a PDF - Front of House
Transcription
a PDF - Front of House
ATK Audiotek Provides Sound Platform for Barack Obama PEOPLE. PRODUCTION. GEAR. GIGS. SEPTEMBER 2008 Vol. 6 No. 12 Olympic Gold Medal for Sound BEIJING — Few live events have the power to draw an audience of billions, but the opening ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics easily surpassed that landmark. The largest international sporting event of the 21st century was also the most technically complex continued on page 8 Industry Supports Parnelli Awards, Voting Now Open LAS VEGAS — Voting for the 2008 Parnelli Awards has begun. Subscribers can vote online for the best of the live sound industry at www. parnelliawards.com/vote. A full ballot listing can be found on page 39. The Parnelli Awards take place on Friday, Oct. 24 at the Rio All Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Tickets can be purchased at www.parnelliawards.com. FOH would like to recognize the live audio companies who have supported the Parnellis this year, including Gold sponsors the Harman Pro group, Sound Image and Lab.gruppen. Stacey Moran of Lab.gruppen commented on why the company decided to become a sponsor. “Lab.gruppen attended the event last year and we really enjoyed networking with our customers. It was also great to recognize the efforts of those who are in the trenches of live performance on a daily basis.” Since 2001, the Parnelli Awards have recognized pioneering and influential individuals and their contributions to the live event industry, honoring both the individuals and companies. This year’s winners in such categories as FOH Mixer, Monitor Mixer and Sound Company will be determined by online votes, so go online and let your voice be heard. A Symbol of the Future DENVER — You’ve done some tough jobs. But not like this. Just one month before Barack Obama accepted his party’s presidential nomination at Mile High Stadium in Denver, the engineers at ATK Audiotek in Los Angeles got their first look at the plan for an event that would be broadcast live to tens of millions of viewers. Obama was scheduled to speak on Thursday, Aug. 28; the Broncos played at Mile High on Aug. 22, and a college football game was scheduled for Aug. 30. The team from ATK first set foot in Mile High on Saturday morning — after they got through the Secret Service checkpoint — and the bands only began to show up on the morning of the speech. Kirk Powell, the system design engineer who ran the show for ATK, loved the scale of the event and the stakes involved. “That’s what makes it interesting,” he said. “It keeps you on your toes.” Powell brought a seven-person crew to Denver, hired more help locally and began a “very fluid” setup that had to take Mile High’s strict rules into account. The stadium field crew imposed tight restrictions on where cable was run and how, and the Secret Service kept clearing out the entire stadium for security sweeps. “Security was unbelievably continued on page 10 tight,” Powell said. The symbol of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation is a reflection of the past. A tree perched on a rocky knoll and framed against a clear sky represents Mashantucket, the “much wooded land”where the people hunted and prospered. A statue of a fox stands as a vigilant reminder of the turbulent times when the Pequots adopted the name that still remains today, the “Fox People.” Fast-forward to May 2008 with the opening of an enormous expansion of Foxwoods Resorts and Casino properties in collaboration with the MGM Grand. “The Tribe was interested in partnering with entertainment companies who would augment our enterprises to expand what we offer to our clientele, such as convention markets, high level entertainment venues and headliners,” states Lori Potter, spokeswoman for the Tribe. “This is why MGM was selected as a partner opportunity.” Turn to page 40. Watch Out! Google Wants To Take Your Wireless WASHINGTON — Remember how we said the wireless thing was heating up? You have no idea. Now a “public interest group” has basically called for the FCC to make wireless mics and monitors illegal. You read that right. But just who is this “public interest group?” FOH put our investigative reporter on the case and he came up with an exclusive story about who is part of this “public interest group.” See page 10. 32 36 46 Buyers Guide Lav and Headset Mics take center stage in this month’s listing. Parnelli Preview A look back at the lives and times of the Clair Bros. of Lititz, Pa. Welcome To My Nightmare Find out how this sound guy deals when the crew leaves the scene. Ad info: http//www.fohhotims.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ www.fohonline.com CoNtENts September 2008, Vol. 6.12 Production Profile What’s hot Feature Features Columns 20 FOH Interview 48 On the Bleeding Edge 32 Buyers Guide 52 Sound Sanctuary Brent Carpenter and Brad Madix on tour with Rush tells us what’s up with the chickens. Lavalier and Headset Mics take center stage in this month’s listing. We hit up some of the world’s largest music festivals including Rock in Rio and Milwaukee’s Summerfest. 22 How to maintain the “time spent vs. gig budget ratio.” A look back at the lives and times of the Clair Bros. of Lititz, Pa. 40 Installations MGM Grand and Foxwoods Resort Casino join forces to build a new entertainment venue. 42 Road Tests Crown reinvents the Macro-Tech line with the i Series Amps, Electro-Voice PL Series mics bring affordable professional sound and the Spectr Audio SPX 1534s, Arena Pro 212 subs and AP28s get road tested at the Rose Bowl. 46 Welcome To My Nightmare Find out how this sound guy deals when the crew leaves the scene after load-in… 50 For all of you church volunteers out there, we explain the mystery known as the front-ofhouse console. 54 The Anklebiter The Boston Pops Orchestra’s Fourth of July performance was an explosion of sound. 36 Parnelli Preview Regional Slants What’s hot 34 Production Profile As an ode to AES, we take a look back at gear we were pumped about back in the day. 56 The Biz Surround sound is making its move from movies to live audio. 60 FOH-at-Large It’s part of our job description to be anal-retentive a$$holes. Departments 4 Editor’s Note 5 News 14 International News 15 On the Move 16 New Gear 18 Showtime 46 In the Trenches With an excess of 1,200 gigs a year, Sound on Stage has taken the Bay Area by storm. FEEDBACK I have been mixing live audio for about 35 years now. I take seriously my responsibility, as an audio engineer, to learn as much as I can about sound. I always look forward each month to reading your articles in FOH, and it is obvious to me that you are observant and thoughtful when it comes to technical issues of audio as it is applied in the real world. So, thanks for all you have given us out here in the trenches of audio. In the July 2008 “Theory & Practice” column about optimization of high-frequency drivers, you wrote that after setting up a 1,200 Hz crossover point you would add a 12 kHz, Butterworth, 2-pole high-pass filter to the DSP settings. Did you mean to say low-pass filter in order to not waste energy above 12 K deeming it unnecessary up there? Or are you trying to counter the increased mass effect at higher frequencies on the 3” diaphragm by attenuating everything below 12 K at a slope of 12 dB/octave? I don’t think this would work well since the driver’s frequency response region between 10 K and 1.2 K doesn’t follow the Optimization Oops 12 dB/octave rolloff slope “need of correction.” The third possibility is that I have something to learn here, and I want to understand what you are doing with this 12 kHz high-pass filter. Also, note that the Figure 2 graph seems to indicate a 6 dB/octave slope instead of a 12 dB/octave slope. Please clarify. Thank you again for all that you do to educate us. You deserve much respect, and I gladly give it. Gregg Stegal 1st Stage Audio Austin, Texas Yeah, I occasionally space out on filters descriptions, and this is where you caught me. First, I bound the bandpass by the 1.2 kHz Linkwitz-Riley on the low side, and place the 12 kHz Butterworth on the high side. I should of said low-pass on the Butterworth, instead of high-pass. In between is where the parametrics get used. Your second point is where I should correctly specify a shelving filter at the 12 kHz corner point with a gain/boost as required. Mark Amundson CORRECTION AKG Acoustics was inadvertently left out of last month’s Personal Monitor Earpieces Buyers Guide. Here is the listing: Company: AKG Acoustics Make/Model: IP 2 Frequency Response: 12 to 23,500 Hz Input Sensitivity (dB @ 30 Hz/1Mw): 121 dB SPL/V Cable Length: 1.15 m / 3.8 ft, Connector Type: 3.5 mm stereo jack Editor’s Note By BillEvans The Amazing Shrinking News Cycle Publisher Terry Lowe tlowe@fohonline.com Y ou may notice a small change on the cover of this issue of FOH. Where it used to say “The News Magazine for Live Sound” it now says “People. Production. Gear. Gigs.” I know it seems like a small thing, but it speaks volumes about the role of news in print media and the future of FOH magazine. I am an old-school news guy and take great pride when we break an important story and are able to get info that our competitors either can’t get or don’t see as important enough to go after. We get those pretty regularly, but we have been having some new faces in FOH (No, like ‘em or not, the old ones are not going away…) and an increased emphasis on applications and “how-to” content and stories that get deeper into the production of shows, the technology that supports them and the people and companies who make it all happen. So, Just What IS News? FOH That question becomes ever more important as the news cycle is driven faster and faster by changing technology. Here’s a peek behind the curtain… I am an old-school news guy and take great pride when we break an important story and are able to get info that our competitors either can’t get or don’t see as important enough to go after. an internal discussion for more than a year about the role of straight news coverage in what we do. I am finally coming around to the POV that, while the kind of news stories we do every issue are important, the place they need to get to first and foremost is online. And if they have already been online for three weeks, there are better uses for the space in the paper and ink magazine than just repeating something that has already appeared online. Once upon a time, when newspapers were still king, the news cycle was days — the time between issues of the newspaper. Network TV news made it a day — the time between broadcasts. Cable news networks broadcasting 24 hours a day brought the cycle down to hours and with the proliferation of news-based sites online, the news cycle is literally seconds. So, it is time to use the right media for the right content. In the coming months, you will see News content in the live audio trade publishing biz is — much to the chagrin of many of us — largely driven by gear manufacturers. They either have inside staff or an outside publicist whose job is to produce “news stories” called press releases about the shows and companies using their products. As you might expect, these press releases are generally not "all inclusive.” That is, they focus not on an entire production but on the role played by that mfg’s gear. That in itself would be okay, but PR people being PR people, these "news stories” usually contain a fair bit of hyperbole, unsupported statements presented as facts and even some plain old garden variety bullshit. We get anywhere from 3 to 30 of these releases every day. And we try — not always successfully — to edit out the crap and leave the good stuff. Like I said, we do not always succeed. Just a month ago, a reader sent me a letter and took me to task for a press release that got through the system virtually unedited. It happens. But our intent is always to serve as a kind of BS filter so you get the good stuff without having to break out the old hip boots. But lately we have been told by some of the PR folks that a certain competitor — one we don’t generally mix it up with because we cover different parts of the audio world — has been getting “news” online very quickly. So, we checked it out and found that they were right. This Web site was getting the press releases that we took a day to edit and post online in a matter of minutes. So, we just had to find out how they were doing it. Child laborers in India? Some kind of new technology? Maybe it was just magic… It turns out to be pretty simple. The Web site has a blog set up and has given the keys to posting on that blog to the PR agents in the industry. The PR people log on, post their press releases and pictures, and it goes online. The site says that all posts are held for approval by a moderator, but they go up pretty fast and there does not appear to be a lot of editing going on. In fact, the releases we saw online and the ones we got from the PR firms were verbatim the same. Which begs a few questions. Is that news? Do you want to read unedited PR that is being called “news” or do you expect publishing people to exercise some judgment and filter out the BS so you don’t have to deal with it? Do you want pabulum passed off as news online? Or do you even care? It comes down to us in the trade media having a decent read on the needs of the readers and being committed to filling those needs as fairly as we can. Anyone can set up a blog, and if that’s what you want let us know. In the meantime, I have an inbox full of hyperbole-laden press releases to edit BEFORE they go online. C-ya at AES… Editor Bill Evans bevans@fohonline.com Managing Editor Breanne George bg@fohonline.com Technical Editor Mark Amundson mamundson@fohonline.com Senior Writer Kevin M. Mitchell Contributing Writers Jerry Cobb, Dan Daley, Jamie Rio, Steve LaCerra, David John Farinella, Ted Leamy, Baker Lee, Bryan Reesman, Tony Mah, Ken Rengering Photographer Steve Jennings Art Director Garret Petrov gpetrov@fohonline.com Production Manager Linda Evans levans@fohonline.com Graphic Designers Crystal Franklin cfranklin@fohonline.com David Alan dalan@fohonline.com Web Master Josh Harris jharris@fohonline.com National Sales Manager Dan Hernandez dh@fohonline.com National Advertising Director Gregory Gallardo gregg@fohonline.com General Manager William Hamilton Vanyo wvanyo@fohonline.com Business and Advertising Office 6000 South Eastern Ave. Suite 14J Las Vegas, NV 89119 Ph: 702.932.5585 Fax: 702.932.5584 Toll Free: 800.252.2716 Circulation Stark Services P.O. Box 16147 North Hollywood, CA 91615 Front Of House (ISSN 1549-831X) Volume 6 Number 12 is published monthly by Timeless Communications Corp., 6000 South Eastern Ave., Suite 14J, Las Vegas, NV, 89119. Periodicals Postage Paid at Las Vegas, NV and additional mailing offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to Front Of House, P.O. Box 16147, North Hollywood, CA 91615-6147. Front Of House is distributed free to qualified individuals in the live sound industry in the United States and Canada. Mailed in Canada under Publications Mail Agreement Number 40033037, 1415 Janette Ave., Windsor, ON N8X 1Z1. Overseas subscriptions are available and can be obtained by calling 702.932.5585. Editorial submissions are encouraged, but will not be returned. All Rights Reserved. Duplication, transmission by any method of this publication is strictly prohibited without the permission of Front Of House. Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com Publishers of... 4 SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com News Logitech to Acquire Ultimate Ears IRVINE, Calif. — Peripheral and accessories maker Logitech International has announced that the company will acquire privately held Ultimate Ears, of Irvine, Calif., for $34 million in cash. The acquisition is subject to customary closing conditions and is expected to close in August. “Logitech was a smart choice for Ultimate Ears because for us to really grow the business, we needed a more established distribution on a global basis,” said Mindy Harvey, an original founder of Ultimate Ears. “Logitech certainly brought that to the table for us. They were also a good fit for our culture — the way they approach the customer is very much aligned with our philosophy. We have tremendous confidence that Ultimate Ears products will become a global brand very quickly.” Harvey continues, “(Logitech) has a tremendous distribution channel across the globe, and anybody that’s tempted to bring products into retail knows how difficult of a job and how expensive and risky of a proposition that is, and they have done just an amazing job of accomplishing that.” “Ultimate Ears is a perfect fit for Logitech and our audio business,” said Gerald P. Quindlen, Logitech president and CEO. “Since its inception, Ultimate Ears has been driven by innovation, close ties to its customers and the desire to enable an immersive audio experience. We look forward to using our worldwide distribution network and operational efficiencies to help more people discover this superior listening experience.” Loud Technologies Chairman and CEO Steps Down; Successor Named WOODENVILLE, Wash. — The board of directors of Loud Technologies has announced that Jamie Engen is stepping down from his position as chairman and CEO effective immediately. The board has named Rodney Olson as the company’s chairman and CEO. “Over the past 10 years, Jamie has played a critical role in growing Loud Technologies into the industry leader that it is today. We appreciate his contributions and wish him the best,” said Tom Taylor, the board member who led the search for Engen’s successor. “We are fortunate to have a strong successor to take over the reins and continue our growth efforts.” Olson joins Loud Technologies after a decade with Cardinal Brands, a Kansasbased $170-million office products company, where he has served as CFO, president and most recently, CEO, for the past two years. Under Olson’s leadership, the company’s revenues grew 30 percent despite competitive market conditions. Prior to his time at Cardinal Brands, Olson served as CFO at Sabreliner Corporation, a $250-million aviation company, where he led the company’s M&A activity and was integral in driving revenue and market share growth in the six years he was there. Yamaha Completes Acquisition of Founders Shareholding in NEXO BUENA PARK, Calif. — Yamaha recently completed its first step of the acquisition of NEXO by purchasing all shares of the two founders. On June 19, Yamaha Corporation announced its intention to acquire NEXO SA, French manufacturer and seller of professional acoustic speaker systems. Yamaha is scheduled to launch a tender offer for the remaining shares of NEXO on the open market in September, with the objective of acquiring 100% of the company’s shares. The decision to purchase NEXO follows the strategic alliance between the two companies, which transpired in 2005. Immediately after the decision to purchase NEXO, Yamaha Corporation made an offer to purchase the shares of the two founders who are also the principal shareholders. Following the completion of the acquisition of the founders’ shares at a meeting of the NEXO board of directors, the board unanimously elected as its new chairman and CEO, Keisuke Kobayashi of Yamaha Corporation Japan (former head of Commercial Audio, deputy general manager at Yamaha’s PA/ DMI Division, and director of NEXO). www.fohonline.com 2008 SEPTEMBER 5 News Sound Image’s Jim Douglas Fighting Cancer Longtime Sound Image employee Jim Douglas has been diagnosed with cancer. Following is a letter from President Dave Shadoan released Sept. 2. Earth Wind & Fire Perform Classic R&B Hits with SD7 GILFORD, N.H. — These days, Earth Wind & Fire performs consistently throughout the year — be it a club, concert venue or corporate setting. For the band’s long-time FOH Engineer Terry “TJ” Jackson, the migration from the DiGiCo D5 to SD7 was a natural one, offering a streamlined roadworthy rig, and giving him the tools to flex the overall sound to the venue at hand. The EWF tour — with production partner Eighth Day Sound — was one of the first tours to head out stateside with the new SD7 console. “I like the challenge of figuring out new gear, and as a long time DiGiCo fan, I was excited to get my hands on the SD7,” says Jackson. I actually like to mix and try new things during the show — and this board allows me to do it.” Earth Wind & Fire FOH Engineer Terry “TJ” Jackson Great White Offers $1 Million for Nightclub Fire Settlement Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Great White, the 80s rock band whose concert pyrotechnics started a deadly nightclub fire back in 2003 that killed 100 people including the band’s guitarist Ty Longley, has reached a settlement offer of $1 million to victims’ family and survivors. The band’s settlement, which denies any wrongdoing, will not go into effect until the more than 300 individuals suing the band have approved it. The fire, which is known as the fourth deadliest U.S. nightclub fire, took place at The Station nightclub in West Warwick, R.I. More than 200 people were injured in the blaze. The nightclub owners, Jeffrey and Michael Derderian and the band’s tour manager, Dan Biechele were charged with 200 counts of involuntary manslaughter — two per death for gross negligence and committing a misdemeanor that led to a death. 6 SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ News Playboy Jazz Fest Hits the Hollywood Bowl LOS ANGELES — McCune Audio recently purchased 26 new McCauley FM850 low-profile, lightweight, 2-way monitor systems. One of the first opportunities to work the FM850s in the field came when McCune provided sound reinforcement for the 30th year at the 2008 Playboy Jazz Festival held at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. Bill Knight and Matt Chavez from McCune ran the monitor boards for each of the stages at the Hollywood Bowl. When asked about the performance of the monitoring systems, Chavez explained, “We received no complaints. And if there are no complaints, then everything is good. Although Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl nothing specific was mentioned, we did receive a few complements that everything sounded great. That’s about the best to be expected from a large festival.” Knight highlighted the few complications with the show that were relative to space dimensions rather than the equipment itself. “The FM850 is a fantastic monitor, and in comparison to what we’re used to using, it has different throw dimensions. It was a bit challenging because the stage for the Hollywood Bowl isn’t as big because it’s cut in half essentially. Since most of the jazz musicians get really close to the wedges, we set the monitor’s to their high angle… and then it was smooth sailing.” An Olympic Gold Medal for Live Event Audio continued from cover Olympics ceremony ever, broadcast for the first time in High Definition and surround sound. The opening ceremony in Beijing, marking the beginning of the 29th Olympic Summer Games, was held on Aug. 8 at the newly constructed Beijing National Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com 8 SEPTEMBER 2008 Stadium (known informally as “The Bird’s Nest”). Sound Media Fusion facilitated the event audio system design, programming and deployment, which featured JBL VerTec line arrays, Crown I-Tech amplifiers and Soundcraft Vi6 digital mixing con- soles. Meyer Sound’s Matrix3 audio show control system managed technical aspects of the performance, including audio, motion control, pyrotechnics and lighting. Gary Hardesty (chief designer, Audio- Beijing Olympic Ceremonies Department; technical consultant, Panasonic for all Olympic Ceremonies and competition/ non-competition venues) had the complex but rewarding task of specifying and implementing the massive, multi-zone distributed sound reinforcement system approach to integrate portable and installed speaker locations. “All FOP [field-of-play] speakers needed to be self-powered arrays due to highly restrictive physical space limitations,” explained Hardesty. “In the case of the JBL products, I needed small size and a lot of SPL, not to mention predictable coverage. The JBL VerTec DP systems were part of a very large, distributed multi-zone system, and they performed flawlessly, exceeding my requirements and expectations.” Harman HiQnet-compatible VT4888DPAN powered midsize line array elements and VT4882DP-AN companion subwoofers with JBL DrivePack technology were selected to cover various portions of the stadium, including array locations dedicated for use in critical end-zone locations. These were configured as ground-based stacks, each containing two or three enclosures. Arrays were masked with neutral gray weather-protective covers, and many speaker units were installed behind facades and integrated into Hardesty’s overall system design underneath temporary staging platforms, including the five Rings Plaza and the National Flags Platform. Additionally, a total of 26 JBL MS-26 ultracompact fill speakers were dedicated for second tribune and VIP stand fill. Passive speaker systems were powered by Crown I-T6000 and I-T4000 power amplifiers, compatible with hundreds of other Crown amplifiers installed for the venue’s audio system infrastructure. Additionally, Soundcraft Vi6 digital consoles were part of the event sound system. Hardesty called for a distributed system comprising multiple stacks of three Meyer Sound MILO line array loudspeakers on the field of play to cover the two lower levels, and to augment the new Panasonic LA3 line array speakers covering the upper level seating. www.fohonline.com Providing powerful low end were 700HP subwoofers, arranged in cardioid pairs and topped with an additional MILO cabinet focused on the lower level audience. Hardesty reports the system’s relatively diminutive size belied its power. “The results were amazing. By far the best sound I’ve heard in a large venue. From our vantage position, if you closed your eyes it didn’t sound like the speakers were as far away as they actually were.” Bob Dixon, director, Sound Design & Communications, NBC Olympics, chose several DiGiCo DS-00 digital consoles for the NBC network’s coverage of the basketball, boxing and indoor volleyball games. According to Dixon, the three DS-00 consoles will each be outfitted with expanders to handle a total of 40 mic/line inputs, 32 analog line outputs and 64 AES inputs and 64 AES outputs. “We’ve had to change quite a bit this year technically,” explains Dixon. “Whereas in previous years, NBC was using a hybrid of both SD and HD, often with stereo or upmixed audio. But with the 2008 Games, it‘s the first time we’re broadcasting all network shows in high-definition with six discreet channels of audio. We’re covering about seven venues on our own, taking some of the feeds from the host broadcaster, but then adding our own cameras and mics to give it our own perspective.” Peavey MediaMatrix NION Series processing nodes were tasked with distributing the event announcements and background music for Beijing Olympic Basketball Gymnasium, where the men’s USA Team will be led by NBA stars Kobe Bryant and LeBron James and the Beijing Olympic Green Tennis Court, which will host competitors such as Venus and Serena Williams. At the National Aquatic Centre, also known as the “Water Cube,” JBL Precision Directivity (PD) Series and Application Engineered (AE) Series loudspeakers were used. The system featured 52 PD5212/64 12-inch 2-way full-range loudspeakers, eight PD5122 dual 12-inch low-frequency loudspeakers, 12 AC2212/95 and 12 each 2380A 90- x 40-degree horns matched with 2446J 2-inch exit (4-inch voice coil) compression drivers. The Water Cube also incorporated Crown CTs600, CTs1200, CTs2000 and CTs3000 amps, Soundcraft consoles and BSS DSP using HiQnet London Architect platform for control. Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ News White Space Fight Escalates By Breanne George continued from cover WASHINGTON — A longtime issue facing the live production industry, the white spaces debate has hit full force in a string of events that appear strangely coincidental amid recent FCC field-testing at live events — all of which have failed conclusively. The consortium of tech companies (Yahoo!, HP, Motorola, Google), fervent about opening up the spectrum for wireless Internet use, continue to escalate its fight. At the forefront of efforts, Google has fired back with a new campaign and Web site, freetheairwaves.com, to garner public support for open use of the tiny spectrum. “We are worried the FCC will buckle and allow white space to be used by personal portable devices seeking wireless services,” says Karl Winkler, director of business development for Lectrosonics. Shortly following the launch of the Web site, a “consumer interest group” (see related story) filed a complaint with the FCC against certain kinds of wireless microphones claiming that they violate licensing requirements. The FCC is now considering a potential ban on a number of wireless mics, an action that would affect a variety of live events including Broadway shows, concerts, church services and political rallies among others. “Remember that fuzzy static between channels on the old TVs? Today, more than three-quarters of those radio airwaves, or “white space” spectrum, are completely unused,” says the Web site. For the live production industry, the free use of that fuzzy static could cause hidden dangers, not just from a business standpoint, but also for the safety of those involved in the productions. Personal devices searching for Internet connectivity could interfere with high-end audio equipment already occupying the spectrum, resulting in dropouts and interference. Problems would exist beyond a wireless mic failing during a Justin Timberlake concert. Rigging equipment and scenery pieces used on many productions are often controlled and dependent on wireless devices. If interference were to occur during some shows, the results could be catastrophic. The potential for interference and loss of signal could also cause a significant reduction in wireless microphones used in productions. “The number of wireless microphones used will be reduced significantly, and it costs big productions millions of dollars to redesign what they do,” says Winkler. Despite the fact that all devices tested by the FCC have failed, it appears that the new strategy among those with monetary interests in white spaces is prohibition of wireless mics unless the operator has a license. If you want to educate yourself on this issue, go to www.fohonline.com/ whitespace for a list of related links to news articles. Exactly Who Is Behind Google’s Grab for “White Space”? By Chris Bray continued from cover WASHINGTON — Do you own or use wireless mics? You’re a terrible person and you should be ashamed of yourself. As a bunch of news stories have recently explained, two sides are fighting over control of “white spaces” in the broadcast spectrum that are currently used for wireless microphones. On one side, the greedy scofflaws of the audio industry and their clients in businesses like live music and theater. On the other side, the apple-cheeked American consumer, pulling his child around the block in a bright red American Flyer wagon. (They’re on their way to buy a slice of apple pie. From a military veteran. At the local volunteer firehouse.) Now, sure: A giant corporation, Google, has taken an interest in the same issue, and companies invested in the Internet would like to sell new services over those broadcast frequencies. In fact, Google started a Web site, freetheairwaves.com, to promote the commercial use of the “unused” radio airwaves that wireless microphones use. But we’re not talking about Google, here — they just happen to be on the same side as the ordinary American. “Consumer groups,” reports the Associated Press, have alleged in an FCC complaint that users of wireless microphones are violating federal regulations by using those unused airwaves. Consumer groups? The AP goes on: “The Public Interest Spectrum Coalition accused manufacturers of deceptive advertising in how they market and sell the microphones, which largely operate in the same radio spectrum as broadcast television stations.” The Public Interest Spectrum Coalition. Here we go. In an April 5, 2007 regulatory filing before the FCC, that group identified itself as an “ad hoc” association — that is, a cluster of disparate organizations, informally banded together to address a single common concern. Among the organizations making up this ad hoc consumer coalition is the New America Foundation, a Washington, D.C. non-profit. It’s a pretty connected organization — it even turns out that the chairman of the board is Eric Schmidt, the CEO of Google. In fairness, Schmidt probably does buy stuff at the store, so it’s not a stretch for him to stand in for America’s consumers — he has experience in the field. Another member of the PISC is the Media Access Project, also a D.C. non-profit. The names of the project’s board of directors are available online. Director Kathleen Wallman is an erstwhile lobbyist for clients like AT&T and the U.S. Telecom Association, according to lobbyist filings obtained by OpenSecrets.org. Board member Albert Kramer, a partner at the law firm of Dickstein Shapiro, LLC, is the former general counsel to the North American Telecommunications Association. According to his law firm’s Web site, Kramer’s clients now include internet service providers and VoIP companies — just the kind of ordinary American consumers who unselfishly yearn to “free the white space.” Democracy at work: In our nation’s capital, Vegans for Fairness to Animals would be an organization of slaughterhouse operators. And the news reports would take everything they said at face value. You can check out all of this information for yourself, by the way — it’s easy to find. Just Google it. Digital Consoles Transform Central Baptist Church Allen & Heath iLive system at Central Baptist Church . ST. LOUIS — Central Baptist Church, located in St. Louis, has installed two iLive-80 digital consoles to handle FOH/monitors and Broadcast positions. A 750-seat facility, Central Baptist Church (CBC) is a dynamic musical church led by the charismatic and compelling Dr. Robert C. Scott. “The church is undergoing a transformation to meet the needs of a media savvy generation,” explains Michael Drainer of Drainer Albright & Associates, “The iLive system by Allen & Heath has exceeded CBC’s expectations and has been the perfect solution because of its superior userfriendliness, flexibility and functionality.” CBC’s Pastor D. Robert C. Scott was blown away by the quality of the new system. “I have never heard my voice with such clarity in more than 20 years of giving sermons,” exclaims Scott. “The congregation has been so pleased with the new system; it adds a new dimension to our services and events. The iDR-10 located on the stage and CAT-5 connection to the console keeps the audio cable lengths short and direct. This greatly improves the quality of the audio and keeps the noise floor very low. The main iLive-80 64-input/16-output system is configured with the control surface installed at FOH position in the church, and its iDR-10 stage box is installed behind the stage. Forty-eight inputs and eight outputs are located in the stage box along with a multi-digital output card for Aviom integration. Inputs are available for choir, lead vocals, backing vocals, drums, percussion, keyboards, piano, guitars, other instruments and spare inputs for various events hosted by the church. Outputs are configured as main speakers, Aviom integrated outs, three monitor wedges and matrix feed for the hallways, bathrooms, nurseries, pastor’s study, etc. The iLive control surface at FOH is configured with 16 inputs for various wireless mics, CD and video input and eight outputs are available for recording of services and patching any other outboard gear brought in by guest engineers. ATK Audiotek Provides Sound Platform for Barack Obama continued from cover The outcome? With all those challenges, ATK turned in a flawless performance. In a rehearsal, Obama’s campaign staff walked around the stadium listening to the senator’s speech, commenting on the quality of the sound. After the show, Powell said the accomplishment was the product of experience. “All of us do these types of shows all the time,” he said. “We all know what’s got to be done.” As routine as their long experience made the setup, the final product was anything but ordinary. “It was an honor to be on the show,” Powell said. “It was a big deal.” Obama’s acceptance speech was the conclusion of the Democratic convention that began on Aug. 25. The event featured live performances by Steve Wonder, Jennifer Hudson, Will.i.am accompanied by 10 SEPTEMBER 2008 John Legend, and the Agape Choir, Sheryl Crow and Michael McDonald. The stadium swelled to an 85,000-person capacity with much of the infield used for temporary seating. Event Sound Designer and Chief Engineer Pat Baltzell of Baltzell Audio Design specified 76 JBL VerTec VT4889 full-size line array elements and 12 JBL VT4880A arrayable subwoofers in sports-venue perimeter configuration along with 32 JBL VT4888 midsize line array elements for delay-tower applications powered by three racks of Crown I-Tech IT8000 amplifiers. All monitors for the performances were powered by 20 channels of Crown Micro-Tech 1200 and Macro-Tech 3600. An additional battery of Crown I-Tech IT4000 amplifiers powered JBL Professional VRX928 compact line array elements for fill applications throughout the stadium. www.fohonline.com Barack Obama’s acceptance speech at Mile High Stadium in Denver Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ News S. Miller Neil Diamond Is “Home Before Dark” Neil Diamond Home Before Dark tour sound team. ORLANDO, Fla. — On the road in support of Home Before Dark, his 29th studio album, Neil Diamond has embarked on a major U.S. tour. Diamond has retained many of the veteran technicians who have traveled with him throughout his career. Among those are monitor mix/live recording engineer Bernie Becker and sound designer/FOH mixer Stan Miller, who hasn’t missed a tour or show in 41 years. “I first encountered Professional Wireless Systems’ GX-8 and GX-4Amplifier/Combiner about five years ago on a TV project in NY,” says Becker, a mastering engineer when he’s off the road. “I noticed one in the rack and asked the engineer what it was. He said ‘watch this,’ flipped the switch, and the sound improved by about 30%.” Miller also saw the potential for PWS gear to enhance the sound quality for Diamond’s show, marking the first time Diamond went wireless. “The RF signal improvement was impressive,” he says. The GX-8 combines up to eight transmitters into a single antenna, and provides flawless coverage in large and small venues. Everyone noticed the difference immediately.” “The essential inputs and outputs for our show are Neil’s wireless mics, wireless GTR and the wireless feed for his IEM,” Becker adds. “Our policy has always been to listen to what each manufacturer has to offer at the beginning of each tour to see what works best. Prior to this current 2008/2009 tour, Diamond used a Shure Beta 87 with an “A” style head and a Sennheiser Evolution belt pack. This time around we tried the new AKG systems and the new D5 Dynamic head and IEM System. We are committed to providing the fans with the best wireless sound. To help deliver the goods we hired PWS GM Carl Cordes to train our sound team on getting the most benefit from the system.” New Jersey Icons Choose Yamaha PM5D ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Two New Jersey legends have chosen Yamaha PM5Ds, The Atlanta City Hilton theatre and Jersey City-born Kool & The Gang. The Atlantic City Hilton recently installed a new Yamaha PM5D digital audio console for front of house use in their entertainment venue. A state-of-the-art venue built to showcase the talents of celebrity entertainers, the theater boasts a seating capacity of over 1,400. The theater’s audio staff consisting of Kevin Kelly, lead audio technician, and Joe White, monitor engineer, had until recently been renting a PM5D from ACIR Pro, and made the decision to purchase a PM5D due to the amount rider requests for the console. The new console joins a PM5D already positioned at monitors. “We chose PM5Ds for a variety of reasons: The flexibility, reliability and sound make the console a pleasure to work on and the company’s tech support system is excellent,” states Kelly. “This console is usually on every rider so most of the incoming engineers have their show on a card. If they don’t, it doesn’t take that long to set it up.” Kool & The Gang’s story starts in the Jersey City, N.J. projects. Their confidence and creativity produced a string of loose-but-tight records, culminating in the Pop Chart smash “Jungle Boogie.” Kool & The Gang found a special sound at the unique intersection of jazz, r&b, funk and pop. The group’s current monitor sound, and for the past seven years, can be attributed to Alfred “AL-Tee” Williams, who for the past four years has been using a Yamaha PM5D digital audio console. “One of the best things I like about the Yamaha PM5D console is its Recall capabilities, “states ‘Al-Tee’. Self-taught on the console, ‘AlTee’ takes his 5D card from gig to gig and pops it into a console with his saved settings to any production-supplied PM5D console. “Routing my outputs and inputs is wonderful, plus the updated software version allows me to use 24 GEQ on my mixes.” Williams says he looks forward to checking out the new PM5D-EX with DSP5D Expander capabilities. NEXO monitors are used for most Kool & the Gang shows. The band uses Sennheiser EW-300 personal monitors and AMT mics are used for the horns. Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com 12 SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com Kool & The Gang’s monitor mixer Alfred “AL-Tee” Williams Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ International News Meyer Sound Names McMahon as Executive Director John McMahon VERNON, British Columbia — Meyer Sound has announced the appointment of John McMahon to the newly created position of executive director of Digital Products. In his new role, McMahon will oversee the strategic direction of marketing, sales, research and development of Meyer Sound’s digital signal processing technologies, including Galileo loudspeaker management system, Matrix3 audio show control, Constellation electroacoustic architecture, as well as all related hardware and software development. “John has been an integral part of defining and developing the strategic direction of Meyer Sound’s new generation of digital technologies, as well as maintaining a consistency in integrating those new technologies with our existing products,” said John Meyer, Meyer Sound CEO and co-founder. “His new position will enable him to work even more closely with the company’s team leaders to firmly establish Meyer Sound’s position as a leader in digital audio technologies worldwide.” “Meyer Sound’s acquisition of LCS Audio in 2005 was the first step in what has created a new era, with both companies’ strengths creating a synergy that is nearly limitless in its potential going forward,” added McMahon. “I’m truly excited to be taking on this new role within Meyer Sound, and look forward to unveiling the results of our dedicated research and development teams in the coming months.” McMahon will split his time between Meyer Sound’s Berkeley headquarters and the company’s offices in Vernon, British Columbia. He will continue to be a strong presence at trade shows and presentations worldwide, and will keep in close contact with Meyer Sound’s customer base. In related news, Teri McLennan has been promoted to Business Operations Manager at Meyer Sound Canada. McLennan will be taking on many of the day-today operations responsibilities that McMahon has been handling up until now. Omniline Array Arrives in London’s Kingly Club LONDON — The first UK installation of the new OmniLine Micro Line Array from Martin Audio has been installed in the new Kingly Club in London’s Covent Garden. The scalable system was specified by Bernard Mani, head of London integration company, Systems Etc. Providing even sound coverage provided a challenge for Mani, although he had experience at the space since he had provided the sound system in the building’s earlier incarnation (as Denim). “This time, not only did we have to provide even distribution through three floors, but the system needed to be tiny and discreet — in fact, Dezzi wanted the components to be near-invisible.” It was important that the sound reinforcement blended in with the high-glamour design concept. The main system comprises seven hangs of four OmniLine boxes — some flown from the ceiling and some wall-mounted. Full range infills are provided by Martin Audio’s architecturally designed white C115s with 11 mounted to the wall, along with a combination of 17 distributed C4.8Ts and two C6.8T Ceiling Series speakers. The floor-mounted sub-woofers needed to be invisible and both the eight CS265s on the ground floor and three AQ series AQ210 in the mezzanine have been concealed within the furniture. Frankston Arts Centre Takes Sound System to the Next Level Frankston Arts Centre MELBOURNE, Australia — The Frankston Arts Centre is a landmark in one of Melbourne’s fastest growing areas. Designed by Australian architect, Daryl Jackson, the Frankston is one of the largest metropolitan and regional arts venues in Australia. It was decided that the venue needed a new loudspeaker system to take its offerings into the next level. Venue sound technician Ben Thompson contacted Simon Moran of Optim Audio to install a d&b audiotechnik sound system. Three clusters arranged in a left, center and right configuration make up the main system. Each of these clusters consists of one Ci60 and one Ci90 loudspeaker arrayed in a vertical setup. d&b audiotechnik loudspeakers are also installed in delay positions with E3s in the upper balcony, E0s covering under the balcony delays and further E0s employed as front fills. Rounding out the low end are d&b Ci7 Subs. 14 200.0809.14.indd 14 SEPTEMBER 2008 The whole system is driven by d&b EPAC amplifiers, while system control and monitoring are accomplished via the d&b Remote network. A bespoke application for the R1 Remote control software was created jointly by Stefan Goetz from d&b’s education and applications support team in Germany and Shane Bailey from National Audio Systems, the d&b distributor for Australia and New Zealand. “I believe the Frankston Arts Centre now has one of the best sound systems available and is the first proscenium arch theatre to install a d&b system in Australia,” said Thomson. “ Since installation, we have received outstanding feedback by providing this world-class, quality sound system. Not only does the d&b system improve the sound of performances coming into the Centre, but it also provides unique opportunities for community groups to access a state-of-the-art sound system.” Special dispensation was made for the Martin Audio Blackline F10, which forms the DJ’s reference monitoring in the highly specified booth — as this does have a strong muscular presence. In order to balance the levels of the source inputs — with different DJ and background music feeds — Systems Etc has once again used Martin Audio’s new Engineer 418 DSP, as they did recently at Pacha Victoria, working in conjunction with a separate zoner, which distributes the sound to 14 different zones. London’s Kingly Club is the first UK installation of the OmniLine Micro line Array. Monsters of Rock Festival Kicks Into High Gear CALGARY, Alberta — Canadian rental and production company Sound Art deployed an Electro-Voice sound system for Canada’s largest annual events, kicking into high gear every summer for the outdoor festival season. This year saw the supply of a suitably muscular EV X-Line system for the Monsters of Rock festival at McMahon Stadium in Calgary, featuring heavy metal legends Ozzy Osbourne and Judas Priest. The system’s X-Line component featured left and right arrays of 12 Xvls and two Xvlt, each flanked by 12 flown Xsubs. In addition, 12 XLC-DVX127 per side were deployed as out-fill arrays, with additional low-end support via 12 ground-stacked Xsubs. Four Xf, four Xn and eight Xb (per side) from EV’s X-Array line served as front fills. 56 P3000RL amps powered the X-Line and Xsubs, with 12 TG-7 for the XLC. IRISNet control and supervision software was used for the X-Line and XLC systems. Sound Art Calgary Operations Manager Ronan McGurk was systems tech for the show, and described why X-Line is hard to beat when it comes to delivering massive sonic horsepower for heavy rock: This was the first large concert at McMahon Stadium in years, and it was an amazing sounding one. We had more than enough PA to cover the whole stadium. It was typical EV: simple to fly, simple to use, sounding great. All the engineers at the show were very pleased with the sound quality. The X-Line and Xsubs always impress; the newer equipment, particularly the TG amps and XLC-DVX, are great too. The DVX speakers provide so much body and definition, though it’s not just the woofers that have impressed me with the DVX upgrade from the XLC-127+, it’s the whole box. It was a big, loud rock show, and this PA was perfect.” Monsters of Rock Festival www.fohonline.com 9/3/08 11:16:50 PM On the Move Bosch Communications Systems has announced the appointment of Kees Geerts as product marketing manager, Conferencing Systems AMEC. Geerts is based at Bosch Communica- Kees Geerts tions Systems HQ in Burnsville, Minn., and began his new position in August. “I’m delighted to join the team at Burnsville,” says Kees, “and look forward to the continued growth of our Conferencing Systems Business Line in the Americas.” Professional’s cinema business and prior to that held senior sales and marketing roles at sister company, Crown Audio. As executive vice president of Sales, Morris will be based at JBL Professional’s Stephen Morris headquarters in Northridge, Calif., and will direct worldwide sales operations, reporting directly to John Carpanini. In his new capacity, he will also lead U.S. sales operations for other Harman Professional brands including AKG, Soundcraft and Studer. EAW has announced two new personnel changes to the EAW Europe Sales and Application Support Group (ASG). The appointments were announced by Sean Martin, director of EAW European Kevin McNally Operations. Kevin McNally will be joining EAW Europe as the UK sales manager, effective Aug. 18. He will be responsible for all sales activities in the UK territory for both live and installed applica- Moray McMillin tions. McNally comes to EAW from an active career in installed sound design, including a stint at Metropolis AV and FX in Surrey. He will be based out of the company’s offices in Wickford, England. Previous UK Sales Manager, Moray McMillin will be taking over European ASG duties effective Aug. 1. McMillin has been looking after UK Sales for the past two years and now moves his talents to the support of the entire EMEA region from the technical application standpoint. Martin Audio has announced that Patrick Lau has joined the company with responsibility for setting up a dedicated Asian office based in Hong Kong. Lau previously worked for DCH, the Martin Audio distributor for Hong Kong and China, and has been instrumental in spearheading the growth in sales and generally expanding the com- Patrick Lau pany’s profile in the territory. Sennheiser has announced the addition of Daniel Shawgo and Eric Reese to its south-central U.S. sales team. As regional sales representatives, Shawgo is responsible for all accounts in the northern Florida area while Reese covers the northern Illinois and eastern Wisconsin territories. Both report to Regional Sales Manager Rick Renner. In his new role, Reese draws on a 10-year career focusing heavily on ins ta lled s ou nd and music industry products. He came to Sennheiser from an engineering position at SPL Inte- Daniel Shawgo grated Solutions and owns and operates a PA company called Loud and Clear Productions. His career also includes engineering roles at Ford AudioVideo and Peavey Electronics. Eric Reese Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com The Harman Music Group has announced the promotion of Reed Grothe as executive vice president of Sales & Marketing and the appointment of Harman Professional veteran Buzz Good- Reed Grothe win to the position of vice president of Domestic MI Sales. Grothe joined Harman Music Group in January 2007 as executive vice president of Sales and was formerly chief global business de- Buzz Goodwin velopment officer for the Gibson Guitar Corporation. Buzz Goodwin is a 20-year veteran of Harman Professional and has proven himself to be a versatile and accomplished sales leader in a number of markets including tour sound, recording and broadcast, systems integration and MI. JBL Professional has announced the promotion of Harman Professional veteran, Stephen Morris, to the position of executive vice president of Sales, JBL Professional. Morris takes up the position having successfully led group-wide sales and marketing for Harman 2008 SEPTEMBER 15 New Gear Pre-AES/PLASA New Gear Preview By BillEvans A hhhhh. Smell that? It’s the exciting but somehow slightly putrid smell of trade show season bearing down upon us. And the dance begins. Everyone wants A) their stuff covered as widely as possible and B) to have it still be a surprise when officially unveiled at PLASA in September or AES in October. You know, everyone wants to go to heaven, but no one wants to die. Can’t have it both ways. Bottom line is that some companies let us know wazzup in advance and others… don’t. So what follows is a smattering, a hors d’oeuvre if you will, for the feast to come. Not a lot of detail here, but lots of cool pictures. This will give you something to chew on while waiting for the trade show of your choice to come around. We’ll start with speakers. Meyer Sound has announced the release of the new selfpowered UPQ-2P narrow coverage loudspeaker. High-power output and low distortion combined with a tightly focused beamwidth make it a natural for small- to mid-sized auditoriums, houses of worship, theatres and nightclubs, either as a standalone loudMidas Pro6 be quick. First, Allen & Heath has new offline editing software for the iLive. Second, DiGiCo is continuing the “stealth” marketing campaign that they took up with the SD7 and all we know about the SD8 is that it is being intro’d at PLASA (and then AES a few weeks later) and the picture makes it appear to be made of gold. Nice touch. Okay, on to the two we know a little something about. Midas has brought forth a little brother for the XL8 called the Pro6. It has a much smaller footprint than the XL8, but a lot of the same technology. A whopping 80 inputs and as many as 32 output mixes mean you can use it at FOH or MON, and it can be expanded up to 264 x 264 all with EQ and dynamics processing. Linux-based makes it at least potentially opensource, which bodes well for future development. FOH’s Jamie Rio flew over to London ,while his editor was stuck in the Midwest, to stay in a 15th-century abbey-turned hotel, drink Scotch