The h part is, anyway. Good score on the KPP.OK .... now this IS fucking gold ! :)
The h part is, anyway. Good score on the KPP.OK .... now this IS fucking gold ! :)
You'll definitely be able to recoup your money on that one.
I'm sure there will be new profiles from Kemper, but curious who would follow up with new releases. Probably Tone Junkie as he's constantly doing profiles, and maybe Choptones as they're constantly pushing new ones as well. Michael Britt doesn't release packs often so I think it would take a while for those. Amalgam has barely released any Kemper stuff to date.
Given there's so many classic amps out there today it may be a while before new profiles are widely available. That's the bummer with things like profiles, you need to reshoot everything, so you need all the amps and equipment and what not (unlike liquid profiles which were just tweaking existing ones).
But as I said earlier in this thread, I've found really good stuff by Matt Fig and Bert Meulendijk (probably butchered the name) sounds much higher fidelity than older profiles from Michael Britt. I'm sure it's how they miked up everything but to me it's more open and much closer to a great modeled amp with a great IR sonically.
My take is I don’t really care about the amp tones at this point. I think the main area of opportunity in modelers is not amp quality improvement but effects quality improvement. And personally the thing I still care about the most is “how well can I control what I need during a live show?”
I already loved the amp tones I got out of Kemper, and I think it’s biggest strength is Performance mode. I love the live workflow! The area I would want to see improved in Kemper is the effects. THAT is where they desperately need better processing power. The effects always felt underpowered and dated.
But Performance mode was amazing. The Stage is still my favorite digital device I ever used for live work. It was just so easy to do everything I wanted; it felt like everything was very well thought out for live playing experience.
Thing is, kemper themselves didn't seem to know the profiler suffers from certain innacuracies (minus the multiple distorting stages issue). Either that, or there was a lack of honesty about the topic. I don't know for sure what the case was.That's kind of what I'm basing my "optimism" on. If Joe Schmo's like us in the forums know how good Tonex and NAM sound and feel - it would be ludicrous to think that CK / Kemper don't also know.
That to me is really the biggest strength of Kemper. The core tones are really good (for most genres), the effects are pretty good, the workflow once you have the profiles is great. It's not the most flexible but it would work for most people I think once you adjust. Five different rigs at five different switches, and then four different effect switches.
Thing is, kemper themselves didn't seem to know the profiler suffers from certain innacuracies (minus the multiple distorting stages issue). Either that, or there was a lack of honesty about the topic. I don't know for sure what the case was.
But if they were honest, how did they miss out on all this? I think it's an interesting question to ask. Surely testing can be imperfect, people can be pressured into being yes men and confirm whatever the engineer wants; the engineer can be dismissive of critical inputs too easily, etc etc.
But personally, I believe that people's standards of what is considered "accurate" tend to change with time. CK may have genuinely believed it's all "bang on perfect" at some point in time. Many guitarists themselves were excited to the absolute shit fuck with this technology, as well as producers like Andy Sneap who used Kemper extensively.
But ask people now, many will say that tonex and NAM are more accurate than Kemper. How did this happen when Kemper was just "accurate"? Even some of the same people who would swear up and down Kemper perfectly clones their amps seem to have flipped.
I think it's partly that: our standards of accuracy change. And when there's other competing products, these standards are also more likely to be challenged and reinvigorated.
Yep. I have no idea what the new system will sound or feel like -or- how " Null Test" good it is ... not that null tests are the be all and end all.
Where Tonex and NAM are awesome is if you want a super accurate static Snapshot of an Amp ... just fantastic .
Thing is, kemper themselves didn't seem to know the profiler suffers from certain innacuracies (minus the multiple distorting stages issue). Either that, or there was a lack of honesty about the topic. I don't know for sure what the case was.
But if they were honest, how did they miss out on all this? I think it's an interesting question to ask. Surely testing can be imperfect, people can be pressured into being yes men and confirm whatever the engineer wants; the engineer can be dismissive of critical inputs too easily, etc etc.
But personally, I believe that people's standards of what is considered "accurate" tend to change with time. CK may have genuinely believed it's all "bang on perfect" at some point in time. Many guitarists themselves were excited to the absolute shit fuck with this technology, as well as producers like Andy Sneap who used Kemper extensively.
But ask people now, many will say that tonex and NAM are more accurate than Kemper. How did this happen when Kemper was just "accurate"? Even some of the same people who would swear up and down Kemper perfectly clones their amps seem to have flipped.
I think it's partly that: our standards of accuracy change. And when there's other competing products, these standards are also more likely to be challenged and reinvigorated.
NAM doesn’t interest me because I use this stuff live, but I’ll have to try ToneX someday. I stayed away from it for a while because Kemper had better curated content from people like MBritt, and I will not play the game of digging through the garbage to find the diamonds in the rough game with random user Profiles.
They have told me directly that the results of profiling specifically should sound identical to source (or otherwise refining wasn't done well enough). That, also considering the statement that "if it sounds the same, it feels the same".I'm not convinced yet that Kemper made the proclamation that the profiler was perfect, but if someone can find a post from Christoph himself I'd be wrong (although I don't think it matters what he said previously).
Difficult to imagine an MKIII considering how long it took to have an MKII. I imagine people would probably not receive MKIII news well if it came out a year or two later. In terms of aliasing, I only had a real problem with Kemper when it was originally released.What I'm curious about with the new profiling is how the high gain stuff is handled. I'm wondering if the computer profiling will somehow involve some oversampling that would reduce aliasing and improve the high end clarity given the 44.1 kHz sample rate of the Kemper (or maybe that's just the output converter and not the internal rate). If they can pull off better profiles with improved clarity and accuracy then great! If not then they better have a Mk3 up their sleeves to stay relevant once Fractal and other companies start rolling out their next gen products alongside Stadium...
They have told me directly that the results of profiling specifically should sound identical to source (or otherwise refining wasn't done well enough). That, also considering the statement that "if it sounds the same, it feels the same".
But you can also hear CK at 3:52 in this video. "Our goal was to sound identical and this is what we achieved".
How else should we interpret the announcement and text that went along with it though? Like offering some new profiling function that doesn't improve upon the original but is distinct or?We'll just have to wait and see, but I don't think Kemper has actually come out and said the new profiling is better than the Mk1.
Did they mention impedance curves?It looks like they'll at least provide some control over impedance curves. That's an advantage they have over more modern black box profilers, but they have chosen their words very carefully to make sure nobody can hold them to any promises.
You're right, it would be crazy not to improve it, but they didn't actually say they didHow else should we interpret the announcement and text that went along with it though? Like offering some new profiling function that doesn't improve upon the original but is distinct or?
Did they mention impedance curves?
Interesting, didn't remember that.That's just my personal interpretation of "Dynamically adjustable Cabinet Resonance".
- Longest impulse responses in a capture device - this sounds fancy but I don't know if it's going to make a difference. I don't hear a difference between 1024 vs 2048 samples in Helix/Fractal honestly
If I import a compatible IR into Kemper, the sound of the IR changes compared to running in daw or fractal units. Especially feel it with mutes. Whatever it is, maybe it's fixed now with the longer IRs.
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