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Seymour Duncan Customer Support
Scott, the other guitar player in my band and I went in 50/50 on a Kemper to help us record the 3rd DoB album.
It arrived today.
Let me tell you folks - holy effing crap.
I only had about 1 1/2 hours to play around with it before band practice tonight. My impressions from that session were that it basically works like any other modeler, albeit a very powerful and flexible one with regard to the tone shaping, effects, and amp/cab configuration. A lot of the profiles loaded on it when I got it weren't knocking my socks off, but I did find a JTM 45 profile on it that I was able to augment with a Tube Screamer, EVH phaser, and studio graphic EQ into something I actually felt sounded pretty darned good and usable in an album tracking environment. In short, I was optimistic but not fully convinced.
Then I boxed it up and took it with me to our rehearsal studio.
We played through our set for our upcoming show, and just intended to hook the Kemper up to the board and listen to the "rig" I'd modified afterwards. That was until our bass player said "I'm really more interested in hearing it do what it was made to do. Let's mic up one of your amps and see if we can make a profile of the thing."
So we did. We used my '93 VHT (Fryette) Pittbull Classic on the Lead channel through my Splawn 4x12. Mic'd up one of the Emi Redcoat Governers with a single off-axis SM-57 through a tube mic pre, ran that into the Kemper, ran the Kemper mains out into the board, and plugged my '08 LP Trad into the Kemper's input. Then we ran the profiling algorithm through it.
"BWOWOWOWOWOWOWOW shshshshshshshshshshshshshs GYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH"
...And it was done. Because we don't get great cab isolation from our control room, we recorded the reference amp and Kemper to the DAW (Reaper) and then listened back. It was pretty surprisingly close. About 90% there. You could tell from the waveforms that it wasn't responding exactly the same while playing. Again, it sounded very similar, but it didn't respond like the amp did.
Then we performed the "Refine" step. You basically hit a button and play a bunch of hard, open chords and harmonics and crazy stuff through the Kemper into the amp - like you're trying to push the limits of how a guitar will hit the input stage of the amp - and the Kemper "listens" to it respond. When you feel you've done enough - we did it for about 2 minutes - you hit the "Finished" button. Then we recorded an A/B between the regular mic'd reference amp and Kemper profile again.
Dead. Ringer.
It was freaking identical. Identical. The Kemper profile was absolutely 100% indistinguishable from the recorded signal from my VHT. Not close. Not really really close. Not "golly I don't think I could tell a difference" close. It was the exact same. We all crapped our pants.
I'm still in a bit of shock. I know it's possible because I witnessed it not 2 hours ago with my own eyes and ears, but it's still almost hard to believe some crazy lunchbox airplane dashboard-looking thing could basically become my VHT (through the signal path we made for it with the mics and pre's and board). But it did. It's on there now, on my desk. That very same sound. Incredible.
---
I don't want to get into an Axe-FX vs. Kemper debate. In my opinion they are two very different tools. This is not a modeler. It's not going to have the kind of flexibility model-to-model that the Axe would. But if you're looking to capture your studio tones to have them available to you with any DAW at any time in any place - and they sound identical to the tones you would get if you tracked everything with mics right there through live amps running hot glass - the Kemper 100 ****ing percent delivers.
It arrived today.
Let me tell you folks - holy effing crap.
I only had about 1 1/2 hours to play around with it before band practice tonight. My impressions from that session were that it basically works like any other modeler, albeit a very powerful and flexible one with regard to the tone shaping, effects, and amp/cab configuration. A lot of the profiles loaded on it when I got it weren't knocking my socks off, but I did find a JTM 45 profile on it that I was able to augment with a Tube Screamer, EVH phaser, and studio graphic EQ into something I actually felt sounded pretty darned good and usable in an album tracking environment. In short, I was optimistic but not fully convinced.
Then I boxed it up and took it with me to our rehearsal studio.
We played through our set for our upcoming show, and just intended to hook the Kemper up to the board and listen to the "rig" I'd modified afterwards. That was until our bass player said "I'm really more interested in hearing it do what it was made to do. Let's mic up one of your amps and see if we can make a profile of the thing."
So we did. We used my '93 VHT (Fryette) Pittbull Classic on the Lead channel through my Splawn 4x12. Mic'd up one of the Emi Redcoat Governers with a single off-axis SM-57 through a tube mic pre, ran that into the Kemper, ran the Kemper mains out into the board, and plugged my '08 LP Trad into the Kemper's input. Then we ran the profiling algorithm through it.
"BWOWOWOWOWOWOWOW shshshshshshshshshshshshshs GYAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH"
...And it was done. Because we don't get great cab isolation from our control room, we recorded the reference amp and Kemper to the DAW (Reaper) and then listened back. It was pretty surprisingly close. About 90% there. You could tell from the waveforms that it wasn't responding exactly the same while playing. Again, it sounded very similar, but it didn't respond like the amp did.
Then we performed the "Refine" step. You basically hit a button and play a bunch of hard, open chords and harmonics and crazy stuff through the Kemper into the amp - like you're trying to push the limits of how a guitar will hit the input stage of the amp - and the Kemper "listens" to it respond. When you feel you've done enough - we did it for about 2 minutes - you hit the "Finished" button. Then we recorded an A/B between the regular mic'd reference amp and Kemper profile again.
Dead. Ringer.
It was freaking identical. Identical. The Kemper profile was absolutely 100% indistinguishable from the recorded signal from my VHT. Not close. Not really really close. Not "golly I don't think I could tell a difference" close. It was the exact same. We all crapped our pants.
I'm still in a bit of shock. I know it's possible because I witnessed it not 2 hours ago with my own eyes and ears, but it's still almost hard to believe some crazy lunchbox airplane dashboard-looking thing could basically become my VHT (through the signal path we made for it with the mics and pre's and board). But it did. It's on there now, on my desk. That very same sound. Incredible.
---
I don't want to get into an Axe-FX vs. Kemper debate. In my opinion they are two very different tools. This is not a modeler. It's not going to have the kind of flexibility model-to-model that the Axe would. But if you're looking to capture your studio tones to have them available to you with any DAW at any time in any place - and they sound identical to the tones you would get if you tracked everything with mics right there through live amps running hot glass - the Kemper 100 ****ing percent delivers.