and see the new beast. You can read about his adventure online at Turbosound Flex Array Series Alcons LR14/90 speaker or as a part of an array. The UPQ-2P features a low-frequency 15-inch neodymium magnet cone driver and 4-inch diaphragm compression driver, both designed and manufactured at Meyer Sound’s Berkeley, Calif. laboratories. Its proprietary twochannel class AB/H power amplifier yields a combined power output of 1275 watts and uses Meyer Sound’s proprietary QuietCool fan technology. The amplifier is equipped with Meyer Sound’s Intelligent AC power supply that adapts to any power voltage worldwide. From “across the pond,” Alcons is now shipping its LR14/90 pro-ribbon line-array. The LR14/90 is a passive 2-way ultra-compact line-array module to be used in vertical stacked or flown arrays with a maximum SPL of 130 dB+ per unit. The LR14/90 uses Alcons’ proprietary pro-ribbon technology for MHF reproduction. The frequencies below 1 kHz are taken care of by two 6.5-inch Neodymium mid-bass drivers, making the system real full-range in most applications with its lowest usable frequency being 51 Hz. Soundcraft Si3 Still looking at the Euro crowd and PLASA we find Turbosound’s new Flex Array series, which combines elements of line array theory with virtual point source technology in one loudspeaker product. It is aimed at providing rental companies with a onebox solution for a variety of venues and audiences. Now there’s an idea… Available in switchable bi-amp/tri-amp and self-powered versions, Flex Array cabinets feature two independent load-certified integrated flying systems, which enable quick and easy rigging with the minimum of external parts. The flybar’s screw thread adjustment allows the movable lift point to be traversed using a handheld speed brace or electric drill even while under load. The flybar supports a column of loudspeakers up to 700 kg from a single fly point. On to the other end of the snake and some real news in consoles. Hmmm, where to begin? Well, they are all Brits so I guess it doesn’t matter. Let’s go in alphabetical order, which means we are going to start with the two we know the least about. This’ll Sennheiser e 965 Meyer UPQ-2P 16 SEPTEMBER 2008 DiGiCo SD8 Sensaphonics dB Check www.fohonline.com/pro6. Staying on the smaller and more affordable tip, Soundcraft is doing a mid-market alternative to the Vi series called the Si3. This one is made to be a drop-and-go replacement for an analogue board with everything in one chassis — console surface, all input and output connections, power supply. Nice. This compact footprint desk can directly handle 64 mono inputs, four stereo inputs and has full connectivity for all 35 output busses (24 Aux/Group, 8 Matrix and Left/Right/Centre mix buses) Add to this four Lexicon effects processors, 12 VCA groups, eight Mute groups and bar graph metering for all 35 bus outputs and the same kind of easy-to-grasp software as the Vi6 and Studer vista consoles and it looks very interesting indeed. To make preparation of the console setup easier, Soundcraft is also planning to release an offline editor for the Si3. This self-contained suite runs on a PC or laptop and allows configuration of the console, which can then be downloaded to the desk. That leaves us with a couple of things that are neither consoles nor speakers. First, apropos for a company founded by an audiologist, Sensaphonics has introduced a dB meter for use with personal monitors. Yes, this is a handheld unit that measures A-weighted APL along with the safe exposure time at that level in real Ramp Runners time. Guess the days of cranking the iPod at the gym are over… Mics. There has to be new performance mics. Oh, there’s one. Sennheiser is touting a new flagship product within the successful evolution range; the e 965 is also their first large-diaphragm true condenser microphone in the evolution line. The e 965 features a dual-diaphragm transducer, which allows users to switch between cardioid and super-cardioid pick-up patterns — a real boon for use on loud stages. Finally, the thing that makes or breaks a gig is often not the high-tech stuff, it is the “make-it-work” logistics stuff. So we end with something totally low-tech — a transport/storage cart for cable protectors. The Ramp Runners are two-wheel and fourwheel carts that allow one person to easily transport or store up to 10 Guard Dog 5 Channel Cable Protectors or 10 Linebacker GP 5 Channel Cable Protectors at one time. An optional Retractable Rail System can be added to the four-wheel cart to transport up to eight pairs of Cross-Guard ADA Compliant Ramps. A removable Storage Box is also available for the 4-wheel cart. Now go out there and git ‘er done… www.fohonline.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Showtime Apple River Country Splash – Gretchen Wilson, Trisha Yearwood, Alan Jackson Venue Float-Rite Park Somerset, WI CREW FOH Engineer: Al Mir Monitor Engineer: Andre St. Pierre System Engineer: John Tellis Production Manager: John Morrison / Gary Brunclik System Tech: Adam Burghout and John Bryant Soundco Clearwing Productions - Phoenix GEAR FOH Console: Yamaha PM5D RH Speakers: L-ACOUSTICs V-DOSC (42), dV-DOSC (12), SB 218 (24), Meyer UPJ (4) Amps: Lab.gruppen fp6400, LA 48, Crown Macrotech MA5002 Processing: XTA DP 226 and DP 448 Mics: Shure, Shure UHF-R, Sennheiser, Beyer, Radial Active DI’s Power Distro: Motion Labs 200A 3 Phase Rigging: CM 1 Ton, CM 1/2 Ton, CM 1/4 Ton Breakout Assemblies: Clearwing Custom and L-ACOUSTICS DOM Series Snake Assemblies: Radial ISO 3way 48 x 16 (1) and Whirlwind Concert Series ISO 56 x 16 (2) MON Console: Yamaha PM5D RH Speakers: Martin LE 700, Martin Blackline sub with 2 JBL VRX (drum fill), 4 L-ACOUSTICS ARCS flown with 2 dV Subs per side (sidefills) Amps: Lab.gruppen fp6400, Crown MA2402, MA3600 Processing: Crown PIP IQ2 Cards and XTA DP 226 Mics: Shure, Shure UHF-R, Sennheiser, Beyer, Radial Active DIs Power Distro: Motion Labs 200A 3 Phase Rigging: CM 1 Ton, CM 1/2 Ton, CM 1/4 Ton Heaven Fest 2008 ST Venue GEAR Denver, CO CREW FOH Engineer: Dave Hash Monitor Engineer: Andy Shornack Systems Engineer: Bill Hart Production Manager: Jeff Preiss System Techs: Jereimiah Horner FOH Console: PM5D-RH Speakers: 24 V-DOSC Elements, 4 Arcs Amps: Lab.gruppen Processing: XTA Mics: Shure Power Distro: Motion Labs Rigging: Loadstar Breakout Assemblies: Whirlwind Snake Assemblies: Whirlwind MON Consoles: Yamaha PM5D Speakers: 12 EAW SM200, 5 Shure PSM 700, 6 Shure PSM 600, 4 Meyer MSL 4 flown Side fills, 2 Meyer 700 subs, 1 DV dosc sub and 1 arc for drum fill Amps: QSC Powerlite Mics: All Shure Rigging: Loadstar Pemberton Festival Venue Main Stage Pemberton, BC CREW Soundco Audio Image Canada FOH Engineer: Toshi Sugitani Monitor Engineer: Ed Hatfield System Engineer: Michael Mordente Production Manager: David Vaughan Tour Manager: Ron Chamberlin System Techs: Derek Mahaffey, Chandy Kilburn Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com 18 ST SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com GEAR FOH Console: Digidesign Profile/MIdas H-3000 Speakers: 32 L-ACOUSTICS V’DOSC, 40 Rat Subs, 40 Meyer Mica, 20 Meyer M’elodie, 12 Meyer 700 HP, 6 Meyer UPJ Amps: L-ACOUSTICS, Crest Processing: 2 Meyer Galileo 616, 2 XTA Mics: Shure, Neuman, Sennheiser, Audio-Technica, various Power Distro: Motion Labs Soundco Initial Production Group with Production Services International ST Rigging: CM Breakout Assemblies: Cable Factory Snake Assemblies: Cable Factory/ Whirlwind MON Speakers: 20 Meyer MJF-212. NEXO Alpha E-line Amps: Self-powered, Crown Processing: NEXO Mics: Various Power Distro: Motion Labs Rigging: CM Adamari Caribbean Festival / Shabba Ranks Venue Queen Mary Park Long Beach, CA CREW FOH Engineer: Danny Almeyda Monitor Engineer: John Coleman System Engineer: Brent Milton, Danny Almeyda, Jerimiah “Jerms” Lauria System Techs: Danny “Mix-Mennace” Almeyda & Brent Milton, CEO GEAR FOH Console: Yamaha M7CL Speakers: 24 Adamson Y-10 (12 per side) and Adamson T-21s (4 per side) Amps: 2 Lab.gruppen fp3400 and 3 fp6400 per amp rack X 4 Processing: 4 XTA DP-424 Mics: 1 Switched SM-58 for Talk Back Power Distro: Pro Power RCD series Distro Rigging: 1 Danny Almeyda 4 CM 1-ton Motors (2 per side) Breakout Assemblies: Socco speaker breakouts for Y-10s and subs Snake Assemblies: 54 Channel Ramlach Snake and Split box MON Console: Yamaha M7CL Speakers: 10 Radian Micro Wedge 12s and an SB-1000 Kick drum sub, 2 sets of KF 750s and 750SB for Side fills Amps: Each Rack consists of 2) Crown MA2402 and 2)Crown MA3600VZ Processing: 4 dbx Drive Rack 480 Mics: Shure UR4D X 4 Tx. handhelds , 8 Shure sm-58s, 6 Shure Sm-57s, 3 Shure sm-81s, 1 Shure Beta-52, 1 Beta-91, 4 Beta 98s, 4 Sennheiser 421s Power Distro: Pro Power RCD Series Distro (on stage) Soundco Pacific West Sound Trinumeral 8 Music & Arts Festival Venue Deerfields, NC CREW FOH Engineer: Stewart Clawson/ Justin Thompson Monitor Engineer: Roscoe Edney/ Kyle Richford System Engineer: Stewart Clawson/ Kenny Reiss Production Manager: Brad Keats System Techs: Kenny Reiss, Kyle Richford, Justin Thompson, 25 Full Sail students Soundco Hurricane Mountain Sound, LLC GEAR FOH Console: Yamaha M7CL Speakers: D.A.S. Audio Compact 2 Amps: QSC Power Light Processing: dbx Driverack 480 Mics: Shure, AKG, Sennheiser Power Distro: Proprietary Snake Assemblies: CBI Paul Van Dyk ST Soundco Venue Metropolis Nightclub Reno, NV CREW FOH Engineer: Fabien Minez System Engineer: Robert Grimard GEAR FOH Console: Innovason SY80 + system rack Speakers: 16 Dynacord PWH, 6 Dynacord Cobra4 top, 4 Dynacord Cobra4 far Amps: Powersoft K8 Processing: Rane RPM88, Dynacord DSP244 Power Distro: Motion Labs Snake Assemblies: Radial Productions Reno MON Speakers: 4 Dynacord FX20, 2 Dynacord FX12 Amps: Dynacord Xa2 system rack Power Distro: Motion labs ST MON Consoles: Yamaha M7CL, Midas Venice 320 Speakers: TCS 1150Ms Amps: QSC PLX Processing: Ashly Mics: Shure, Sennheiser, AKG Power Distro: Proprietary We Want You! FOH wants your gig shots, horror stories and resume highlights! Go to www. fohonline.com/submissions to send us your Showtime pics, Nightmare stories and In The Trenches stats. Or e-mail bg@fohonline.com for more info. We cover the industry — and that means you! Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com ST FOH Interview Rush Drummer Neil Peart in the zone Modern-Day Warriors Choose Free Will We catch up with Brad Madix, Brent Carpenter and Rush. By NortJohnson FOH engineer Brad Madix T o say that Rush is a damn good rock band would be the understatement of the last four decades. Geddy Lee, Neil Peart and Alex Lifeson are three of the best at what they do in the world. When they perform live, it’s a mind-boggling experience. Since the release of the band's self-titled debut album in March 1974, Rush has become known for the instrumental skills of its members, complex compositions and eclectic lyrical motifs drawing heavily on science fiction, fantasy and libertarian philosophy, as well as addressing humanitarian, social, emotional and environmental concerns. They were in this when live sound reinforcement was just a scared little kid. Now that our industry has grown up by leaps and bounds, Rush’s sound has evolved along with it. We caught up with them in Milwaukee, Wis., at the Marcus Amphitheater, a small (23,000-capacity) shed on the shore of Lake Michigan. This was the middle of the band’s 2008 Snakes and Arrows North American tour. The crew had flown the Clair I4 rig in what almost seemed to be a land-to-air record. Then a small problem arose, and the stage right fly had to come down right before sound check. They had it back in the air in no time. After sound check, we sat down with FOH engineer Brad Madix to talk about some of the perfunctory issues on this swing of the tour. Sitting behind a Digidesign Venue, he started out with much enthusiasm. FOH: So what sold you on the Digidesign Venue for this particular tour? Brad Madix: I used this desk with Shakira, so I wanted to bring it over from my experience with that. I like the smaller Profile version of it. The plug-ins for this are studio-quality. During my stretch with Shakira, I talked with them about what they used on the record and how they made the record, and we went and got the same stuff, and it was exactly the same stuff. 20 SEPTEMBER 2008 Monitor Engineer Brent Carpenter Who chose the mics on this tour? Brent (monitor engineer) and I do in tandem with the band. Rush pretty much likes what they hear. These guys told us “you guys need to use what works for you!” Geddy’s pretty particular about the vocals and what works with the vocals, of course. We took five or six mics and narrowed them down to one and that’s how it worked out. Do you use any standard outboard gear in your mix? There’s not much outboard. I run Geddy through a Lake IO just for EQ. It’s a very flexible EQ. It serves as both a shaping as well as feedback control, and you can keep it pretty tight... Then I use a Pro Tools record rack. They are very handy for tuning the PA. Plus, if there is something that is not quite working in the room for you at that venue you can touch it up before the band walks on stage. The rest is plug-in. I use Eventide Anthology, and a few other sidekicks are in there as well. Then there’s the incredible potpourri that comes with the desk, which is highly functional. Rush lead vocalist and bassist Geddy Lee Monitor engineer Brent Carpenter masts some heavy duties. Just about a half hour before the show, he found time to clue us in on the monitor situation. What kind of personal monitors are you using with this tour? Brent Carpenter: All three band members are on Ultimate Ears UE-7 Pros. I find that the isolation that I get from the UEs, the way they are manufactured and the materials they use are really far superior to the other major personal ear monitor companies. There may be someone else out there, but I haven’t found another company that does a better job. How’s the service from Ultimate Ears? They have treated me like I was the only guy on the planet, and that goes a long way when you’re in the middle of a Rush guitarist Alex Lifeson www.fohonline.com They were in this when live sound reinforcement was just a scared little kid. Now that our industry has grown up by leaps and bounds, Rush’s sound has evolved along with it. Rush concert at Summerfest from FOH position large tour. They call me all the time and ask me if things are cool. I have never had a problem on this tour, but when I have on previous ones, I send it, they fix it and sent it right back to me. I have never missed a show with them. Why do you like their molds so much? The UEs are way better molds than I have been able to find out there. The band is extremely pleased with them. The EQ circuitry that they’re using now, even from last summer, is superior in just that short amount of time. They actually take your impression and put it in a 3D laser scanner. Then they have a laser cutter cut the ear monitor out of the material.” What kind of new things are you doing on this tour in regard to miking? Most of the mics on stage are Audio-Technica, with a smattering of Shure products as well. We use three Shure SM 98s to pick up certain points on the cymbals that are not being picked up well with the overheads. That’s because Neil plays with a very wide, open kit and it’s hard to pick up every cymbal like he wants to hear it with just two overheads. On the Kick, we’re using the Audio Technica AE 2500 — it’s a duel element mic so there’s two elements in one shell, and they’re perfectly time-aligned with each other, which is really nice. The snare is a 23 HE on the top. It’s a good all around mic, kind of like an old Shure SM product. On the bottom is an AE 5100 and that is their pencil condenser. Then we went with an AE 450 on the hi hat that is a side-address pencil condenser. Neil’s kit is so tight that it’s really hard to get a mic in there pointed down. So, we went with this side address. We can’t stick it in there from the side because it has a polar pattern that points straight down. I have to say that a lot of what we do couldn’t be done without our system engineer Joe Ravitch and our monitor tech Anson Moore — it just wouldn’t be possible! The show went well and Madix drove the rig at about 101 to 103 dB throughout most of it. Our handheld SPL meter spiked a few times and only on some controlled accents. Above all, the acoustical challenges of the Marcus were only a small drizzle of rain as they opened the gates, dampening the sold-out Summerfest performance. These guys get it! Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com www.fohonline.com 2008 SEPTEMBER 21 Production Profile W Mass music events are becoming the norm around the world. e have covered festivals as a business trend and have covered many individual events as production profiles, but this year we are pulling out all the stops and gathering coverage of more than a half-dozen festivals into a single feature. It’s a big job, but somebody’s gotta do it… Enjoy. Summerfest 2008 A Midwestern Family Affair By NortJohnson S ummerfest has been running since 1968 and has grown to be the largest festival in the world. Period. (Ed note: There is some question here. Rock in Rio also claims to be the biggest, so it all depends on how you look at it. Stages? Performers? Attendance? Revenue? Like Mark Twain said, there are three kinds of lies: lies, damn lies and statistics. To which this editor would add “gear specs,” but that is for another story…) ing just after the Fourth of July. It takes place on 75 acres of lakefront adjacent to downtown Milwaukee. The festival site, the Henry W. Maier Festival Park, stretches about a mile and a quarter, starting on the south end with the 23,000-capacity Marcus Amphitheater and runs north with 12 other permanent miniamphitheater structures — all with varied capacities of 6,000-plus each, respectively. Every year for over the last 40 years, the city of Milwaukee has played host to what has been called the largest festival of its kind in the world — Summerfest. I worked at Summerfest for many years and my son D.J. (now 28 and a touring sound engineer veteran) spent his youth growing up every summer on the grounds from the age of six. He was tutored by folks like Harry Witz, Ronnie Kimbal (Bad Religion) and Mike Piper (The Allman Brothers). D.J. was a young teen back then. My slightly younger brother, Todd (Clair Bros.), has been working with the festival for longer than I have. My nephew Dave was seven years old when he used to hide under the Old Style Stage. Dave is now 25 and touring the world as a backline tech. Next year it will be my six-year-old grandson’s turn to be brought into this Summerfest fold. What and Who? FOH Going back to interview old comrades like Terry Linneman (system tech at the Briggs and Stratton Stage for over 20 years), Greg and Gary Brunclick (Clearwing Productions), and our buddies Steve Vallee and Rick Erickson was a blast and honor. Working productions for Summerfest is like a family reunion every year. So what and who makes this festival unique? Here’s an FOH exclusive overview and interview we hope you will enjoy. Every year for over the last 40 years, the city of Milwaukee has played host to what has been called the largest festival of its kind in the world — Summerfest. It goes for 11 days starting the last week of June and endSEPTEMBER 2008 Handling production for an outdoor shed the size of the Marcus Amphitheater is a fulltime gig alone — add to the mix 12 more stages that require backline, hospitality and the usual rider requirements for international touring acts and you get the idea. Production Manager Steve Vallee takes it all in stride and virtually alone. With the help of his assistant Amanda Grumbein, Vallee is unseasonably calm commanding Summerfest. For the last 21 years, he has been producing all the shows at all the stages from a small production office stage right off the loading docks at the Marcus. When Vallee started, they had seven stages. Over the years that number has grown to 12 to handle different pockets of demographics. This year, the new Harley Davidson stage is an incredible design feat by the motorcycle giant. It looks as awesome as it sounds. Some of the biggest bands and artists in the world have played Summerfest during Vallee’s tenure, and a lot of them performed a mile or more from his sightline. With 5 a.m. to 6 a.m. calls and 12 a.m. to 1 a.m. outs, he laughs and says, “I get home some days with just enough time to shower and then come back.” A Massive Project FOH So how does he smoothly attack a massive project like Summerfest each year with high degrees of consistency? “Well, I wrote a preparatory computer program that pretty much keeps all my information organized. I can take the information in at one place and then from there I can develop backline reports, stagehand reports, hospitality and information on sound and lighting companies. It’s an Access program, that’s basically how I keep track of it all.” As far as festival staff? There is a large group of volunteer drivers for Summerfest. They move the entertainers and their staff to and from the hotels, airport and shows, as well as a number of equipment haulers to transport equipment from the various holding areas to the stages. There are also three or more runners at the Marcus all the time. A nine-person production staff review contracts, arrange hotels, coordinate sponsorship equipment and deal with local band issues. When priorities and staff collide, Vallee seems to hold them both in high regard. So, what’s up with just one assistant? Vallee explained, “ I like to keep things efficient, and Amanda has done a great job for 11 years with me here. The more people you have the more information gets moved around and people get involved in situations that they shouldn’t. With one good assistant, I can keep my finger on what’s going on. I don’t like to micromanage, but I like to know what’s going on all the time.” So, almost every aspect of Summerfest production is managed from Vallee’s office at the Marcus, which he rarely wanders from. “I don’t have to move around the grounds a lot. I usually get out there once or twice a day to see what’s going on at the different stages. I talk to the stage managers on the phone all the time. I check in at the end of the night and call all the stage managers and ask them how it went that day. Because I have a show going on here at the Marcus every day, I have a lot of issues to deal with here at the Marcus, but all the stage managers at Summer- www.fohonline.com fest are some of the most professional in the industry as far as I’m concerned. If there’s a problem with production or an artist, you can bet I’ll hear about it right away.” The longest standing stage manager is Summerfest veteran Rick Erickson at the Briggs and Stratton Stage. He has had 31 years of deployment with the festival. Vallee works with only a couple different vendors for sound, lighting and backline requirements. Clearwing Productions of Milwaukee supplies lighting for the Marcus Amphitheater and Clair/Showco of Chicago supplies sound for those acts not carrying production for the shed. Clearwing Productions also supplies V-DOSC for sound at all the major ground stages except two and augments and supplies lighting on the stages that have house lighting production. Greg Brunclick, Clearwing’s owner, oversees his company’s employment from stage to stage on the grounds. His company started in the late 1970s, and has gone from doing two small stages at the festival to 90 percent of the production. Clair/Showco supplies sound on one grounds stage, the Briggs and Stratton. Clearwing also supplies all the backline for the entire festival for the acts not carrying. As you can imagine, Chad Sikkink, who runs Clearwings backline, is a pretty popular fellow during the 11-day festival. Testing the New Rig FOH This year was the first year Clearwing took delivery of a new NEXO GEO-T rig for the Zippo Rock stage on the north end of the grounds. Brunclick wanted to deploy the new rig through rigorous combat. The GEO T held the front lines for them well. “We put the Geo-T at the rock stage purposely so we could pound nails with it so to speak. To let it prove itself,” said Brunclick. “The triple 18-inch subs on the ground surprised everyone. The order of the day at that stage is to fire up the system and play a Rage Against the Machine song as revaley in the morning,” Brunclick chimed. “The Zippo stage is the northern most stage on the grounds. The guys from the southern-most stage on the grounds called the North Zippo stage (about a mile away) not to tell them that they John Mayer performing at Summerfest Production Profile Summerfest 2008 Local Artists Welcome FOH Besides major and regional touring artists, a lot of local Wisconsin artists are featured usually during the day slots at the music stages. Even more diversity comes as you pass stages like the Potawatomi Bingo Casino Stage where you can find an old-fashioned Wisconsin bingo game in the rock in rio T he world’s largest rock festival grew even larger this year. Rock in Rio drew masses of music-loving revelers to Lisbon in early June before moving to a second location in Madrid for a series of shows in late June and early July. Rock in Rio Lisbon featured performances by Lenny Kravitz, Bob Dylan, Bon Jovi, Metallica, Rod Stewart and Linkin Park, while the Madrid dates included the likes of Neil Young, Shakira, The Police and a shaky-in-stilettos Amy Winehouse. Events at each site drew up to 100,000 people with 300,000 attendees confirmed for Madrid. “Headroom for Days” FOH Brazil-based Gabisom Audio Equipment, the largest audio company in Latin America, provided sound system services for all artists at both locations. The main (World Stage) system featured a massive JBL VerTec system with four array locations. A total of 120 VT4889s and 60 VT4880A Ultra Long Excursion subwoofers were deployed in the main suspended arrays. The main system consisted of four arrays across the front in the normal L/R, LL/RR configuration. The unusual part, however, was that each array consisted of three separate hangs: dual VerTec VT4889 full-range hangs separated by a VT4880A subwoofer hang in the middle. The main left and right arrays had two columns of 18 VT4889 line array elements and one column of 18 VT4880A arrayable subwoofers each. Outer LL and RR columns had two columns of 12 VT4889 elements and one column of 12 VT4880 subwoofers. 