- The Profiler Model referred to in this thread is ...
- ☑️ Profiler Head/Rack
Why did you get your first Kemper Profiler?
I was probably the worst candidate to get a Profiler.
I wasn't an amp aficionado or a purist. When people asked how I got my sound, I used to joke, “I hit the strings, and if a sound comes out, I'm ready to go.”
I had been using Bose L1 gear for my personal rig and bands since 2004. I had tried a bunch of things between the guitar and the L1 (Line 6, Boss, Roland VG99, TC Helicon, and so on), but my favourite was the McIntyre Bluesmaker Mk II. That was my holy grail amp. I found it in 1999, gathering dust in a tiny mom-and-pop music store. It was designed as a recording amp, just 3 watts RMS, with a speaker sim line out. Very few were ever made.
I eventually tracked down the distributor and followed the chain back far enough to find a second McIntyre, also gathering dust in a warehouse. I wanted one for the road and one for the studio. You know, for convenience and backup. I contacted John McIntyre to thank him for making these amps. He offered to tweak them for me, so I shipped them off, and they came back with his special blessing. Because they were irreplaceable, I never wanted to risk gigging with them, but I did.
In 2015, I came across a Kemper Profiler (white-faced toaster) and bought it. Here's why:
Profiling
Profiling meant I could capture the sound and behaviour of my irreplaceable amp and leave the originals safely at home.
Rig Exchange
Rig Exchange meant that people could upload their profiles and share them with anyone. Philosophically, this was a perfect fit with my worldview.
I did not need hundreds of profiles. At the time, I do not think Rig Exchange had even reached a thousand yet. All I needed were the profiles I made of my own amp. But I loved the idea that Kemper had created a platform where people could share their profiles. You can search Rig Exchange for McIntyre to find mine.
My approach has always been, “It is not what you know, it is what you share.” Rig Exchange really resonated with me.
That is how I ended up with my first Kemper.
How about you?