The latter is described as an analog tube amp with different amp voicings. It is analog for sure with two 12AX7's (one in the preamp and one in the poweramp) but I don't think they are run at full voltage. The amp "models" are really good and an improvement from the AD series, IMO. I was very surprised at how well this little 30 watt amp with a 1x10" keeps up with a really hard hitting drummer, with room to spare. It's not even close to full volume. It's a great, lightweight, little amp. While I do like modelers, simple is better for me. The AV30 captures that in spades. A WYSIWYG interface, 2 channels, 3 digital effects that sound great (chorus, delay, reverb), effects loop, footswitch with either 2 or 5-button (2-button switches channels and effects bank on or off. 5-button switches channels, each effect on/off and a tap tempo for the delay). There's also some switch settings on the pre and power (like bright and fat, BIAS and reactor). There's noticeable changes in the sound with those switches. It's everything I need in a small footprint. Vox has made great modelers over the years.
Would I like to use a full tube amp again? Sure. Is it practical for me? Not really. Definitely not practical at home.