24 SEPTEMBER 2008 afternoon and bands like The Wailers or Marcia Ball at night. Throw into the mix the small children’s stages and smaller PAs, you have a complete manifest of demographic production from Summerfest Inc. and Clearwing. So, after the 11 days with over 700 headliners — what’s left for Vallee to do? “Well, first we have to load out and that will start about 9 a.m. the next day, and we’ll finish about 5 p.m. for the whole grounds. Then once I’m done with that, I keep track of the payrolls for the stagehands every day and enter them into the computer. I take a look and see where we are at with the budgets. I have to get projections to our accounting department to see if we’ve gone over budget or not. I deal with whatever issues we had this year and start thinking about changes for next year. I try to start getting an idea on where we are at for next year. Then I basically try to get some sleep.” He starts working on Summerfest early in the year and never really stops. Advancing all the artists takes time. Vallee’s responsibilities are expansive: He takes care of all the hiring and firing of production staff — surveys new site plans and implements them, budgets for new entertainment areas on the grounds and consults in every aspect of what the Guinness Book of World Records calls, “the largest music festival in the world.” (L-R) Clearwing owner Greg Brunclick and Steve Vallee, Summerfest production manager Jim Pietryga could hear the subs, but that they could feel them. That’s a pretty good testimony on how much air they’re moving!” The GEO-T performed well for the task at hand. Its cardioid approach seemed to make this PA really clear. It brings out all the things that you’re not used to hearing on other PAs. The subs move your gut almost requiring a change of shorts. The degree of access is great, too. We just loved standing under the fly and walking the stage ground with nothing transitional. Walking through the Festival site, you’ll find a lot of L-ACOUSTICS V-DOSC. Almost all the stages are digital, with Yamaha PM5Ds leading the pack — the oldest console that we ran into was a Ramsa SX1. Clearwing has grown a lot over the years and has another office in Phoenix run by Brunclick’s brother, Gary. The company has also won a Parnelli Award for Regional Sound Company of the Year. Headliners Rush performing at Summerfest Europe’s claim to the biggest festival gets even bigger. By TravisMcGee “The main PA was set up in a nontraditional and unusual manner, which we call ‘side-by-side,’” said Gabisom’s Peter Racy, chief engineer for Rock In Rio. “It was nontraditional for line array systems because of its mammoth size and also unusual because it was intentionally designed to have a greater amount of acoustical output than usual. The system had headroom for days.” High Expectations FOH According to Racy, each cluster (group of these three arrays) was fed three separate signals called Band, Vocal and Sub. This helped create sound that was characterized as “effortlessly powerful and clear” in a festival where the sheer size of the venues and audiences cried out for something more than just a standard PA. “By separating what would normally just be a single program feed in this way, we gain loads of headroom from each of these three dedicated sub-systems, allowing the entire signal flow [mix busses, summing amps, system processors, amplifiers and speaker components] to work in a comfortable range, far below the traditional onset of system limiting or distortion, while delivering the huge sound that has come to be expected at Rock in Rio,” he said. FOH engineers could elect to feed vocal signals/effects only to the inner VT4889 columns while the music mix went to the outer VT4889 columns. This was the program-feed option recommended by the Gabisom sound crew, which was led by Racy with Valter Silva in charge at front-of-house. Using the “Vocal/Band/Sub” triple-program source Rock in Rio festival (The main PA) was nontraditional for line array systems because of its mammoth size, and also unusual because it was intentionally designed to have a greater amount of acoustical output than usual. The system had headroom for days” — Peter Racy, chief engineer for Rock In Rio www.fohonline.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Production Profile All in all, it was a really big PA that looked good and sounded good. What more can you ask for?” — Tony Szabo, system engineer for the European leg of Bob Dylan’s tour. Producao audio - alexandre BaPtista rock in rio Rock in Rio draws hundreds of thousands of music-loving revelers to Lisbon and Madrid. feed approach, flown subwoofers had a discrete feed and additional VLF (very low-frequency) content was also able to be fed to additional stage-stacked Meyer subwoofer arrays via an auxiliary signal bus from the mixing console. Six delay towers were set up, each with six Norton LS-8 line array systems, local to Portugal. With the help of these, Gabisom was able to cover the entire 300-meter- Front-of-house position at Rock in Rio 26 SEPTEMBER 2008 deep (985-foot) audience area with plenty left over to play to the music-driven fountains beyond the seating zone. “This was the first time that I had to set a delay time by sight,” Racy noted. “We supplied a line-level audio signal to the fountain’s control room. I then had to set the audio signal delay based upon the ballistics/responsiveness of the fountain’s water pumps, while listening to the music and watching the effect of the dancing waters. It was actually quite fun!” Bringing the Crowds FOH In Madrid, the July 6 show featuring Bob Dylan, Lenny Kravitz, Franz Ferdinand and Chris Cornell, drew one of the largest singleday crowds of the entire festival. “Gabisom did a great job on the VerTec system design, setup and operations for this year’s Rock In A total of 120 JBL VerTec VT4889 large-format line array elements and 60 VT4880A Ultra Long Excursion subwoofers were deployed in the main suspend arrays. www.fohonline.com Rio, and our team was quite impressed with the results,” noted UK-based Tony Szabo, system engineer for the European leg of Bob Dylan’s tour. “With Peter and Valter in charge at front of house, and JBL’s new V4 DSP presets loaded in the rig, the show certainly sounded good. We really didn’t have to do too much EQ. All in all, it was a really big PA that looked good and sounded good. What more can you ask for?” A JBL VerTec system at Rock in Rio Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Production Profile Europe’s Festival Scene The U.S. isn’t the only hotspot for festival action. In fact, some of the largest festivals are hitting the European countryside, including England’s Glastonbury and Latitude Fests, Solidays Music Festival in Paris and Scotland’s T in the Park. Glastonbury Festival England’s Glastonbury Festival is unquestionably Europe’s biggest festival. The three-day festival featured some 500 bands, artists and DJs. The John Peel Stage is one of the main attractions at Glastonbury Festival with 43 bands performing, including The Cribs, Friendly Fires, Patrick Watson and The Futureheads. The John Peel Stage’s monitor tech Mike Taylor, from Emarty, used HK Audio stage monitoring products for the first time in 2008. Fourteen CT 115 ConTour Series high-/ midrange units, biamped with DSM 2060 controllers and Lab.gruppen FP 10000 power amps served as front monitors. Two CT 112 enclosures and four CTA 118 units provided the drum-fill, and one ConTour Array with two CTA 208 and CTA 118 enclosures made up the side-fill system. Solidays Music Festival For the past 10 years, the Ile de France region has supported the Solidays music festival to raise AIDS awareness. As this year was the 10th anniversary of the festival, a fifth stage was added and a vast electic selection of hip-hop, rock, reggae and techno artists were invited to perform. French PA company Melpomen, which has provided PA support for the last decade, was able to use three generations of NEXO’s GEO Series line array loudspeakers in their FOH systems. Out of the five stages, the two largest featured NEXO’s GEO T systems. [The larger of the two had 24 GEO Ts per side with six GEO Subs (flown) per side and six CD18s per side. The smaller GEO T stage had 12 GEO Ts per side and CD18s per side.] Making their first appearance at the festival, the NXAMP 4 x 4 power amplifiers were used to drive the subwoofers won the large GEO T stage. oregon jamboree T he Jamboree is quite likely the largest and most successful music festival in America that operates under the auspices of a community rather than a private promoter. In this case, it’s for the sole benefit of Sweet Home (population around 8,000), a logging and mill town hit hard by the timber harvest cutbacks of the early 1990s. Looking to leverage its location in the scenic Cascade foothills, the town decided to boost tourism by hosting a country music festival. Applying federal timber settlement dollars as seed money, the festival premiered in 1992 and has grown steadily ever since. Over 500 townspeople volunteer yearly for the event, working as everything from stagehands to drivers for buses that shuttle fans back and forth from the 16 temporary campgrounds also operated by the festival. (Buses are big, bright yellow and otherwise rarely used in August.) After money is set aside for the following year’s event, the remaining proceeds — well into six figures lately — go to community development grants. Spanning Generations FOH The sixteenth edition of the festival ran the first weekend in August with total three-day attendance pushing 40,000. Fans spanning the generations — from preteen through geriatric — streamed into the site to hear the 13 acts, with headliners ranging from high-energy contemporary artists like Sugarland, Trace Adkins and Neal McCoy to enduring icons like Glen Campbell and former Alabama frontman Randy Owen. Since 2003, sound for the Jamboree has 28 SEPTEMBER 2008 T in the Park ADLIB Audio also supplied sound for two stages at the T in the Park 2008 festival, staged at Kinross, Scotland; the King Tuts Wah Wah Stage and Slam Stage. Slam Stage’s massive V-shaped dance-orientated tent had a capacity of 20,000. Its shape and scale presented some interesting challenges for ADLIB Crew Chief Hassane Essiahi and his team who worked with Sound Engineer Dave Pringle. The 40-meter-wide stage — with DJ platform in front — was located at the middle point of the V, leaving large sections toward the edges of the tent needing to be covered. This was achieved with the installation of two delay stacks per side. They chose to use a JBL VerTec system, all ground stacked, with the main stage stacks containing six VT4889 elements a side, augmented with two 4889 per side at the edges of the stage plus AA FD2 infills along the stage lip. For subs, there were eight VT 4880As per side. The four delays comprised three NEXO Alpha S2 subs, three B1 bass and six M3 tops per stack. The FOH console was a Soundcraft Series 5. Horne Audio rocks the country at Oregon Jamboree. By BruceBorgerson been supplied by Portland-based Horne Audio. For company owner J. Peter Horne, the Jamboree is a keystone event in his summer schedule. “It’s certainly one of my bigger events in terms of size and income,” he says. “It’s also very well run. Any issues that come up seem to get resolved in a non-stressful way, which means I can kick back and have some fun.” Horne was contracted for the Jamboree when the previous sound supplier failed to keep pace with the festival’s growth, according to festival director Peter LaPonte. “Every year Peter [Horne] listens and makes notes,” he says, “and then makes new equipment purchases based on what worked and what didn’t. Also, his monitor engineers are topof-the-line. We never hear of problems or complaints.” Covering Ground 2008 Latitude Festival ADLIB Audio supplied sound production and crew for the third year running to Lake Stage, the Film & Music Stage and the Cabaret Arena at the 2008 Latitude Festival. This is one of a host of festivals ADLIB is involved in this Summer. The Lake Stage was sponsored by the BBC as an “introducing” platform for emerging talent. The tent was a small saddle-span design with relatively low headroom, so the NEXO Alpha PA supplied by Adlib was ground-stacked and comprised two S2 subs, two B1 bass speakers and two M3 mid-highs. This was powered by Camco amps with NEXO NX242 system processors; all bands were mixed from side stage on a Soundcraft Series 4 console, which was also used to mix six monitor sends. A standard ADLIB outboard FX rack contained a Lexicon PCM 70, Yamaha SPX 990 and 2000s and an Eventide H3000 harmoniser plus Drawmer DS201 gates and DBX 1066 and 160A compressors. FOH To cover the festival grounds, which requires a maximum throw of well over 400 feet to the back of the audience area, Horne deployed an Electro-Voice XLC-based line array system. The main hangs of 12 mid-high cabinets per side were buttressed by 12 XLC215 subwoofers. A beefed-up side hang of 10 XLC-127 DVX cabs covered the all-important beer garden at stage left, and 10 more of the same (plus four more subs) were placed on a single delay tower behind the FOH mix. Down- and front-fill duties were handled by a total of 10 compact XLD-281 line array cabinets. Everything was amplified by Lab.gruppen FP+ Series and PLM Series units, with three external Dolby Lake Processors shaping the signals for the FP+ racks. The biggest challenge facing Horne in his system design was the “upside down” seating: Many of the older patrons paid extra to sit up front in the (aptly named?) reserved section, while younger fans of today’s high-dB country sound were partying out in the “back 40.” Ground-stacked subwoofers had proven particularly troublesome. The essence of the problem was recounted by festival director Peter LaPonte: “It was so loud you could feel it slamming your chest. A few years back, one of my staff told me about an older gentleman who angrily walked out saying he was wearing a pacemaker and feared for his safety.” Horne’s first order of business was flying all the subs. Then he configured and shaded his XLC arrays for an emphasis on the long throw. Essentially, the overriding goal was to throw as much sound to the back as possible while keeping levels under control in the front. “I beefed up the delays quite a bit this year,” says Horne. “Also, the top six cabinets in the main arrays are the brand new EV XLC907 DVXs, which are a 90-degree horizontal box. That narrower focus helps to pump up the levels toward the back. When you move www.fohonline.com J. Peter Horne out wide of the delays, the coverage is much better this year than in the past.” Horne utilized the EV LAPS software to aid array configuration, then switched to SpectraFoo for final system tuning. continued on page 30 Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Production Profile Oregon Jamboree Festival continued from page 28 Volunteer Muscle FOH Thanks to availability of well-instructed volunteer muscle, Horne managed the festival with a bare-bones crew. Horne works as FOH liaison and mixes any opening acts (only one this year) without their own engineer. Mark “Sparky” McNeill was the onstage operations chief, while Don Lindsey turned over monitor mixing/liaison duties to Steve Beatty on Saturday when he had to leave for another mixing commitment. Up at FOH, the console complement was 100% digital, with Digidesign Venue boards continuing an upward trend. Horne brought along his own pair of the compact D-Show Profile desks, with one permanently stationed for playback and the other available for acts carrying little or no production of their own. Three of the top-billed acts carried the complete FOH and monitor kit, while most supporting acts used Horne’s FOH and monitor packages — as did headliner Randy Owen, who was on a fly date. “There’s been a definite shift toward the Digidesign boards,” says Horne. “It seems like the country acts have latched on to them even more than in the rock world. We bought our first Profile last year and the second just a few months ago.” Also new to Horne’s inventory this year are his racks of Lab.gruppen amplifiers. For the Jamboree, all the main house arrays were powered by a total of 24 FP+ Series units (FP 7000, FP 100000 and FP 130000) while delays and monitors were driven by 10 PLM Series Powered Loudspeaker Management Systems with their own built-in Dolby Lake processing. Horne says he was particularly impressed with the guts of the FP 130000 units that fed the flown subwoofers. “Without the ground coupling that you get with stacked subs, engineers tend to push the flown subs really hard to get low-end you can feel. But the Lab 13ks just cruised right along no matter what we gave them.” The networked monitoring and control features were also mentioned as a factor in his switch to Lab.gruppen. “The DeviceControl software is very user-friendly and lets me know what’s going on with my load. For example, on setup day I was able to determine quickly that I was missing something. It was a mistake we’d made that showed up right away. We didn’t have to waste a bunch of time tracking it down, or worse yet, do the show lacking a couple of subs.” A Peculiar Mixed Bag FOH In monitor world, Horne confronted a peculiar mixed bag for 2008. He owns both Shure and Sennheiser wireless in-ear packages, but nobody asked that he bring either. Most headliners brought their own in-ear rigs, with everybody else happy to use his complement of L-ACOUSTICS 115-XT HiQ wedges. “They are very rider-friendly,” he notes, “and I like the coaxial design because I don’t have to worry about matched left and right pairs.” Horne supplied his own Yamaha PM5D as a monitor console, with about half of the acts bringing their own digital boards, a mix of mostly Digidesign and Yamaha — with one early-in-the-day act even employing Yamaha’s ultra-compact LS-9. Horne’s 60-plus package of hard-wired microphones — largely Shure with a smattering of AKG, Beyer and Neumann models for targeted applications — was supplemented by 10 channels of Shure UHF-wireless models. Of course, this is Oregon, and though 99% of the precipitation falls between October and June, the occasional “heavy Oregon mist” does creep up the Willamette Valley on summer days. In this case, it fell almost entirely during the opening act — comic duo Williams and Ree — on Friday. By the time red-hot Sugarland hit the stage to close the night, the tarps were pulled back and the system was ready to prove its mettle. “I know sound is very subjective, but I’d have to say that Sugarland’s engineer, Dave Haskell, had the rig sound exceptionally good,” says Horne. “The same holds for Trace Adkins’ guy. Each had a unique approach to mixing, but both did a great job of getting their sound out there.” Festival director Peter LaPorte was even more forthright in his praise, stating, “Sugarland’s show was one of the best sounding I’ve heard anywhere, here or at any other festival, for as far back as I can remember.” He credits Haskell with the artistic judgment, but also acknowledges EV Array 30 Horne Audio’s commitment to constant improvement. “Peter [Horne] really nailed it this year,” he maintains. “It wasn’t too loud up front, but it still had plenty of fullness and clarity all the way to the back. He managed that trick better than ever this year.” No Limit Off Limits FOH It should be noted that Horne did not have to be concerned with excessive SPL outside the venue, as is often the case with festivals surrounded by residential neighborhoods. (The balance of the year, the festival site serves as baseball and soccer fields for the adjoining middle school and high school.) “There’s no limit out in the city,” observes Horne. “Nobody checks because they don’t really care. Everybody loves it. It’s the sound of more money coming into their community.” Also, Sweet Home is a country music kind of town. Early on Friday, residents along 14th Street —next to the festival grounds in line with the main arrays — were putting out lawn chairs and coolers on the front lawns. After all, this was the week when Sugarland was battling “Hannah Montana” for the number one slot on the Billboard Hot 200 (all CD sales, not just country), and these well-located Sweet Home citizens could hear a free show at only slightly reduced levels. Another fringe benefit of community development with a driving beat. Lab.gruppen amps at Oregon Jamboree SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Headset and Lavalier Mics Buyers Guide Headset and Lavalier Mics I By Bill Evans still consider it the day I went from "band guy who owns a PA" to "fledgling anklebiter sound guy." It was an outdoor festival. Two days. Probably a dozen acts total with canned music in between. I had my AKG Acoustics HC 577 small collection of typical rock ‘n’ roll mics and — with the addition of a few more lent by friends — I thought I was set. Things went well until the second day when I discovered that my next act was a magician hired to AKG Acoustics C520 entertain the kids, and he was pretty pissed that I didn’t have a headset or lav for him. Whenever one of us graduates from bands in clubs to "real" sound gigs, having a couple of lav or headset mics becomes a Audio-Technica AT892 MicroSet Audio-Technica AT898 necessity. Yes, most acts that use headsets carry their own, but if you have a corporate gig, you better have a couple of lavs in the old mic locker. Here is a look at some of what is out there. Audix Corporation HT2 Company Model MSRP Size/Weight Pattern Max Clean SPL Handling AKG Acoustics www.akg.com HC 577 $579.00 8.1” x 5.7” / 0.99 oz Omnidirectional 133 dB @ 1% THD C520 / C520L $279.00 / $249.00 7.7” x 5.3” / 0.9 oz Cardioid 132 dB @ 1% THD Omnidirectional Condenser Headworn $549.00 0.32” x 0.11” / 0.08 oz Omnidirectional 122 dB SPL, 1 kHz at 1% T. H.D. Cardioid Condenser Lavalier $315.00 0.91” x 0.21” / 0.03 oz Cardioid Phantom/Battery: 131 dB/ 115 dB SPL, 1 kHz at 1% T.H.D. HT2 $249.00 2.4 oz. Supercardioid 140 dB HT5 $449.00 1.1 oz. Omnidirectional 140 dB OPUS 54 $189.00 1.38 oz Cardioid 132 dB MCE 60 $189.00 0.05 oz Omnidirectional 120 dB GLM-100 $361.00 .310” x 1.435” / 1 oz. without connector, 2.8 oz. with connector Omnidirectional 150 dB SPL produces 3% THD CM-311A $546.00 Headband 5.5” diameter, adjustable. Boom approximately 7 x 3” Headworn mic, 2.1 oz. CM-311A belt pack and battery, 6.1 oz Cardiod 148 dB SPL produces 3% THD 4066 $635.00 Adjustable, weight: 0.49 oz. incl. cable and MicroDot connector Omni, Cardioid 144 dB 4080 $559.00 1.2”, 0.5 oz. incl. cable and MicroDot Cardioid 144 dB RE97-2TX $299.00 0.6 oz.; mic and headset only: 0.33 oz. Omnidirectional >125 dB SPL RE92TX $175.00 0.81 oz. Cardioid >135 dB Head-Clip $69.00 1.2 mm N/R N/R PSL6 $129.00 3.6 mm capsule Omnidirectional 130 dB PSM1 $379.00 3.5 mm capsule Omnidirectional 140 dB Beta 54 Headworn $594.65 4.75 oz. Supercardioid 149 dB SPL at 1% THD/1 kilohm load WL51 Professional Cardioid Subminiature Lavalier $285.95 0.7 oz. with cable Cardioid Unidirectional 138 dB at 1% THD Audio-Technica U.S., Inc. www.audio-technica.com Audix Corporation www.audixusa.com beyerdynamic USA www.beyerdynamic-usa.com Crown Audio www.crownaudio.com DPA Microphones, Inc. www.dpamicrophones.com Electro-Voice www.electrovoice.com Provider Series www.providerseries.com Shure Incorporated www.shure.com N/R = No Response Provided 32 SEPTEMBER 2008 www.fohonline.com F 20 250 dB s PL Audix Corporation HT5 Crown Audio GLM-100 Electro-Voice RE97-2TX DPA Microphones Inc. 4066 Crown Audio CM-311A Electro-Voice RE92TX Provider Series PSL6 DPA Microphones Inc. 4080 Provider Series PSM1 Shure Incorporated Beta 54 Frequency Response Sensitivity at 1 Pascal Noise Floor Distortion Connector Type Color HD 20-20,000 Hz 8 mV/Pa 26 dB-A 1% @ 133 dB TA-3F Fleshtone HD 60-20,000 Hz 5 mV/Pa 32 dB-A 3% @ 132 dB XLR / TA-3F Black 20-20,000 Hz -44 dB (6.3 mV) re 1V at 1 Pa Integral 3-pin XLRM-type Black, beige or cocoa N/R 200-15,000 Hz Phantom/Battery: -43 dB (7.0 mV)/ -46 dB (5.0 mV), re 1V at 1 Pa Integral 3-pin XLRM-type Black 50 Hz-15 kHz 5 mV 26 dB A 0.50% Mini 3 pin XLR f Black 20 Hz-20 kHz 7.1 mV 26 dB A 0.50% Mini 3 pin XLR f , or mini 4 Pin XLR f Black or beige N/R 4-pin mini XLR (also available with free end cable) Black or beige N/R 4 pin mini XLR, also available with free end cable Black Hz at ery: PL, 1 D. uces uces 1% oad HD 40-17,000 Hz N/R N/R 25-20,000 Hz 20 Hz-20,000 Hz 50 dB re 1 mW/Pa N/R 28 dB SPL 66 dB at 94 dB SPL Black XLR 50 Hz-17,000 Hz 4 or 1.25 mV/P 27 dB A nominal N/R Satin black 20 Hz-20 kHz, 3 dB soft boost at 8-20 kHz 6 mV/Pa; -44.5 dB re. 1 V/Pa Typ. 26 dB(A) re. 20 ¬µPa (max. 28 dB(A)) <1% THD up to 123 dB SPL peak Black, brown, Beige 250 Hz-17 kHz with typ. 4 dB soft boost at 4-6 kHz (-5 dB at 100 Hz) 20 mV/Pa; -34 dB re. 1 V/Pa 23 dB(A) re. 20 ¬µPa (max. 26 dB(A)) <1 % up to 123 dB SPL peak 50-15 kHz -48 dBV, 4.0 mV/Pascal 32 dBA Max. SPL > 125dB (<3% THD @ 1 kHz) TA4F Connector wiring: Pin 1 - Ground; Pin 2 - Audio; Pin 3 - Bias Voltage; Pin 4 Unused Black, beige or brown 40 Hz-20,000 Hz 5.6mV/Pascal Equivalent noise , 30 dB SPL “A” weighted (0 dB=20 micropascals) N/R TA4F Connector wiring: Pin 1 - Ground; Pin 2 - Audio; Pin 3 - Bias Voltage; Pin 4 Unused Non-reflecting black N/R N/R N/R N/R N/R Black or tan 20 Hz-20 KHz -46+3 dB N/R N/R Various Black or tan 20 Hz-20 KHz -45dB +3 dB N/R N/R Various Black or tan 50 Hz-20 KHz -52.0 ± 3.0 dB Mini 4-pin connector (TA4F) Black or tan 2 termination options: 4 - pin mini connector (fits directly into Shure Wireless transmitters), or uterminated (bare wire) Black or white N/R 20-20,000 Hz N/R N/R www.fohonline.com All Black 2008 SEPTEMBER 33 Production Profile An Explosion of Sound The Boston Pops Orchestra’s Fourth of July concert at the Esplanade on the Charles River Sound crew worked hard to ensure the Boston Pops’ Fourth of July performance was as vibrant as the fireworks. By BryanReesman Boston Pops audio supervisor Steve Colby T here’s nothing like hearing majestic symphonic music and then seeing a sky erupting with colorful fireworks on the Fourth of July, and the concert at the Esplanade on the Charles River is the most prestigious annual celebration of its kind. Featuring lively performances from conductor Keith Lockhart and the acclaimed Boston Pops Orchestra, guest appearances throughout the years by everyone from David Lee Roth to Rascal Flatts, engaging hosts like talk show personality Craig Ferguson, and (of course) a vibrant fireworks display, the event is a local sensation, and after 10 p.m., a national television event on CBS. Organizing a Local Sensation FOH This past summer, Boston Pops audio supervisor Steve Colby — who has become the de facto organizer of the performance audio side of things over the years, — procured a state-of-the-art microphone package from DPA. “I got involved with the DPA while doing a show in Boca over the winter with Acme Sound Partners,” explained Colby. “They had a package of mics from DPA. I was so impressed with them and thought the July 4th event would be a great venue for the Pops to try them out. So, I got in touch with Bruce Myers and the DPA guys and collaborated on an enormous collection. In fact, more than 65 DPA mics were used. DPA was wise to lend out mics for this prominent event, which draws 500,000 people along the Charles River in Boston plus millions of television viewers nationwide. “The equipment got a lot of exposure. The P.A. guys get to hear them, I can hear them in the TV truck and the Rascal Flatts guys were kind of looking at them,” added Colby. “The orchestra is easily 99% DPA this year, and it just sounds fabulous.” A Sense of Adventure FOH Colby has been working with the Boston Pops orchestra for three decades, including tour sound for the entire 14 seasons that 34 SEPTEMBER 2008 Keith Lockhart has been conductor. They first traveled together with a three-week Christmas tour of NBA arenas with no rehearsal and no sound check. “I can’t imagine there’s anybody better in the business for doing live sound orchestrally in the varying spaces,” enthused Lockhart of Colby. “Anybody can get it right if you give them enough time and enough money. But [he does] things on limited resources with no time, with something as variable as the kinds of venues we play in. In one tour, we’ll play a 10,000-seat arena, a little concert hall and an outdoor space with no acoustic whatsoever. So, we look for a sense of adventure in our sound engineers.” “One of the great things about working with Keith is that he completely gets the technical side of it,” asserted Colby. “He understands when something goes wrong why it went wrong [and] how to deal with acoustic or musical problems first, then supplement that with the electronic side of things. He’s just a dream to work for.” Multiple Mix Locations FOH All in all, eight engineers were involved in creating the sound mixes used for the production. “I’ve been the front-of-house guy for the Pops for many years, and then when CBS took over the July 4th broadcasts about six years ago, I moved into the truck to do the TV music,” Colby says. “I’d been the Evening at Pops TV mixer for PBS for many years, so that’s how I got associated with the orchestra as a broadcast mixer. “When I can’t be in the FOH PA seat, we’re lucky to have that position filled by Paul Bevan.” In the Sheffield Remote Recording mobile, Colby mixed the music for the TV show through a 96-input, all-digital SSL Axiom console with total recall and a 24-input Mackie sidecar for audience reaction microphones. Nearby, Al Centrella created the final broadcast mix in an All-Mobile video truck, adding in local announcements, tape features and more. In addition to the broadcast mixers, and Bevan at FOH, mix engineers included Howard Rose for orchestra monitors, John Daley building a direct string mix used for some segments, Clayton Young of Capron Lighting and Sound, (the overall event tech coordinators), handling local preshow playbacks plus FOH and monitor engineers for guest stars Rascal Flatts. Out in the field, FOH mixer Paul Bevan and system tech Kevin Delaney tackled the difficult challenge of mixing a live orchestra, rock band and television production elements for a crowd of half a million people. The main PA, provided by Scorpio Sound, is comprised of a JBL VerTec system powered with Lab.gruppen amps. Working at a mix position approximately 40 feet back from the stage left array, Bevan operated a completely full Midas XL4 for the orchestra, plus a Yamaha PM5D for Rascal Flatts, which totaled 106 inputs. Bevan reported that they were “in probably one of the worst mix locations you could possibly be, but that’s a function of the way the event has been for a number of years. We’re in an enclosed tent, and the audience is out there with the speakers in the open. “There’s enough PA pointing down so that if you could open up the roof of the tent you could hear,” he said, “but otherwise you get a lot of the low end. You have to imagine what the high end sounds like and stick your head out periodically.” make an orchestra, in what’s not really a terrific sounding venue, sound natural,” remarked Colby, confirming Bevan’s assessment of the Hatch Shell. The TV mixer noted that it was constructed before the days of amplification and specifically to project sound out, but those same characteristics make it a challenge today to get a good sounding television and front-of-house mix. “You hear everybody in everybody else’s microphones unless you’re very careful about microphone choice and placement. That’s where the DPA products really helped the cause.” The bleed-through and isolation issues become equally challenging when a rock band plays on the thrust built at the front of the stage. “When you put an artist like Rascal Flatts down there, with a very loud backline and a big drum kit and guys that really like to wail, all that sound goes back into the shell,” adds Colby. “Now that sound is in all of the orchestra mics. Plus there are musical issues with that as well because the orchestra is trying to stay in time with the guest artist, and the guest artist is trying to hear the orchestra augmentation of songs they play on the road all the time. These arrangements are often not completed until a day or two in advance. So, there are music challenges, electronic challenges and acoustic challenges.” Ambient Miking “Lost In the Sauce” FOH The biggest problem to contend with, beyond the threat of bad weather, was the shape of the famous Hatch Shell. “Stuff just builds up in there,” remarked Bevan. “You get a lot of low mid that builds up and obviously you get a lot of spill from some of the louder instruments like percussion and brass into the string mics. You just factor that into the mix. So, if you’re getting a lot of high end from the brass or the percussion into the string pickup, then you make the sound of their individual mics a little bit darker just to compensate for the bleed. One of the expressions I’ve heard about mixing orchestras is that you don’t mix instruments, you mix spill. It’s not like the usual mixing of a band where everything is really close miked. It’s really ambient miking.” “I think the biggest challenge is trying to www.fohonline.com FOH Orchestra monitor mixer Howard Rose, working from a Yamaha M7CL and assisted by monitor tech Kevin Fuller, added that, “Less is more because of the acoustic signature of that shell. Basically, the four or five mixes that I have on stage are mainly time, which is to say kick/snare kind of stuff. The conductor likes to hear some vocals, sometimes a little bit of piano and any melodic or rhythmic info he can get to keep the star act and the orchestra synched together. The downstage mix for the one or two primarily vocal acts that I have are star vocal, time and piano. Again, it’s such an ambient environment that the less I do, the better I do. You get lost in the sauce so fast that you’re not doing anybody any good.” Rose added that 9 to 12 Galaxy hotspots are used on- CREW Pops Audio Supervisor/Audio Designer for the Stage/Music Mix for CBS: Steve Colby Production Mixer for CBS Broadcast: Al Centrella FOH Mixer for Boston Pops: Paul Bevan Monitor Mixer for Boston Pops: Howard Rose FOH/System Tech: Kevin Delane of Scorpio Sound Monitor System Tech: Kevin Fuller of Scorpio Sound Deck Audio Crew: Jay Arthur/ Patchmaster John Daley Lynn Scornavacca Lance Vardis Music Mix Mobile Unit: Sheffield A/V Audio Mobile Jake Mossman EIC Wireless Microphones/ Intercom: Wireless First Overall Event Coordination/ Production: Capron Lighting and Sound Project Supervisor Paul Mcgalliard GEAR SSL Axiom with total recall Yamaha PM5D Yamaha M7CL 24-input Mackie sidebar JBL VerTec System Lab.gruppen amps Midas KL4 Galaxy Hot Spots Mics: DPA 4066 Headset: narrator microphones DPA 4041-SP Large Diaphragm Omni : brass, basses, timpani DPA 4006 Omni: percussion DPA 4021, 4022, 4023 Compact Cardioid: violins, violas, cellos, harp DPA 4061 Miniature Omni w/ Bridge mount: close mics for strings DPA 4061 Miniature Omni on custom hanger: main omni pickup for orchestra The Fourth of July concert was a colorful explosion of confetti, fireworks and sound. stage for the orchestra monitors and their distinct lack of low-end was a godsend given how much bass reverberated in the shell already. The musicians only wanted timebased info — kick, snare, guitar strumming — to get through. If all of this does not sound complicated enough, the massive size of the audience in attendance meant that delay towers must be setup to cover miles of outdoor seating. An additional responsibility that Bevan dealt with was the tuning of 13 to 15 delay towers that ran back along the length of the Charles River from the Hatch Shell. Even though the Pops held a concert on July 3 as a trial run, the towers did not go up until midday on July 4, which gave Bevan and the Capron Lighting and Sound crew little time to tweak things. “I take a listen to the P.A., jump in a golf cart and go around and try to balance them out,” revealed Bevan. “With the audience out there you can’t do any kind of analysis, so we ship this [pre-show] music out. I listen to the P.A. here, then go out and EQ the speakers and get a rough level in comparison to what it sounds like in here.” He then hoped that it translated on their end when the show began. Coloring the TV Mix FOH Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com “Another big element for PA is the live TV broadcast, so one of the challenges is you want to make the P.A. sound nice and big and exciting for the audience, but you also want to make that mix clean so the sound doesn’t get back into the microphones and color the TV audio,” said Bevan. “So, I check in with Steve to make sure that the PA is at a level that’s not interfering with what he’s doing and ke eping the TV broadcast clean. Also, EQing it is really important as well because even at a low level, if you have spikes with people with odd frequencies sticking out, you’ll hear that on the TV. I also have the TV production elements for the audience; all the bumpers, tape rolls and host mics. As well as mixing all the music, I’m also blending in CBS host Craig Ferguson and all the other [television] hosts that are placed in different parts of the property.” In the end, this year’s Fourth of July celebration at the Esplanade turned out to be a fantastic event, with a powerful but crisp sound splashing across the Charles River. FOH was positioned on the media platform beneath one of two speaker towers, located specifically by stage right, and the amplification was clean and not overwhelming. The biggest hitch of the night was the fact that there was a lot of humidity and a distinct lack of cross breezes, which meant the smoke from the fireworks hung in the air and obscured some of the explosions. www.fohonline.com 2008 SEPTEMBER 35 Roy & Gene Clair Feature The Sound of Sibling Success By Kevin M. Mitchell Brothers who built pro audio empire to be honored with Parnelli Audio Visionary Award R oy and Gene Clair are quick to say they are “outstanding in their field.” Not that they are braggarts — far from it. They mean it literally, as in they are “out standing in their field” of humble Lititz, Pa. Far from the glare of New York or Los Angeles, the brothers built one of the largest and most innovative pro audio empires the live event industry has ever seen. From their early days of providing sound for the likes of Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons through Elvis Presley, Elton John, Rod Stewart, Yes, the Rolling Stones, up to undertakings like the US and Live Aid festivals, Clair Brothers has endured while others came and went. The innovations were many, and included consoles built for the road, the tilted stage monitor and the S4 speaker to name just a few. “When I first met Roy and Gene they were based in an old barn in rural Pennsylvania,” recalls Bruce Jackson. “Clair Bros. left the barn behind long ago, but the country values still run strong. The growth from a regional sound company to a worldwide operation is impressive.” Deals on a Handshake PLSN Jackson, who himself has a Parnelli Audio Innovator Award on his shelf, worked for Clair Bros. for years. He’s known them for 39 years in different roles including employee, business partner and client. “We’ve done many deals on a handshake. Equipment changes comes and goes, but good service is a constant.” “From the very dawn of rock history, the Brothers Clair have stood at the head of the touring sound industry,” declares Patrick Stansfield, tour manager/producer and the Parnelli Awards executive director. “Never sacrificing quality for portability, they coupled elegant packaging and quality audio into high art. The incredible roster of talents they’ve fostered and the artists in their client list alone speak their history loudly.” “We were very lucky,” Roy Clair says of their success. “We grew very slowly. We weren’t in a hurry, and we thought it was best to not be the biggest. And we always had money in hand before a system was built.” Soc Hops and Easter Egg Hunts The Clairs were raised in Lititz, where their parents owned a grocery store. As Jackson describes it, it was the “wrong side of the tracks” if there is such a thing in a small town in Pennsylvania. Gene says he was around 15 when he became interested in audio, playing with electronics while his brother looked on. When their father bought them a small P.A. system in 1955, they immediately put it to work. “We were doing very small things on very small stages,” Gene says. “We’d use an inverter to power it off a car battery, the sort of thing you don’t hear of now, but it took 12 volts and turned it into 120.” Roy says the P.A. included a horn, Stromberg-Carlsson integrated preamp, 35-watt power amp and microphone. “Our father intended us to do Easter egg hunts and small sock hops with it, and that’s what we did,” Roy says. For their trouble the boys would get $5 a gig, which rather than ending up in the local malt shop’s register, always went into buying more equipment. “It would take us a while to save for a mic — they were about $45 back Clair Bros. handling the audio for the Papal Mass by Pope Benedict at Yankee Stadium. 36 SEPTEMBER 2008 PLSN then, so we’d have to do eight shows to get one!” , he laughs. Their first business was actually Clair Reconing, where they reconed speakers. This led to experimenting and building their own products. “We did a pretty good job making the speaker cabinets stiffer than most, and that helped propel the sound forward from the speaker rather than leaking from the side and back of the box,” Roy says. “We learned right away that the speakers were more efficient if they didn’t move or vibrate. It’s simple now, but we were on the forefront of that.” Gene would get a job as a technician for Franklin & Marshall College, a modest liberal arts college in nearby Lancaster, Pa., where he had no way of knowing that the opportunities there would be the launch pad of Clair Bros. Audio. The college would call him in for all kinds of things, and that included helping with concert events. “That started the whole thing because we met groups,” Gene says. The boys made $95 a gig for their efforts. The gear at this point included four Shure 55s, a Bogen amplifier and two columns with six eight-inch speakers each. The school got comfortable with them providing the sound for local bands, so when Dionne Warwick was to do a performance there, they didn’t hesitate to turn to them. Big Break PLSN Then came their big break: Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons came to the college. People were intrigued by the system the brothers put together, and Roy saw an opening. He boldly asked to go into their dressing room where he explained why the system sounded so good. After the show, the band Roy and Gene Clair in 1966 www.fohonline.com thanked the boys, who went home with their usual $95 richer and happy. “The next day, we got a call from a local DJ saying Frankie Valli was trying to get a hold of us,” Roy says. “And it turns out they wanted us to come down to Allentown, Pa. because the system they were supposed to use was terrible. So, we borrowed my wife’s uncle’s truck and did the show. After, I asked the tour manager to take us on the road with them — don’t ask me where I got that idea — and the tour manager said, ‘funny you mention that because we were just thinking about that.’” Between the local events and being on the road with the Four Seasons, the brothers continued to make money at their “hobby” and poured money into more equipment. More mics, more A7s and two Harmon Karden 75-watt power amps made it into their inventory. Meanwhile, Roy would graduate from college with a degree in electronic industrial arts from Millersville State University, where he later taught school. The brothers built more equipment and started attending AES shows. They were at the show when the Crown amp was displayed — at 300 pounds and 250 watts, and being all tube, the brothers saw that was likely the trend and they were right. After the show, they talked Crown into selling them that very amp, which had the serial number 101 — as in the first one. Their reputation grew. Elton John was in the beginning of his first U.S. tour and had a terrible experience with the sound preparing for a Glassboro, N.J. gig. “They got in trouble up there, and Elton freaked out,” Gene says. “We got the call and took off in the middle of the day. After that gig, Elton wanted us to work for him.” Even continued on page 57 Roy Clair with a picture Elvis, one of the company’s legendary clients. NEWs Join Us r te of Cerem ies Alice Cooper Roy & Gene Clair In Honoring The Very Best Of Our Industry on Ma s P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S When: October 24, 2008 • 7pm Where: www.parnelliawards.com HIGH-DEFINITION TELEVISION Sponsored by GOLD SPONSORS Parnelli Lifetime Achievement Award SPONSORED BY Rio Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas Dennis Sheehan SILVER SPONSORS Parnelli Audio Innovator Award Brought to you by Martin Professional 38 PLSN August 2008 200.0809.38-39.indd 38 9/4/08 2:30:55 PM and the Parnelli goes to... NEWs P R O J E C T I O N L I G H T S & S TA G I N G N E W S Below are the nominees for the 8th Annual Parnelli Awards. Cast your vote to honor those individuals and companies who have done outstanding work in the past year. Voting for the Parnelli Awards is limited to subscribers of Projection, Lights & Staging News and Front of House. To cast your vote, go to www.parnelliawards.com/vote 2008 Parnelli Ballot Sound Company Lighting Company Video Rental Audio Analysts — Linkin Park ClairShowco — Police Firehouse Productions — Radiohead Rat Sound Systems — R.E.M. Sound Image — Rascal Flatts Special Event Services — Coldplay Bandit Lites — Rascal Flatts Ed & Ted’s Excellent Lighting, Inc. — Bon Jovi Premier Global Production Co. — Gigantour 2008 Q1 Production Technologies — Trans-Siberian Orchestra See Factor — Various Theatrical Media Services — Dave Matthews Band Upstaging — Police I-Mag Video — Rascal Flatts Moo TV — Brad Paisley Nocturne Productions — Nine Inch Nails Pete’s Big TV’s — Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Screenworks NEP — Kenny Chesney XL Video — Foo Fighters FOH Mixer Scott Boorey — Steve Miller Band Dirk Durham — Toby Keith Jon Garber — Rascal Flatts Pete Keppler — Nine Inch Nails Ken “Pooch” Van Druten — Linkin Park Jim Warren — Radiohead Monitor Mixer Jules Aerts — Bob Dylan Kevin Glendinning — Justin Timberlake Chris Lantz — Seal Kevin “Tater” McCarthy — Linkin Park Troy Milner and Monty Carlo — Bruce Springsteen Mike Sprague — Rage Against the Machine System Tech Ted Bible — Def Leppard Brett Dicus — Bruce Springsteen Russell Fisher — Toby Keith Matt Naylor — Kenny Chesney Lee Vaught — R.E.M. Mike Wolf — Elton John Hometown Hero Sound Company Midwest — Great Lakes Sound, Toledo, OH Southeast — Atlanta Sound & Lighting, Atlanta, GA Southwest — LD Systems, Houston, TX Southwest — HAS Productions, Las Vegas, NV Northeast — MHA Audio, Hagerstown, MD Northwest — Morgan Sound, Lynnwood, WA Canada — Tour Tech East, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia Production Manager Omar Abderrahman — Hannah Montana/Miley Cyrus Jim Digby — Linkin Park Bill Leabody — Nine Inch Nails Robert Long — Rage Against the Machine Mark Spring — George Michael Ed Wannebo — Kenny Chesney Tour Manager Mike Amato — Linkin Park Scott Casey — Bon Jovi David Farmer — Kenny Chesney Andy Franks — Coldplay Chris Littleton — Steely Dan Brian Ormond — Radiohead Video Director Lighting Designer Roy Bennett — Nine Inch Nails Bryan Hartley — Trans-Siberian Orchestra Mattheiu Larivée — Chantal Chamandy: Beladi - A Night at the Pyramids Mark Jacobson — Tool Sha Xiao Lan — Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony Andi Watson — Radiohead Staging Company Accurate Staging — Linkin Park All Access Staging Productions — Rascal Flatts ASI Production Services — NCAA Final Four Brown United — Billy Joel at Shea Stadium Mountain Productions, Inc. — 2008 Papal U.S. Tour Stageco — George Michael Set/Scenic Designer Justin Collie — Beyoncé Seth Jackson — Toby Keith Jason Robinson — Wrestlemania Bruce Rodgers — Dave Matthews Band Mike Swinford — Kenny Chesney Willie Williams — George Michael Set Construction Accurate Staging — Linkin Park All Access Staging Productions — Wrestlemania B and R Scenery — Superbowl Show Group Production Services — Keith Urban Tait Towers — Bon Jovi Hometown Hero Lighting Company Northwest — Hollywood Lighting Services, Portland, OR & Seattle, WA Southwest — Precise Corporate Staging (PCS), Tempe, AZ Midwest — Blue Planet Lighting, Inc., Hollister, MO Southeast — Eye Dialogue Lighting & Sound, Charlotte, NC Northeast — Earl Girls Inc., Egg Harbor City, NJ Canada — Metalworks Production Group, Mississauga, ON Be front and center as the industry salutes its finest companies and practitioners at the 8th Annual Parnelli Awards Steve Cohen — Billy Joel Mike Drew — Rascal Flatts Mark Haney — Eric Clapton Tony Bongiovi — Bon Jovi Bailey Pryor — Brad Paisley Christine Strand — Return to Forever Rigging Company Atlanta Rigging Branam Enterprises Five Points Production Service Show Group Production Services Stage Rigging Pyro Company Advanced Entertainment Services — Poison Pyro Spectaculars by Souza — Fourth of July Pyrotek — Trans-Siberian Orchestra Strictly FX — Avenged Sevenfold Zenith Pyrotechnology — Wrestlemania Tour Manager Mike Amato — Linkin Park Scott Casey — Bon Jovi David Farmer — Kenny Chesney Andy Franks — Coldplay Chris Littleton — Steely Dan Brian Ormond — Radiohead Coach Company Diamond Coach Four Seasons Hemphill Brothers Music City Coach Roberts Brothers Coach Senators Coaches Trucking Company Ego Trips ES Transport Janco Roadshow Services StageCall Upstaging, Inc. Freight Forwarding Acme Global Logistics Epes Freight Management Horizon Freight System Rock-It Cargo Show Freight Industries Sound Moves www.parnelliawards.com/vote 100.0809.42-43.indd 39 2008 August PLSN 39 9/4/08 4:22:22 PM reG Mc GeA ry All P ho tos by G Installations The interior of the MGM Grand Theater Jeff Nelson, Foxwoods MGM Grand audio supervisor, Marc Wager Weisgal NAT director of digital media, Stan Pace, Foxwoods MGM Grand audio tech; Jeff Mele, President/CEO NAT; Chris Arnold, Foxwoods MGM Grand Audio tech; Greg Downing, director of engineering NAT; Steve Gamelin, Foxwoods MGM Grand lead audio engineer. Not Pictured: Bob Cowley, lead audio technician; Patrick Nelson, NAT project manager; Nathan Gohla NAT project manager; Ken Beaudette NAT digital media project manager. A Symbol of the Future MGM Grand and Foxwoods Resort Casino join forces to build a new entertainment venue. By TaraMcCartney T he symbol of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation is a reflection of the past. A tree perched on a rocky knoll and framed against a clear sky represents Mashantucket, the “much wooded land” where the people hunted and prospered. A statue of a fox stands as a vigilant reminder of the turbulent times when the Pequots adopted the name that still remains today, the “Fox People.” Fast-forward to May 2008 with the opening of an enormous expansion of Foxwoods Resorts and Casino properties in collaboration with the MGM Grand. “The Tribe was interested in partnering with entertainment companies who would augment our enterprises to expand what we offer to our clientele, such as convention markets, high-level entertainment venues and headliners,” states Lori Potter, spokeswoman for the Tribe. “This is why MGM was selected as a partner opportunity.” A-List Headliners FOH The new property includes the 4,000seat MGM Grand Theater at Foxwoods and a fourth luxurious hotel complex. Latin superstar Gloria Estefan opened the theater Memorial Day Weekend, followed by such acts as Larry the Cable Guy, Cyndi Lauper, The Steve Miller Band, Joe Cocker, Sarah Brightman, Carrie Underwood and Sammy Hagar and the Wabos. The Theater will also showcase some of the world’s hottest sporting events and offBroadway shows including upcoming perfor- mances by Cirque de Soleil. An invitation-only event took place a week prior to Estefan’s concert with performances by Josh Groban, Alicia Keys and John Mayer, all backed by David Foster and his orchestra. “MGM and Foxwoods wanted to provide world-class facilities not just for casino customers but also to service the convention market, which was being underserved in Connecticut,” states David Holahan, public relations spokesman for the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation. “The new theater provides the resort with an additional venue for performances by top flight entertainment. The large venue will offer the opportunity for bigger acts to perform, and more frequently.” With state-of-the-art acoustics and ergonomically designed seating, this versatile venue’s performance spec was created by PMK Consultants of Dallas, with North American Theatrix (NAT) of Waterbury, Conn., handling installation details and systems coordination for the project as a design/build based on the performance spec from PMK, along with partners Woods Electric and Barbizon Light of New England. NAT’s role encompassed design, coordination and supervision of the installations of audio, digital signage/media/advertising, video systems, theatrical lighting, IT systems and security/surveillance systems. It was NAT’s responsibility to assess the owners’ needs and work with the owners and Bertino Associates, the program manager, to coordinate and integrate the systems into a converged system ul- timately yielding a mechanism for advanced multimedia environments and marketing capabilities without significant increases in operating staff. A Complicated Structure FOH The owners' needs were not much different than any other casino: They needed an exciting environment throughout the property and entertainment venues that would leave a lasting impact on audiences, casino clientele and visiting convention attendees. “What is different at the MGM Theater at Foxwoods than in most other venues is that the theater is a very complicated structure and required extensive modeling to build in the audio, video and theatrical lighting/rigging elements,” states Jeff Mele, president of North American Theatrix. The Theater proscenium is flanked by 20to 60-foot “peel” walls that create an asymmetric, wavy surface that towers over the audience. “The concept recommended by Wilson Associates (interior designers) and HKS Dallas (architects) is truly unique,” says Mele. “The NAT team was responsible for properly integrating the performance audio system, massive 10- by 18-foot Hi-Definition plasma walls and the theatrical lighting system into the theater. Pook Diemond Ohl (PDO) was contracted to install and coordinate all the stage rigging and draperies. “They also did a remarkable job on this project,” he adds. “From a technical standpoint, we were looking to build a room with great acoustics and an array of equipment that will meet or exceed 99% of the technical riders out there,” notes Steve Gamelin, lead audio engineer at the MGM at Foxwoods, Foxwoods Resort Casino. “Each piece of gear was evaluated for sound quality, build quality, tour-use longevity and rider acceptance. From initial conversations, we wanted to provide a high-quality environment for both the artist and the audience so that each would leave our facility with the feeling of an exceptional show experience.” Kicking It Up a Notch FOH He continues, “Most touring engineers and artists have come to love our 1,400-seat Fox Theater because we have provided this service for many years. Audiences know the Fox is one of the best places to see a show and they continually talk about sound quality. We wanted to kick that up a notch and we feel we have surpassed the Fox Theater. Many touring engineers comment to us that the Fox is one of their favorite sounding rooms in the world, so to achieve what we have in the new theater was not an easy task.” The joint decision of Foxwoods entertainment and NAT was to base the sound system around a d&b audiotechnik line array system, which includes 24 Main Left/Right J series (flown 12 per side); seven Center Cluster Q Series downfill (flown); 14 J Series Subwoofers (flown seven per side); eight E3 Lip Fills (built into stage lip); nine E8s under balcony; seven E12s for over balcony E12; all powered by History of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation The history of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation is one of dramatically changing fortunes. Native peoples have continuously occupied Mashantucket in Southeastern Connecticut for over 10,000 years. By the early 17th century, just prior to European contact, the Pequots had approximately 8,000 members and inhabited 250 square miles. However, the Pequot Massacre (1636-1638) — the first attempt of genocide by colonists against indigenous people in North America — had a devastating impact on the Tribe. Land Battles In the ensuing decades, the Pequots battled to keep their land, while at the same time losing reservation mem40 SEPTEMBER 2008 bers to outside forces. By 1774, a Colonial census indicated that there were 151 tribal members in residence at Mashantucket. By the early 1800s, there were between 30 and 40 as members moved away from the reservation seeking work. Others joined the Brotherton Movement, a Christian-Indian movement that attracted Natives from New England to a settlement in upstate New York and later, Wisconsin. As for the remaining land in Connecticut, by 1856, illegal land sales had reduced the 989-acre reservation to 213 acres. In the early 1970s, tribal members began moving back to the Mashantucket reservation, hoping to restore their land base and community, develop economic selfsufficiency and revitalize tribal culture. By the mid-1970s, tribal members had embarked on a series of economic www.fohonline.com ventures, in addition to instituting legal action to recover illegally seized land. Economic Ventures As the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation sought to settle its land claims, it also actively engaged in a number of economic enterprises, including the sale of cord wood, maple syrup and garden vegetables, a swine project, and the opening of a hydroponic greenhouse. Once the land claims were settled, the Tribe purchased and operated a restaurant and established a sand and gravel business. In 1986, their economic ventures accelerated when the Tribe opened its bingo operation, followed in 1992 by the establishment of the first and successful phase of Foxwoods Resort and Casino. The 4,000-seat MGM Theater The entrance of the theatre d&b audiotechnik D12 amplifiers with remote network. Six B2 subs are in inventory for use when extra sub bass is required. Twenty-four d&b monitors and four d&b side fill stacks round out the entire speaker package. Two Yamaha PM5D-RHV2 digital sound reinforcement consoles as well as a Yamaha M7CL are the mainstay at the new theater. One console is outfitted with an Aviom16 card and two AuviTran EtherSound cards. The second PM5D-RHV2 includes two AuviTran EtherSound cards. “The console choices were made primarily by Foxwoods Entertainment based on their experience of what tools they need in their toolbox to support the multitude of visiting acts and in selecting devices they could rely on both electronically and sonically,” Mele says. “The Yamaha PM5D is a popular console and is requested on many riders we deal with, so we bought two,” adds Jeff Nelson, audio supervisor, MGM Grand at Foxwoods. Some of the artists that have used the PM5Ds to date are Gladys Knight, Al Green, Googoosh Mehrdad and Huey Lewis.” In addition to Nelson and Gamelin, theater crew consists of Production Manager Don Costello, Production Supervisor Jennifer Baker, Production Supervisor Eddie Scuncio, Lighting Supervisor Tom Roach, Lead Audio Technician Bob Cowley and audio techs Chris Arnold, Stan Pace, Mike Farrell and Jim Joseph. Wired mics consist of Sennheiser, Shure, AKG, Royer, Neumann, Countryman as well as a Shure Uhf-R Wireless System. A pair of MIDAS Heritage 3000s, a DigiDesign Venue Profile and Venue D-Show console are also used. Audio Effects FOH Audio effects are plentiful and include Klark Teknik Helix Equalizer with Rapide and wireless remote (22 EQ Channels), Klark Teknik DN6000 analyzers, DBX 162SL dual compressors, Summit TLA-50 tube compressors, Drawmer DS-404 quad Gates, tc Electronics M2s, Yamaha REV-500sand Lexicon PCM-81s, Avalon AD2022 dual mic pres, Avalon AD2044 dual compressors, Summit TLA-50 tube compressors, Drawmer DL441 quad compressors, and Drawmer DS-404 quad gates. System EQ is handled by a Dolby Lake Processor with remote tablet for all zones. QSC ceiling speakers and CX amps are used in the back of the house controlled by Peavey Nion processors. Personal monitoring is provided by a Sennheiser G2 system with ACP5000 antennas. “NAT listened to our specific wants and needs and was totally committed to fulfilling those wants and needs,” adds Lead Audio Engineer Steve Gamelin. “We could not have worked with a better team of people who helped us realize our ultimate goal.” Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com Mele, audio digital www.fohonline.com 2008 SEPTEMBER 41 Road Test Electro-Voice PL Series Mics By MarkAmundson Electro-Voice PL Series Mics E lectro-Voice has revived the PL series of pro audio microphones, and brought for th a promising crop of both vocal and instrument microphones that are value priced, but professional in per formance. The PL Series is currently on the road with STAIND, Finger Eleven and ZZ Top (on drums). The mics have also proved roadwor thy on this summer's Vans Warped Tour. With three -year warranties, EV is making a promise that the quality is wor thy for road usage. I received one of each model for this road test review. The Gear RT PL24 With a full retail price of $129, the PL24 vocal microphone has complete professional microphone details. This mic is flat in response from 200 Hz to 15 kHz in far field frequency response, with a modest proximity effect close up. In my critical listening tests, the super-cardioid response was confirmed, with a full and even sounding performance brought out by using the Neodymium dynamic capsule. My only complaint was a touch more handling noise than its more expensive siblings in the PL series. PL44 The PL44 vocal microphone takes the flat response from the PL24 and flavors in a boosted presence response that many vocalists favor. A slight flattened windscreen top gives it a bit of style and maintains the supercardioid pattern with the Neodymium capsule. In critical listening tests, the handling noise was very good, with a nice sounding response with a tight pattern at most frequency bands. I felt this was a nice mid-range model with a $165 retail price, and every bit as good as the popular tight-pattern dynamic mics. 42 SEPTEMBER 2008 PL80a The EV PL80a is a re-issue body style mic that comes in two finishes, the “a” finish in a modern dark gray (EV describes the finish as “black satin”) handle, and the “c” finish with the classic tan look. But PL80 received the modern Neodymium price of $199. The large dynamic capsule provides a flat 50 Hz to 100 Hz frequency response with a natural scoop in the low mids and a nice “click” peak at 4 kHz so you can have both a modern hi-fi bottom and that fashionable heavy metal click without having to tax your console I found the Electro-Voice PL Series mics useful for live sound applications, and the pricing is affordable in comparison to competitive offerings from reputable brands. capsule and shock mounts like its other PL series mics for a super-cardioid pattern response. In critical listening tests, I found the presence frequency response pleasing with reasonably low handling noise. The pattern was tight over most audio frequency bands, and the $249 retail price is not outrageous for the quality. PL84 As expected, the PL84 was my favorite sounding microphone with the condenser element and tighter-than-usual cardioid pattern. While a touch hotter in output than the dynamic vocal mics in the PL series, the 141 dB max SPL rating is ideal for screamer vocals. In critical listening tests, I considered the PL84 having the best detail in the presence band, while still looking and handling like a normal dynamic microphone. At a $230 retail price, the PL84 is your “diva” microphone without the diva price tag. PL33 Kick Drum Mic Moving on to my favorite category of mics, the specialty instrument mics, the PL33 mic looks almost identical to the ND868, but with a more favorable retail equalization resources. In critical listening tests, the PL33 was extremely tight in pattern, which is the perfect cure in loud stage environments. PL35 Tom Mic One look at the PL35 tom mic, and you will shake your head with the “why didn’t they do this a long ago?” thought in your mind. The full-size dynamic capsule provides a full range sound in listening tests, and its super-cardioid pattern is ideal for getting all the tom sound and minimal cymbal bleed. The PL35 has that beautiful angle rear XLR connection that removes the need for right angle patch cables on the drum mics. The included universal drum rim clamp is a necessary accessory. With the $165 retail price, the PL35 will be a hot seller. PL37 Condenser Mic This is the mic I wished Electro-Voice would have introduced years ago. The PL37 is a small element pencil condenser mic perfect for drum overheads, hihat, acoustic instruments and choirs. It is not your perfectly flat response mic, but if high frequency detail is needed over low frequencies, you have found www.fohonline.com your mic. In testing, the high sensitivity was evident, and the cardioid pattern was tight enough for cymbal work, while keeping off-axis stage wash from leaking in. I do recommend a windscreen for this mic, as any air movement is picked easily. With a retail price of $165, picking up a couple for percussion work will not hurt your budget compared to similar pencil condensers. The Gigs RT I found the Elec tro -Voice PL Se ries mics useful for live sound applications, and the pricing is affordable in comparison to competitive offerings from reputable brands. At the gigs, the vocal mics cut through the mix nicely, and the musicians had little difficulty settling in to the tone of the mics. The PL33 kick mic is notable in that you get two mics in one design, so you do not need a boundary mic for the click and a large diaphragm mic for the boom. The PL37 makes a great “Poor Man’s C451” pencil condenser mic for when great cymbal sounds are really what you are after. All in all, the EV PL Series shows novel design ideas and fills needs for working sound people in real-world gigs. Electro-Voice PL Series Mics What It Is: Vocal and instrument microphones. Pros: Affordable, quality sounds, nice cosmetics. Cons: No major issues for the money. How much: See product descriptions. Web site: www.electro-voice.com Road Test Spectr Audio SPX 1534s, SPX218T Subs and AP28s By BillEvans I have this one annual gig in the LA area that I should really give up. But I like the people, and the nature of the event lends itself to trying new gear, so it is a great Road Test opportunity. In fact, in the five years I have been doing the gig I don’t think we have used the same speaker system once. This year, the boys at Spectr Audio got the call. After going back and forth a few times on the requirements of the gig, we agreed on a configuration. The Gear RT All of the Spectr Audio stuff is built on the beefy side — we didn’t try dropping ‘em off the truck, but I am betting they could take it. You get 18-ply calibrated Baltic birch (“calibrated,” means that the thickness of an entire sheet varies by no more than 0.5 mm) covered with black GigArmor paint. With two handles per side as well as top and bottom, the SPX 1534s were not a problem to move around with two guys, even at 88 lbs. each. Actually for a dual 15” cab like this, 88 lbs. is not that heavy — credit that to the neodymium components inside. Speaking of inside: two 15-inch drivers and a 3-inch, 60-degree horn coupled with a switchable passive crossover and two Neutrik Speakon NL4 connectors wired in parallel. We used four of the 1534s as our main top boxes would have been nice, but I have to admit that the top handle and sleek sides make for a good-looking box for gigs where looks count as much as sound. One small issue, one of the subs came out of the box with a good-sized nick in the GigArmor paint. Fixable, but I think the lack of rounded edges on the subs is going to make nicks like this a common occurrence. (Spectr Audio let us know after the gig that they had noticed the same problem and had adjusted the design as a result. The new design will be in place by the time you read this.) The Gigs RT Like I said, I have done this gig for several years, but this one was different from all of the others. This is the annual fundraiser for the biggest Catholic high school in LA and we have always done it at the school’s football field. They always do two bands and a DJ with the first band usually a jazz or Latin instrumental act and the second an “old-school” dance band generally in the 10-piece range. The DJ has monitors for himself, but sends his main mix to us. Not generally a tough gig except that it is a long day in August and these guys want to party until as late as the law will allow. They generally go until at least midnight. All of the Spectr Audio stuff is built on the beefy side — we didn’t try dropping ‘em off the truck, but I am betting they could take it. For subs, we went with the SPX218T. They are sleek and low-profile subs that look equally good on a rock ‘n’ roll stage or at a corporate gig or even a church install. They go down to 32 Hz (plenty for most gigs) and even with dual 18-inch drivers the weight is a reasonable 201 lbs. With a sensitivity rating of 102 dB and a max SPL of 136 dB, long term they will handle any mid-sized gig easily. Finally, this was a gig where coverage was crucial, so we needed some satellites and went with the ArenaPro 28s. They shipped us six, although we only needed four. Same Baltic birch, (but covered with textured paint and available in custom colors), same 60-degree coverage as the 1534s, but with a pair of 8-inch drivers and a 1-inch horn and weighing in at just 39 lbs. These are ideal for spoken word, corporate and speaker-on-a-stick gigs. They are also biampable and go down to 70 Hz — not bad for a small box. For our situation, side handles Spectr Audio Speakers What It Is: Good performing passive speaker cabinets. Who It’s For: Bands, small-to mid-sized soundcos, corporates, installs and gigs up to 2,000 people. Pros: Dead simple. Nice sounding even in passive crossover mode. Cons: Lack of rounded edges on subs look sleek, but may lead to chips in the paint. (But this is being addressed so…) How Much: AP29 MSRP: $1,790, SPX218T MSRP: $3,000, SPX1534N MSRP: $Z2,780 Web site: www.spectaudio.com Being outdoors, coverage has been something we have had to adjust for. They like it loud up front on the dance floor, but the older alumni who tend to sit farther back don’t want to have the music intrude on conversation. At the same time, everyone has to be able to clearly hear when announcements and presentations are made and awards given. This year was made more complicated by a change of venue. The football field is being renovated and a new stadium built, so we moved from the school overlooking downtown LA out to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, which presented a dual challenge. First, volume was a big issue. In another lifetime, I was a newspaper editor in Pasadena and know very well about the neighbors of the Rose Bowl who live in multimillion-dollar homes, have considerable political muscle and don’t like their weekends intruded upon by events in the stadium at the bottom of the hill. They put up with the Rose Bowl game and a few other sporting events, but music has always been an issue. The contract with the venue explicitly called for a 95 dB limit “at the source” with no weighting specified and the promise of a $3,000-per-minute fine for exceeding that level. That was bad, but coupled with the fact that the school had to rent a venue instead of using the school for free resulting in a very tight budget made it a potential nightmare. I partnered on this gig with my FOH cohort Jamie Rio, who generally provides racks and stacks. I throw my Midas Venice 320 and some rack gear and mics into the back of the PT Cruiser and drive from Vegas to LA. For the past two years, Jamie has had a second gig on the same day, so he has been there for setup, leaving me with a crew guy/tech and then comes back for load out. This year, I had the pleasure of working with Jon “Nacho” Gollihugh who spends most evenings mixing at a well-known Sunset Strip nightclub. We got the mains setup with two 1534s a side on top of the 218T subs. We positioned them to try to keep as much SPL as possible on the dance floor without a lot of leakage that would cause “neighbor” issues. As to the satellites… This is always an issue and one that is more psychological games than anything else. They want to hear the announcements, but if they can see the speakers then they are “too loud” before we even turn them on. We tried to get around that this year by SPX 1534 over a SPX 218T sub hiding them — something that the small size of the AP28s made very easy. They ended up halfway back between the stage and the last tables in a pair of planters filled with — what else? — roses as the picture shows. (The picture below also shows that climbing around in rose planters in shorts is not a great idea. But we do what we need to do.) We wanted to see what the Spectr Audio stuff could do under worst-case conditions, so initially set up fullrange with the intention to move to bi-amped before the gig began. But the weird speaker placement and need to hide cables and such coupled with two guys and a 100-degree August afternoon put us too close to hit time to And what it took to get them there. AP28s hidden in the roses. make the changeover, so we did the entire gig in “worst-case” mode. To make it even tough- with some cheap compression driver. So er for Spectr Audio, the “A” amps (except one) many boxes have built in crossovers that are were all out on the other gig. We got one totally worthless — you have to bi-amp them good QSC amp for the subs and low-end, MI to get anything to sound halfwway decent. grade (I won’t even mention the brand) amps As I walked the dance floor, I was surprised with 1/4-inch connectors (not even binding that a full-range PA speaker could sound this good. The coverage from box to box posts) for the tops and satellites. was even. The quality didn't fall off as you So, how did it go? Let’s start by asking Jon: “I was shocked at how well these speak- got to the edge of the horn. With two boxers sounded even running full-range. I fig- es splayed together they created one even ured they were going to be another run of coverage area with hardly any sense of hot the mill box with a couple of 15s and a horn spots or dead areas.” continued on page 44 www.fohonline.com 2008 SEPTEMBER 43 Road Test Crown Macro-Tech i Series Amplifiers By MarkAmundson Crown Macro-Tech i Series I f you think Crown would gracefully sunset the popular Macro-Tech line of tour-grade audio power amplifiers, well you are in for a surprise. The new Macro-Tech i Series provides a decent series life extension by keeping the front-panel look and feel, while sneaking in some of the same technology from the I-Tech series amplifiers. One could spend a lot of time comparing the I-Tech with the Macro-Tech i, but the little time I spent on this tells me there are both similarities and differences. The Gear RT On the similarities side, the new Macro-Tech i Series does get a pair of Class I power amp stages; and de pending what size MAi amp you buy, you get either 2,000-, 3,000- or 4,000watts per channel at 4-ohms ratings. The Crown MA9000i amplifier I received has 3,000 watts per channel at 4-ohms, but also does about 4,570 watts impulse power with 1,500 watts per channel at 8-ohms and back to 2,500 watts at 2-ohms. The MacroTech i Series also has a similar switching power supply as the I-Tech amplifiers with a separate cooling fan for the supply. On the front panel, the Macro-Tech look and feel is preserved by the grille work, logo plate, two volume knobs, signal/ready LEDs and power button. Three more LEDs handle the power, bridge mode and data traffic indications. The front also takes in cooling air and lets the two rear fans exhaust the heated air. The rear panel has more of an ITech look and feel, except for missing the color ful paint job on the I-Tech rear panels. The Crown MAi power amplifiers have a 20-ampere IEC inlet next to the power supply exhaust 44 SEPTEMBER 2008 fan and resettable circuit breaker. The middle of the chassis contains the analog and control jacking, with in/out XLR connectors for each channel and a RJ-45 ethercon connector by Neutrik for data control. Three momentary push-button switches handle the sensitivity selection (1.4V/32 dB/25 dB), input mode selection (stereo/bridge/ Y-mode) and network reset control. The remaining rear panel features are the power amp exhaust fan, and the speaker output connections. The beefy 50-ampere-rated Neutrik Speakon NL4 connectors handle each channel’s needs, with channel one connector having channel two’s outputs on the +/-2 circuit contacts. In addition, there are the expected 60ampere-rated binding post connections for traditional in-rack or install wiring. ity is no easy walk in the park. So, I was merciless in torturing the MA9000i amplifier, both in subwoofer duty and on top-boxes. I normally do not try 2-ohm operation, but I had to do it just because so many club installs in my area inflict that kind of loading all the time on MA5002 amps. While each channel of the MA9000i loaded at 2-ohms (two 2x18” sub cabs) does not stand a chance against stereo 4-ohm loading, it did do much better than what a MA5002 could handle, even with similar power ratings. So, the 3,000 watts per pair of subs does k ick ass and take names. Many of its high power amplifier peers can occasionally fall shor t in speed to handle top -box duty. The Crown MA9000i was a nice and expec ted exception in that clean highs and good mid-range fidelity came The Crown MA9000i was a nice and expected exception in that clean highs and good mid-range fidelity came to my top boxes with this amplifier. I took the time to break out the Torx 10 bit on my electric screwdriver and popped the bottom cover off the MA9000i amplifier. What I found was a lot of nice surface-mount technology (SMT ) circuit components intermixed with power supply reservoir capacitors, power transistors, and large inductors for the class I switching. The design of this amplifier is meant to stay very cool, and the near 90% efficiency of this amplifier will keep it that way. The Gigs RT Living up to the Macro-Tech durability and large power output capabil- to my top -boxes with this amplifier. While 3,000 watts is a bit much on monitor wedge duty, I am sure that plenty of MA5000i amplifiers will work fine in this application. I checked out the System Architect software that came bundled with the amplifier. The features are ideal for most touring application, but will not have speaker processor filter features that are used in top of the line touring amplifiers like the I-Tech. But you do get amplifier volume control, load and amplifier monitoring, and compression and limiting thrown in for good measure. www.fohonline.com In summary, the Crown Audio Macro-tech i series amplifiers are beautiful products that fit the practical/durable description. While there’s nothing wrong with the previous Macro-Tech amplifiers, the 28-pound weight of the new amplifiers is appreciated in portable applications, and the huge power ratings make the new i series an obvious winner for live sound professionals. Crown Macro-Tech i Series Amplifiers What It Is: Tour-grade audio power amps. How much: Crown Audio MA9000i: $5,200 SRP. Pros: Rugged, lightweight, high fidelity. Cons: Nada. Web site: www.crownaudio.com continued from page 43 I would concur with all of that and add that the “seam” between the coverage of the 1534s and the AP28s was pretty much non-existent. We found out when we got there that the “hard” dB limit was not enforced until 11:01 p.m. so we were running about 98-100 dB on the dance floor until then with the satellite boxes barely on and then bringing them up for the awards part of the evening. In the end, we had zero complaints about volume OR coverage (well, they complained when I had to all but kill the PA at 11 p.m., but that ‘s another story). The organizers commented on the high quality of the sound and we’ll be back next year. If I had my way we would have the same system with us. Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Welcome To My Nightmare Tell Me Again Why I Love This Job? A few months ago, I was hired to do a gig for a company I had not worked for before, but heard a few horror stories about, mostly pay related. We were carrying most of the gear, but subbed out local crew, most of the lighting, racks and stacks and some backline. First, there was a problem with the promoter paying the balance when due, and the local crew (who had a five-hour call) sat around for three hours (after unloading the local gear for the first hour). Finally, the payments were made and we started unloading our truck. After the truck was unloaded and pushed into the venue (from across the city street), the five hours were up and the crew walked, leaving everything to be moved to the stage and set up! Apparently the local company that hired the crew “tried” to buy them for longer, but they all had other gigs to work at! Besides me, there was one other person from my company and two local guys from the rental company to set up a mid-sized high-profile show in a large club (including four electrics with many movers, flying two Meyer arrays, pulling snakes, setting up consoles, risers, backline, etc.) To make matters worse, the monitor console I was given was an Innovason SY80, with only an FOH rack with input and output cards and no stage rack — enough to do most shows with ease. However, on www.tonygleeson.com this show, the monitor engineer had his program set up to use a stage rack and FOH rack, and apparently there is no easy way to reconfigure the console to use the line ins and outs on the rack. That alone was enough for them to consider canceling the show, but he started working on rebuilding his mixes, and I started wiring his special patch that was wildly different from the FOH patch. Add in the band never putting 220v transformers on the rider to the mess and me having to rewire some twist locks to make 220v (very unconventional and slightly dangerous, but I’ve seen it work before so it would have to make due again). Now all we needed was to find Edison to Euro converters and some more people who speak Greek to translate between the band crew and us! We were setting up the stage as the room was filling with audience at 8 p.m. We sound-checked one instrument at a time about an hour and a half after the show was supposed to start (10 p.m.). There was one instrument (of 12 or something) that FOH did not see, and he held the show for 30 minutes, while I ran back and forth, and passed an argument between him and his monitor guy. Shortly after the show started, we lost power at FOH twice because I was not given a twistlock power cable to wire to FOH, and was told to plug FOH into a wall outlet, and had three Edison interconnects in the middle of a mob of patrons. Finally, we got better tape and security people to watch the connections. The show started around 11 p.m. if I remember right, and went until 2 a.m. two hours later than it was supposed to end. The crew is there to unload, but except for helping us push our heaviest items to the truck, they did not help us AT ALL, and my partner, truck driver and I packed up the entire system. They dropped me off at the hotel at 9 a.m. I got two hours of sleep, woke up 45 minutes late and hauled ass to the airport to catch a 11:45 a.m. flight back home! It then took me almost a month to get paid. P.S. I am still trying to remember why I love this job! In The Trenches Randall Turner Terry Holdershaw Randall Turner Owner/Designer Turner Specialty Contractors, LLC Bradford, PA www.audionlightsnstagecurtains.com 877-45-AUDIO lightingdirector@msn.com Terry Holdershaw Operations Manager Star Productions Inc. Mississauga, ON www.starproductions.com 519.591.2725 terry@starproductions.com Services Provided: Audio, lighting, stage curtains, design/build. Services Provided: Full production ser vices. Clients: ABC News — “Nightline with Tek Kopple,” “This Week with Sam Donaldson and Cokie Roberts,” “Good Morning America,” ABC Sports — ”Monday Night Football,” First Baptist Columbia, S.C., Bemus Point United Methodist Church and Family Church, both of Jamestown, N.Y. Clients: Private, corporate and festival events. Clients include: The Healing Cycle, Pottahawk, Transitions Optical, Golder Associates, etc. Quote: “Whatsoever you do, do as not unto man, but as unto the Lord.” Personal Info: Over 25 years of experience in the television and theatrical lighting and audio business. I was formerly a controller and then president of a $30-million general contractor. I have installed systems in 14 states and designed systems in 26 states. Long and proud history as a U.S. Military family: One son is a U.S. Marine Lance Corporal with combat medals currently on 46 200.0809.46.indd 46 SEPTEMBER 2008 second tour of Iraq as Point Man (and door breacher). Our second son will enter the Marines as an officer next year. Hobbies: Weightlifting. I read EVERY issue of the Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Business Week, The Economist, Fortune, Barrons and Leatherneck. Equipment: Harman audio dealer (Crown, AKG, Soundcraft). Don’t leave home without: A nice pair of pants with a shirt and matching tie (since you never know where you’ll be invited to or with whom) and my bible. No joke. Quote: “Sounds good!” Personal Info: Six years in the business and things are going well so far. Hobbies: DJ-ing, computers, skiing. Equipment: Allen & Heath consoles. Don’t Leave Home Without: Duct Tape and Red Bull. If you’d like to see yourself featured in “In the Trenches,” visit www.fohonline.com/trenches to submit your information to FOH, or email trenches@fohonline.com for more info. www.fohonline.com 9/3/08 9:40:44 AM The Bleeding Edge A Look In The Rearview Mirror T he basic tenet of Bleeding Edge is to look forward at cutting-edge technology and what it can offer us now, or perhaps might promise us in the future. Sometimes it can be fun (and quite educational) to look in the rearview mirror, so to speak, where technology is concerned. Since this month is AES month and we’ll be seeing a lot of new product from our favorite gear manufacturers, we thought it might be fun to set the time machine back to 1998 and have a look at the audio rage of the time and what has perhaps fallen by the wayside. A Flashback TBE In 1998, I purchased my first real computer: an Apple PowerMac 8600. It was one of those beige rectangular boxes Apple made before their sleek designs started showing up in the Smithsonian. It had a 604e CPU running at 300 MHz. Your average high school track star runs faster than that now, but it was good enough for me Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com 200.0809.48.indd 48 to run Pro Tools 4, which had just come out (more on that in a minute). My 8600 had 32 MB RAM, three PCI slots and used SCSI drives! Now? It’s still in service at my studio, though mostly for word processing, archiving of various files (including audio) and an occasional e-mail. It has floppy and ZIP drives so every once in a while it comes in handy — like when I recently purchased a used TC Electronic M5000. I wanted to upgrade the operating system, and you can download the files from the TC Web site. If you have a floppy drive, you can transfer the files to floppy, insert the By SteveLaCerra floppy in the M5000 and off you go. By the way, that M5000 is pushing toward 15 years of age and still sounds great. 1998 was the year that TC announced the M3000, which like its older brother, still sounds fantastic. Take THAT, plug-ins. Interesting Developments TBE An interesting development in the computer world was something called the Universal Serial Bus. We now commonly refer to it as USB, but prior to the development of USB, your keyboard and peripherals either mated with Apple or PC hardware — but not both. My first real computer — an Apple PowerMac 8600 — had a 604e CPU r u n n i n g a t 3 0 0 M H z . Yo u r a v e r a g e high school track star runs faster t h a n t h a t n o w. USB delivered on the promise of providing a portal to a multitude of devices including storage devices and audio interfaces. If you had one of those hot-rod Macs you could run Pro Tools 4 software. One of the big features of PT4 was that it offered support of 24-bit audio files. While I’m not yet convinced that 88.2 and 96 kHz sample rates are always the way to go, I think most people can hear the difference between 16- and 24-bit audio files. Score one for Digidesign. For those engineers who couldn’t bear using a mouse to mix (show me one engineer who likes to mix using a mouse and I’ll show you to the psych ward), Digidesign rolled out the Pro Control while Mackie produced the HUI. Both of these controllers set trends that others would follow, all the way to Digi’s own current Venue and D-Show Profile. If you were recording live shows in 1998, you were using either Tascam DTRS machines or Alesis ADATs. Those lucky enough to take a 2-inch, 24-track machine had palpitations that year when tape manufacturer Ampex became Quantegy — and would later go out of business. There were several interesting product introductions aimed at live sound in 1998: Xwire unveiled the X905, a 20-bit digital audio wireless transmission system. About a year ago, the developer of Xwire, Guy Coker, started a company called X2 to market the latest 24-bit version of that technology, and X2 was recently purchased by Line 6. Digital consoles had invaded the studio: The Mackie d8B, Panasonic DA7 and Yamaha 02R were all setting new standards for digital audio recording and mixing. Initially, the concept of a digital console for live use was a pretty foreign concept. I believe it was a Todd Rundgren tour where the engineer carried on the road a couple of digital desks intended for studio use. Soundcraft on the scene with the Spirit 328, a digital console that could interface 16 digital and 16 analog inputs, plus included total recall with moving faders and onboard effects designed by the folks at Lexicon. Yamaha’s 01V brought most of the capabilities of the 02R down to a smaller format, and Tascam’s TM-D1000 also provided a compact format more suited to live use. All of these desks were a far cry from current digital live sound consoles, but they helped develop the standards that we expect in digital mixers today. A Different World TBE In the world of power amps, manufactures started paying attention to the weight of the chassis, way before we’d have to swallow $4-a-gallon gasoline prices. In particular, QSC’s PLX Series offered light weight, high power and reliability in a two-space package. That trend is certainly continued today with more amplifier manufacturers designing less weight into their products while increasing performance. In the world of microphones there were several important developments. beyerdynamic announced the world’s first digital microphone. Employing a traditional transducer, the beyer MCD Series performed A/D conversion onboard the microphone for the first time, negating the need for an external mic pre while ensuring that the mic signal would not degrade due to cable capacitance, RF or EMI issues. Neumann would later join beyerdynamic as the only other manufacturer of digital microphones, but at the time, Neumann was busy celebrating its 70th anniversary. The Neumann TLM103 became one of the most affordable Neumann microphones ever, making it available for studio and (albeit high-end) live use. Shure rolled out their first large-diaphragm studio condenser microphone ever, the KSM32. This mic offered great performance, quiet operation and affordability. At the time, we didn’t know that the KSM44 would be the first in a line of mics that have become popular in the live sound world. The KSM Series continues now with models such as the KSM27, KSM141 and KSM9. The wonderful thing about microphones is that they never become obsolete. Outboard Offerings TBE New outboard offerings in 1998 included feedback exterminators from various companies and the Antares ATR-1, which provided real-time pitch correction in a rackmount package. Who would need to use such a thing? Hmmm… is it true that engineers mixing certain artists have to sign non-disclosure agreements? I’m sure we’ve all heard the ATR1 in live situations more often than we are aware. One of the developments in live sound consoles that didn’t fair so well was the idea of placing vacuum tubes in the mic preamps for extra warmth. I thought that a console sitting in the sun at a County fair in Jefferson City, Mo. during August had all the warmth it needed. Apparently, I was correct. Unfortunately there are some audio products that we are still awaiting. Some of those include the Lead Singer Attitude Adjuster, Guitar Player Attenuator and Teletransporter — so I can stay away from planes. That would truly be progress. Steve “Woody” La Cerra is once again out on tour this summer mixing front-of-house for Blue Öyster Cult. He can be reached via email at Woody@fohonline.com 9/3/08 4:25:58 PM Regional Slants Wes NorWood Sound on Stage “Somebody had to figure out the microphone thing. So that was the first thing I did.” By DavidJohnFarinella J erry Pfeffer got into the PA business while playing in his first band. He was in grammar school. “Somebody had to figure out the microphone thing,” he recalls with a laugh. “So that was the first thing I did.” A handful of years later, Pfeffer was working at a hi-fi store in San Francisco when the phone rang and somebody needed a PA system. The owner let him borrow the van and he loaded up a couple of speakers with a handful of microphones. “It’s been one of those things where it’s one job to another to another,” he says of his company’s growth, “until it’s got to this point. It’s a little crazy now.” A Little Crazy FOH A little crazy is a little bit of an understatement, considering that Sound on Stage is one of the San Francisco Bay Area’s preeminent regional companies. In fact, its gear and personnel can be found at venues like the Shoreline Amphitheatre, Concord Pavilion, Warfield and Bill Graham Civic, at corporate events for companies like Apple, Oracle and Adobe, and at civic happenings like the inaugurations for California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom. And that’s just a partial list. “Last year we pushed in excess of 1,200 events,” reports General Manager George Edwards. “We were really flying. At one point last summer, we did 63 shows in nine days.” Treasure Island Music Festival in San Francisco. Edwards points to a number of reasons why the company has excelled over the years, including low employee turnover, a good sense of camaraderie, an eye on technology and tight inventory control. “I would say that 90 percent of us that are here have been here 10 to 30 years,” Edwards says. “There is no hierarchy. You’ll see the owner of the company in his nice white tennis shoes and gold watch tipping trucks with the new 25-year-old kid. “To coin one of Jerry’s phrases,” Edwards continues, “we’re all just here to refine our craft. We’re not trying to be millionaires or rocket scientists. We love what we do and we’re blessed enough to be able to continue to do it.” Following the Pulse of Technology FOH On the technology front, Sound on Stage makes gear decisions based on rider requirements, Edwards explains. To that end, the company has recently added digital boards from Digidesign and Yamaha and Lab.gruppen amplification to its collection of L-ACOUSTICS V-DOSC boxes and analog boards. “We’re not being complacent,” he states. “We’re following the pulse of technology and staying as close as possible.” All of the Sound on Stage gear is managed via a new bar code and inventory tracking system that boosts efficiency and practically ensures bidding and work flow success. “We’ve got multiple ways to tell if we’ve oversold,” Edwards says. “Red flags come up if something is in the back of a truck from the night before and it needs to go to another truck.” And while Sound on Stage has flirted with staging, lighting and video over the years, the company remains an audio house. “We stick to what we know best,” Edwards says. “Every so often somebody kicks around the idea of buying some plasmas and a projector, but as soon as it comes up, it dies.” that the same philosophy applies. “At one point, we all have toured for the company, so consequently we developed relationships with [people from the national companies],” he reports. “When they have gigs out this way they’ll call and respectfully say, ‘Please take care of my customer.’ We look at those calls as welcoming and not threatening. I think the truth of the matter is they know that we’re the little engine that could. We’re not looking to conquer the world. We’re just looking to do well with what we have.” Friendly Competition That said, Pfeffer marvels at the change in his business. “I never thought it would be like this,” he admits with a laugh. “I remember thinking that if I could ever have enough gear to do a show at the Cow Palace, that would be a big thing. Then you hit that goal and you think, ‘Wow, maybe I could do a stadium show like Day on the Green.’ “When you’re starting out, you never have an idea that it’s going to get this crazy,” he continues. “Having more than one system was something I couldn’t understand.” Then he pauses before adding, “I really find this a good time to be in the business. It’s changing and it’s a little scary at times, but everyone is trudging forward.” FOH While the Bay Area features a number of sound companies, Edwards points out that each has their own niche, and it’s rare that Sound on Stage will get a call from somebody else’s customer. “Once in a blue moon, maybe if there’s a new person in the picture checking out options, we’ll get a phone call,” he says. “But we talk to each other. If I get a call, I’ll call the other company and ask about it. There’s a lot of work out there and very rarely do our paths cross, so I like to believe that at a bare minimum it’s friendly competition. There’s a little honor amongst bidders.” As far as competition from bigger companies coming into the area, Edwards says FOH Wes NorWood Wes NorWood The Times They Are A-Changin’ dVDOSC were used extensively for the Red Bull Air Race in San Diego. 50 200.0809.50.indd 50 SEPTEMBER 2008 SOS systems engineer Denis Deem (lower right) assists Van Morrison’s FOH engineer John Willis (center) opening for the Rolling Stones at Oakland Coliseum. Zach Pfeffer (on ladder center) and Sean Roberts (on tower right) set a speaker tower for the Red Bull Air Race in Monument Valley, Utah. www.fohonline.com 9/3/08 11:14:24 PM Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Sound Sanctuary Mixing Sound God’s Way By JamieRio S ince I have been writing Sound Sanctuary, I have spent a lot of time in houses of worship, mixing live sound, installing sound systems, tuning up systems and interacting with the people that operate and volunteer at worship houses. The one theme that seems to be common among the different houses that I have visited is the lack of volunteer training. I certainly understand why this phenomenon exists. Worship volunteers generally have limited time to give, and that time seems better used in actual doing rather than learning. Please don’t think I am being critical, I am just stating what I have observed. The fact of the matter is that I admire anyone who will give freely of his or her time. That said, let me get into this months installment of Sound Sanctuary. Uncovering the Mystery FOH Every sound in your house of worship that is amplified must travel through your house mixing console. Some of you may have a good understanding of how your house mixer, signal path and gain structure work. But for a lot of you that console is a very scary piece of equipment, and how sound travels through it is a mystery. However, it is simpler than you think. The microphones or direct boxes on your worship house stage pick up sound from you preacher, choir, worship band, etc., and send it to your snake or directly to the mixing board through a balanced XLR cable. This is the path that the signal takes, commonly known as the signal path. This “sound“ (now in electric form) enters your mixing board at the channel or channel strip input. If your house console has a 16-channel board, you will have 16 channel (mono) inputs. Some manufacturers will refer to their stereo channel inputs as two channels, but for this discussion we will only examine the mono inputs. The input channel can only be entered through a female mic input or a ¼-inch line level input. Take a look at the backside of your board and you will see what I am referring to. While you are looking back there you may see another ¼-inch female jack named “insert.” Don’t worry about it for now. Some church volunteers may have a good understanding of how the house mixer, signal path and gain structure work. But for a lot of you that console is a very scary piece of equipment. An Audio Godsend FOH At the top of that input channel strip you will have a knob titled “gain” or “trim.” This knob adjusts how much the channel pre-amp boost the incoming signal. If you crank it up too much you will get distortion (clipping); however, if the incoming signal is too low you may experience unwanted hum or hiss. The idea is to set this level just right. You can use your ears, LED indicator lights or meters to set this level. If the incoming signal is really hot (usually a keyboard, iPod or computer) you can engage your mixer’s “pad” button. If you don’t have one, sorry, but if you do it will knock down the incoming signal by 24 to 30 dB (give or take). In the same area as the gain knob and pad button you should find a high-pass filter button. This handy item will roll off the low frequencies of your incoming signal at 80 or 100 Hz. This button is a godsend if you need to eliminate boom from a mic or instrument. Next you will enter the EQ section of the channel strip. I believe I covered equalization in-depth last month so get a copy of FOH or go online and read up. Keep in mind two EQ rules: 1) Less is more. Don’t over EQ a mic or instrument and 2) Generally, you will want to remove offending frequencies, not add frequencies. Twist Some Knobs FOH Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com After we leave the EQ section, we come across the Aux sends. These knobs, sometimes labeled “monitor” or “effects” allow you to send the signal to another place without interrupting the signal traveling through the channel in- 52 200.0809.52.indd 52 SEPTEMBER 2008 put strip. The aux signal can be used for onstage monitors, effects processors or recording devices. The aux signals from the individual channels are sent to the aux master bus in your consoles master section. I will not be getting into master section until next month just because a lot happens there. Let me just say that from the aux master buss the aux signals can be sent to the aforementioned destinations (stage monitors, etc.). Your house board may have a pre/post fader button in the aux area of each channel strip. The pre-fader position means the signal is sent to the aux buss before the fader. Your channel strip fader will have no effect on the aux signal. The post fader button means that the fader will affect the level that is sent through the aux send. Pre-fader is usually reserved for monitor sends and post for effects processors. Leaving the aux sends, we encounter the pan control knob. In its simplest form, the pan knob will send the channel signal to the left or right output of your mixing console. If your board has a subgroup section, the pan knobs function is greatly expanded. Now you can choose to send the signal either to the right or left mixer or to an individual subgroup. I promise I will expand on the concept and advantages of subgroups next month. After the pan knob, your board will either have a mute button, on/off button, solo/PFL button or all of the above. The mute button cuts the channel (just like the mute on your TV remote), on/off is self-explanatory and the PFL/Solo sends the channel signal to your headphone jack (then to your headphones). By the way, buy a good set of headphones or have your house of worship buy some. They are invaluable. Lastly, we come to the channel fader. This slider is the output volume control for each individual channel. With your gain structure set up properly the fader should be set at the “0” spot to begin with. There you have it. Study your mixing console and don’t be afraid to twist some knobs. It gets easier every time. You can e-mail Jamie at jrio@fohonline.com www.fohonline.com 9/3/08 4:21:34 PM C’mon Just CALL Anklebiter Maintaining the Time Spent vs. Gig Budget Ratio I share yet another experience from the wonderful wacky world of sound production this month. I have mixed feelings about this incident — you’ll soon find out why. Being ultra-cool, suave and debonair, I have made many friends out of my clients, to the point that we have the occasional social gathering. Yes, I am a far better trencherman than sound engineer. (Is trencherman a little revealing about my age?) A Yearly Event FOH Anyway, one of my friends has a yearly event that garners big time regional and minor league national acclaim. Another group is coming to town, trying many of the same ideas, but at a different time of year. This group was referred by the venue to my friend, who knows and gnaws on the local and state laws and policies and machete masters the usual red tape. I don’t know what title his job has, but the description was pretty much to make the event happen by crossing the “Ts” and dotting the lower case “Js.” My friend is very organized and has timelines, flowcharts, schedules and any other word you can think of for a quasicorporate system to get things done. Of course, being ultra-cool, suave, etc., I was brought in to handle the production side of things. I put together a pretty good price with some great gear and people, and, lo and behold, they balked at the price! I know I am not the cheapest, but I am the best (not really, but I have some great friends that keep me from biting off more than I can chew). In the three months since we have been trying to get Rolling Stones HOTLINE By KenRengering answers or even a rider, I have backed off gear, brought the price and deposit down, agreed to have another vendor on the property — in other words, I have I think the event will be a bust, which is never good for the local scene. And I am sorry my friend will probably terminate his relationship with this group, thus I exchanged more than 70 e-mails regarding this turd. I think that’s one of the signs of a sound gig going bad. When the e-mails are flying, the gig is usually circling the drain. been sucking a little heine to make the gig happen. I know what you’re thinking, but I passed kissing a while ago. An Unnatural Act FOH Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com Ad info:http:// foh.hotims.com I did this in an attempt to win this contract for my guys, my friend and me. Yes, the hope of future business was gleaming in my greedy, beady eyes. This group’s VP told my friend he was offended I wanted a 50% deposit! I even agreed — after they balked at another contract and the terms — to be their production manager and provide a qualified stage manager, talent coordinator and assistant talent coordinator. I do have a gag reflex, and the rising tide of bile was giving it a test. Maybe I was too preoccupied searching for my nads to notice. Then, a few telling events occurred. They bounced a check on my friend. They tried to go around me to hire my talent coordinator, and, after balking at the price and terms of my bid, the next company’s price was higher and wanted a 50% deposit in three days. Surprise, surprise! Amazing how the taste of gloat can wash away the taste of bile. All right, I know, I know, the taste of gloat is bittersweet. 54 200.0809.54.indd 54 SEPTEMBER 2008 severing a potential source of income for him. I did advise him to forewarn the local venue from which he was referred — feeling it was the decent thing to do, especially as he is a local promoter. Gig Gone Bad FOH I exchanged more than 70 e-mails regarding this turd. I think that’s one of the signs of a sound gig going bad: When the e-mails are flying, the gig is usually circling the drain. I think we’ve all had those clients whose “time spent vs. budget ratio” is way out of whack. Under my breath, I may mention that doing the Rolling Stones would only require four e-mails and a phone call. (I honestly have no idea, but when I get that phone call from the Stones, the readers of FOH will probably know. How much would a full-page ad cost me?) So, as always, it all comes down to the love of the job. Can you love it enough to wade through the river of BS? When it comes to the carrot and the stick, only work for carrots because every stick hurts us all a little. Sticks are only good to measure how deep the BS was or will be. I have to go look for my testicles now. Let me know if the Stones call, cool? www.fohonline.com 9/3/08 4:27:35 PM Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ The Biz Surround Moves from Movies to Live W hen the iconic Bleecker Street music venue, the Village Gate, was at its peak in the 1960s and ‘70s, the sound system was decidedly monaural, though plenty suitable for the eclectic array of musicians, from folky Dave Van Ronk to fusion prophets Dreams, who trod its stage. But when the Village Gate came out of retirement this year, under the rubric Le Poisson Rouge, its programs may have been just a eclectic as ever, from jazz to classical to rock, but its sound system had to face the reality of modern expectations. It had to go surround. Modern Expectations BIZ The system, with Meyer Milo components configured in a 5.4 array (four subs), was assembled and installed by Masque Sound, which has done multichannel sound systems for Broadway theaters as well with a design by John Storyk, who is better known for his recording studio designs. That’s all part of a differentiation strategy in a city that has once again become cluttered with club venues. Le Poisson Rouge’s owners, David Handler and Justin Kantor, both classically trained musicians and composers, paid a premium for the system — not quite $1 million for a system that covers 800-seats, says Handler — but they can command a premium for its use. One of the maiden voyages of the system was the debut, last July, of a new piece by electronic music and media composer Morton Subotnick, which in classical electronica is the equivalent of the famous four nights at the dearly departed Bottom Line by Bruce Springsteen in 1974. “A sound system like this gives artists like Morton and other classical composers a place where their compositions that require multiple source points can be accurately portrayed,” says Handler. It also makes for a memorable experience for record release events, particularly multichannel or high-resolution records like Nine Inch Nails’ With Teeth, but certainly for any record. “The amount of depth that this system has is pretty incredible,” says Handler. “It takes the room a step beyond being a place just to hear music — it makes it a place that attracts music and sound connoisseurs.” There are a few touches that wouldn’t be out of place in a recording studio, including airtight doors leading to all exits and hallways. “This club shows people what a listening environment can be,” he says. “It’s like high-def video — once you’ve seen it, you don’t want to go back.” Surround on Broadway BIZ Clubs aren’t the only live spaces that are getting into surround audio. Broadway’s first surround production was Into The Woods, 2002’s spooky Tony Award winner that had the prerecorded voice of Dame Judy Dench, playing Giant Tess, appear first as sound from the rear of the theater, then inch ever closer to the front, speaker to speaker, as the lighting dragged a huge shadow across the stage. The effect did as it was intended: it turned heads, though that’s not something you want to do on a regular basis on Broadway lest you incur the wrath of the diva. But Into The Woods’ foray into surround did get the attention of directors, more and more of whom have prevailed upon show producers to spend the extra geld for a multi-channel sound system. But the trend has limits. FOH mixer Dave Rat (Red Hot Chili Peppers) assembled a multi- By DanDaley channel system for Pink Floyd founder Roger Waters when he headlined the Coachella festival this year, using L-ACOUSTICS’ V-DOSC, dV-DOSC, KUDO and other components. What made it work, says Rat, is the fact that the surround channels — which occupied six of the eight clusters around the field and were aimed to fire back at the stage and over the audience’s heads — were used almost exclusively for prerecorded sound effects, such as jet and rocket engine sounds, that were mixed through a separate Yamaha PM5D console rather than the Midas XL4 used for FOH. “As soon as you put anything rhythmic into rear channels at this kind of scale, you’re asking for time smear and delay problems,” says Rat. “The only solution for that is to keep the clusters spaced at a maximum of 70 feet between them to avoid delay problems. But that would also limit the size of the venue or add a huge number of extra clusters or towers.” As impractical as a surround live PA seems to be for large venues, Rat believes it’s a great way to brand a club or theater as a serious listening room and attract artists and patrons who want that level of audio. Increasingly Cinematic BIZ As theatrical productions become increasingly cinematic, surround sound seems to work for them the way it works in the movies. “In an effects-heavy show, surround systems are now considered necessary on Broadway by some directors,” says Simon Matthews, who was the production sound mixer on Into The Woods and who now runs what has to be called a many-channel sound system for Young Frankenstein, in which a separately sourced speaker hangs spaced about every eight feet around the room and twice as many in the orchestra rings. Going surround on Broadway, where sound systems are for the most part leased on a weekly basis, doesn’t cost producers a lot more money. David Strang, general manager at PRG Audio, one of Broadway’s main systems suppliers, estimates that it adds no more than $1,200 to $1,500 a week to a typical system rental. “But the surround part of the sound system is usually the first to get cut when there are budget issues in a show,” he says. Strang says the live surround trend has resulted in having to buy and keep more different types and sizes of speakers available, since the range of club and theater requirements is much wider than that usually found in touring systems. “It means a bigger investment in more kinds of equipment and not necessarily a bigger return on it, and that’s meaningful in this economy,” he says. This has not escaped the notice of sound systems designers, who can use the principles of supply and demand to leverage better rental deals for their productions in a poststrike environment where producers remain skittish despite healthy box office returns. “When you know what the shops have on the shelf, it helps to negotiate the price,” says Dan Moses Schrier, who designed the first surround system on Broadway. Surround sound in clubs and theaters might also do for live music what 5.1 did for the movies: get more people out of the house and buying tickets to shows. And that’s good for everyone. Dan Daley can be reached at ddaley@ fohonline.com Theory and Practice Color Codes C olor-coding of cabling, road cases, speakers, etc. is one of those “how do you know that?” questions I get all the time. In all honesty, I have to blame my eighth grade industrial arts teacher (in electronics shop) for the lifelong passion into all my esoteric electronics knowledge. But, of course, it was 1974, and my first project was a one-tube AM radio. I remember a lot of both the good and bad habits of electronics from that class; bad things like how to toss molten solder from the iron-tip toward other classmates, and good things like the color code. For those of us old enough to remember, there was a sentence commonly used as a memory device, which by today’s standards is considered to be “inappropriate.” The first letter in each word of the sentence stood for a color: Black, Brown, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet (Purple), Gray and White. If you don’t know the memory device sentence, ask someone with a bit of gray hair. Just don’t repeat it in “polite“ company. These colors also have numeric representation as 0 through 9. Why Color Codes Exist T P The reason these color codes exist is because electronic components like resistors, ca56 SEPTEMBER 2008 By MarkAmundson pacitors and inductors commonly had stripes or dots of color to represent a numeric value in ohms, farads or henries. These colors also used the colors as base 10 power multipliers, plus silver and gold colors were added to indicate part quality in the form of tolerance of the value. As a teenager, I used to buy experimenter grab bags of unsorted components and make sport of how fast I could identify a part at a glance. For example, a resistor with yellow violet orange and silver stripes was a 47k-ohm resistor with a +/-10% value tolerance. This even went back before my 1937 RCA console radio were I could identify a burnt power resistor because it had one red dot on a brown painted form to signify a 200 ohm value. The reason why color codes go back so far in history is that painting stripes and dots was simpler technology than imprinting letting, and much easier to read in poor lighting of a chassis. Table 1 shows this standard electronic component color code. Cabling T P This relates to live sound because a commonly trained staff can then understand how the colors have meaning to stage gear. A good example is my Speakon cabling that I have with three standard lengths of 15, 30 and 50 feet. The 50-foot coil of cable has a green stripe of electrical tape near the Speakon NL4 plugs as a reminder that green means “5” or a 50-foot length. Likewise, my 30-foot speakon patches have orange tape stripes for “3” or 30foot designations. To make things a bit more complex, my 15-foot speakon patches have a brown stripe followed by a green stripe, which means “1 5 “ or 15 feet of cable. I do this to my standard Edison (NEMA 5-15) power cords as well, in which I keep 10, 15, 25, 50 and 100-foot lengths. Since the jacketing of these SJEOW and SEOW cables is black, I had to break the rule a touch since black electrical does not really show up or mean much to anybody. So 10’ extensions are brown, 15’ is brown-green, 25’ is red-green, 50’ is green and 100’ is a single white stripe. As long as my stagehands, techs and engineers are reasonably trained, everything gets found and put back in its work trunk. Other Codes T P There are so many color codes that keeping them straight is maddening. Codes like standard single-phase AC wiring (black=hot, www.fohonline.com red=hot, blue=hot, white=neutral, and green=ground) are necessary for distro maintenance. But the color codes for lowvoltage HVAC or Telephone/Cat5 systems can drive you to tears. Unfortunately, we better start getting Cat5 color code literate pretty soon if digital consoles become standard equipment everywhere. If you need that color code refresher, check the back issues for my piece Ethernet audio (also in the book, page 76). One ancient color code I want to lay on you is the old radio chassis wire colors that may be handy. Since I spend plenty of time fooling around with guitar effects pedals, having standard coding for ins and outs and power connections is necessary. Stated plainly yellow is for inputs, blue for outputs, red is DC power positive, black is DC power return/negative, green is ground and white is a free color for control wiring. This code goes back to the vacuum tube days where brown was tube filament and pilot light wiring. Old as it is, I still find it a handy way to sort things out. If you have a handy color code, send me an e-mail and state your preferences and/or rationale. Company Page Phone Web Company Page Phone Web A&S Case Company 18 818 509 5920 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-210 QSC Audio Products C4 800.854.4079 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-115 AKG 47 818.920.3212 Radial Engineering/ Cabletek 55 604.942.1001 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-179 Audio-Technica 9 330.686.2600 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-131 Rane 25 425.355.6000 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-116 Bosch/Midas Digial Consoles C1 248.876.1000 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-161 Renkus-Heinz 5 949.588.9997 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-117 Carvin Pro Audio 48 800.854.2235 http://foh.hotims.com/18518198 RSS by Roland 52 800.380.2580 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-165 Checkers Industrial Products 54 800.438.9336 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-215 Sennheiser Electronic Corp. 6 860.434.9190 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-209 Crown Industrial 3 574.294.8000 Sound Image 27 760.737.3900 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-166 dbx Professional Products 53 801.568.7660 Soundcraft 37 888.251.8352 DiGiCo 51 516.249.1399 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-105 Studer 49 +41 44 870 75 11 Digidesign 29 650.731.6287 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-169 Tour Tech east 19 902.468.2800 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-220 DPA Microphones 17 303.485.1025 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-163 Westone Music Products 4 719.540.9333 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-121 EAW 35 800.992.5013 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-173 Worx Audio 8 336.275.7474 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-122 Electro Voice/ Bosch 7 248.876.1000 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-171 Yamaha Commercial Audio Systems 1, 13, C3 714.522.9011 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-123 FDW-W 15 608.227.2040 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-177 Yamaha Corporation of America 45 714.522.9011 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-159 Full Compass 41 +49 (0) 9421/706-0 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-175 Gear Box Pro 8 877-789-5774 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-211 Hear Technologies 21 256.922.1200 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-109 MARKET PLACE Innovason 12 888.DIG-DESK http://foh.hotims.com/18518-184 Gabriel Sound 58 973.831.7500 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-149 JBL Professional 23 818.894.8850 Gear Box Pro 58 877-789-5774 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-211 Kaltman Creations 31 678-714-2000 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-216 Hi-Tech Audio Systems 58 650.742.9166 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-127 Meyer Sound Laboratories C2 510.486.1166 http://foh.hotims.com/18518112 New York Case/ Hybrid Cases 58 800.645.1707 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-168 Morgan Sound 21 (425) 771-7257 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-217 SoundBroker.com 59 702-736-3003 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-219 OVO/ Mega Systems 54 210.684.2600 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-154 Sound Productions 58 800.203.5611 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-129 Peavey Electronics 11 877.732.8391 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-174 Transamerica Audio Group 58 702-365-5155 http://foh.hotims.com/18518-213 Roy & Gene Clair continued from page 36 during this period, both Roy and Gene kept their day jobs and worked seven days a week. “They were long weeks,” Gene sighs. In 1968, they were in Philadelphia running sound for Cream, Iron Butterfly and Jefferson Airplane, among other acts. “Often the bands would ask if we were from New York or LA,” Roy says with noticeable delight. “When we said we were from Lititz, they couldn’t believe it. Like Jefferson Airplane — they couldn’t believe that two hicks like us put together the best, loudest system they had ever heard.” They would eventually quit their day jobs. “We’re conservative people, and don’t like to take crazy chances,” Gene says quietly. Don’t Know “No” PLSN The 1970s would see their collective star rise higher. Dick Clark Productions had the Jacksons and the Osmonds touring and used Clair Bros. sound. But it was the acts that were respected for their intricate music that seemed to especially appreciate the sound company: Blood Sweat & Tears used them frequently, including the first American rock band to go behind the Iron Curtain. For the prog rock Moody Blues, once they heard what Clair Bros. could do, no other sound company would do. Chicago and Yes would come to rely on them for sound. “But another significant feature was that we didn’t know what ‘no’ was,” Roy says. “Whatever people wanted, we did it. If they wanted us on some street corner at 10 p.m. on a Tuesday night, we did it. Nothing was too much. We were a ‘yes’ company.” Meanwhile, Franklin & Marshall, the place of the launch of their career, became home to their farm team. They would hire college kids to work for them, and one of the first ones to be hired full time was Donald Gehman, who would go on to engineer and produce the likes of R.E.M., Stephen Stills, John Mellencamp, among others. Otherwise, Jackson laughs and tells as Roy and Gene were wrestlers, they were partial to hiring other wrestlers, some of whom could lift 300-pound speakers by themselves. Key to their longevity was speed: “We always strived to make the setup faster then what it took at the previous gig,” Gene says. “We specialized in connectors that made it easier and quicker.” Gene would spend almost all his time on the road as they added other acts, and during the summer, his son Troy would be right along side him in what had to be a young kid’s dream. Roy at this point was focused more on development and the business end. “The sound company landscape in the early 1970s was very different,” Jackson explains. “It was the exception for a group to take the sound company on tour. This arrangement gave the regionals the chance to be exposed to a string of big acts as they passed through their area. And the companies that gave the best service and delivered the best sound quickly grew to become worldwide touring entities. It was a great opportunity for a small bootstrapped operation to make the transition to the big time,” which is exactly what Clair Bros. did. “Roy and Gene are two quite different personalities,” Jackson continues. “I've been in partnerships and know full well how difficult it can be to see eye to eye on all the different aspects of being in business. The dynamic between Roy and Gene had a lot to do with their success. Roy was very conservative in managing the money and didn't like operating on credit. I recall Clair Bros. always took the ‘prompt pay’ discounts. Gene was far more daring and seemed to thrive on living out on the technological edge.” Jackson says it was Gene who drove the genesis of the ubiquitous S4. It was 1974, and one of the biggest ad- vances of the pro audio business came out of the Clair Bros. barn, and that was the S4. The 4-foot by 2-foot by 2-foot system needed only one connector on the back. It was an influential, great-sounding system that seriously cut the time needed to set up and tear down. “We first used the S4s with Rod Stewart, and it was the first show we hung speakers from a grid,” Roy says. “We came up with a hanging device that would allow you to point the speaker where you wanted to. The hardware was beautifully machined, done by local Lititz people. We were the talk of the industry at the time.” Mick Jagger wanted to see it and came to a Stewart show, making Roy walk with him around the arena during a show to really get a sense to what the hanging S4s could do. Suffice to say he was impressed because he had the Clairs do the band’s 1975 tour. Peter Frampton would use them too, as would David Bowie, the Beach Boys and most acts doing arena tours at the time. “After a while, everyone else kept coming up with new speakers, but always comparing them to the S4s,” Gene adds. “It was a compliment.” Other Innovations PLSN While he acknowledges that Bill Hanley was the first one to put monitors on the stage, Roy says they were the first to build a box for them that slanted up. “The first one was for the horn section of Blood Sweat & Tears, and then the rest of band, then other bands wanted them.” The Clair Bros. built the first audio board with a talkback button it. So, rather than the FOH engineer yelling at the band, a button could be pushed and a conversation could be had through the monitors. “Believe it or not, even that simple feature got us a few shows including Yes.” www.fohonline.com In 1984, they built a sophisticated road console that boasted parametric EQ and folded up conveniently in a box. “Nobody had parametric EQ on the road in a console,” Roy says. “They were in the studio, and there were some tours that borrowed studio consoles and used them on the road, but there was nothing like this. We also had a bar graph meter that no one else had. Our engineers, Bruce Jackson and Ron Brothwisk, designed this.” A commonsense business approach always pervaded, as many festivals sprung up all over the country, the Clair Bros. were careful which ones they did. More big acts and events would continue, all fueled by their ability to hire and develop good people. “Back when the company was in a converted chicken house in Brickerville, Pa., the Clairs’ took a kid out of college and gave him a chance,” says Greg Hall of his own beginnings. “And for 30 years, it’s been a great place to work. I’m still proud to be apart of what they built.” Today, Hall is business manager for the company. In 1995, Gene, who stayed on the road, finally got off and retired. “My last tour was with Elton John,” he says. “I didn’t mix that, but was in charge of setting up the system.” He would sell his part of the business to his son Troy, who today is in charge of the touring division. Barry Clair, Roy’s son, is in charge of the systems division. Roy is still active in the business, though on his terms. And the company still continues to dazzle. One of their recent gigs was handling the audio for the Papal Mass by Pope Benedict at Yankee Stadium. “Their love of sound and the entertainment industry took them out of Lititz and around the world, yet they always chose to keep their base within a few miles of their childhood home,” Jackson says. 2008 SEPTEMBER 57 To Advertise in Marketplace, Contact: Dan Hernandez • 818.435.2285 • dh@fohonline.com STAGING • LIGHTING • SOUND Order online TODAY at www.plsnbookshelf.com Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ EMPLOYMENT Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ You don’t have to steal If you thInk classIfIeds don’t work... why are you readIng thIs? call dan at 818.435.2285 a copy of Get your own Subscription! It’s FREE to start your own personal subscription just go to: www.fohonline.com/subscribe Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ FOH-at-Large It’s All About Control A as “cocky anal-retentive.” Of course, if the engineer keeps insisting upon getting what they want, they will also become known as an “asshole,” which, for those of you who may not know, is a derogative term and is definitely not the same as being “anal.” I have heard certain engineers being described as “anal,” and others described as being an “asshole,” but the one that really made me wince was when I heard an engineer described as being an “anal asshole.” Sort of a weird mixed metaphor, but given the choice, I think I would rather be an “anal asshole” than a “horse’s patoot” since, if I am correct, a horse’s patoot is a euphemism referring to the rear portion of the aforementioned animal. t this time of year — when the members of our celebrated audio industry descend upon one town or another and fill massive convention centers with miles and aisles of new, state-of-the-art audio technology — my thoughts turn to control. After all, every item on display at AES is purporting to present the user with more control of their mix along with the promise — spoken and unspoken — that each new piece of technological wizardry will offer a newer, faster and more efficient way to manipulate and manage the mechanics of their audio world. FOH There are many items and concepts of control that we take for granted. Tools that at one time did not exist, but through diligence, need and brilliance were made manifest by a few great minds that could not only visualize them, but actualize them as well. What we take for granted as everyday items in our audio arsenal are things that at one time did not exist when the need arose. To name just a few of the technological innovations that have aided the audio engineer in his or her quest for ultimate control, I would have to include such every day controls as parametric EQ, compression, noise gates and 31 band equalization. Wireless microphones and personal monitors have become a mainstay in the industry, and although they are relatively new to the scene, digital consoles and line array speaker systems are almost a prerequisite on most riders. With the advent of computers and digital technology, speaker management has been taken to a new level of controlled use. Wireless and digital advances now make it possible for the monitor engineer to walk the stage while ringing out wedges and mixing at the same time, thus doing away with any intermediary help and again allowing the engineer more control. COMING NEXT MONTH... Installations For $90 million, it damn well better float… The Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Ind. is a riverboat no more. FOH Interview Why an SD7 AND a D5? Because he can. FOH gets deep with Lars Brogaard. Buyers Guide Large-format line arrays 60 SEPTEMBER 2008 Part of Our Job Description By Andy Au What We Take for Granted By BakerLee Have fun at AES. Be particular, ask questions, demand answers and find new equipment that helps you maintain control of your domain. A Plethora of Technology FOH Every year at the AES convention the tried-and-true established audio companies and many new upstart businesses put forward a plethora of new and updated technological advances to be picked through and assessed by all of us control-obsessed audio engineers. Just for the record, I totally support being in command of an environment that could so easily spiral out of control at any moment. All engineers are fully aware of how frightening it is to be behind a console during a show and have something go wrong. Thirty seconds of downtime can feel like time without end in a very hot place, therefore, we try to avoid any of these eternal moments by doing our best to control all situations during a show. It is my experience that to avoid sweating bullets during a show, most successful audio/production people live by the Boy Scout mantra “be prepared.” State-of-the-art equipment is definitely one of the key ingredients for maintaining control of the audio stew, but as we all know, anything can happen, which is why most engineers try to ensure their success by preparation. It’s not easy nor is it always possible to plan for every situation, but based upon our experiences and our skills, we try to do just that with varying degrees of success. Only Words FOH A good blend is in the details and most engineers are constantly tinkering with the audio mix in an effort to achieve perfection. Perfection, as we all know, is a rather high bar to jump. Therefore, the successful engineers I know are, to a fault, diligent and detail-oriented in their search for flawlessness. I say to a fault because I have often seen this meticulousness and attention to detail misconstrued as a negative trait and described by others as “picky,” overbearing,” “fussy,” “demanding,” and even “anal-retentive,” or in hip terms just “anal.” The term “anal retentive” has slipped into our vernacular due to an acceptance of Freudian psycho-babble and is often used as a pejorative to describe a person with an obsessive-compulsive disorder. It is not a very eloquent way of describing a person — let alone an audio engineer — but be that as it may, it is part of the contemporary lexicon. Some people, who are a little more laid back in their approach to production and audio, view the engineer’s attention to detail as demanding and arrogant. Many times an engineer will refuse to share consoles or snakes. Engineers are very particular about what they need in order to make a show successful and often do get an attitude when told they cannot get what they want. So, this “anal-retentive” becomes known as arrogant and now they are seen www.fohonline.com FOH Recently, I mixed a popular morning radio show, and since it was an early morning show we were required to load in and set up the day before. I insisted upon bringing my console as well as all my microphones, stands and personal monitors. I was being somewhat “anal” about my gear and actually had a bit of a fit when I was informed that I had to use his in-house snake. Therefore, I became somewhat of an “asshole” when I insisted that the house technician stay overtime and be available for a sound check when we arrived to set up the gear. Although I had been an “anal asshole,” all went well at the check, and it wasn’t until the band started to play the next morning that the show’s host stated screaming that he did not have any vocal in his headphones. The house technician blamed me for not sending them the vocal, but I was sending them a stereo mix and I had a great full mix (if I say so myself ), which included the vocal. Turns out that the on-air mix was fine, but the house technician neglected to send the host of the show a headphone mix, and while the band had everything in their ears, the host could only hear what his studio microphones were picking up. I felt like a “horse’s patoot” due to the fact that the in-house engineer had not been “anal” or “asshole” enough. I had taken for granted that the house audio tech knew what he had to do. When he verified he was receiving signal, I just assumed that he was sending signal everywhere it needed to be sent, and while technically the blunder was not my fault, I assumed some of the blame because I had not been a bigger “anal asshole.” That said, have fun at AES. Be particular, ask questions, demand answers and find new equipment that helps you maintain control of your domain. Remember that it’s OK to be an “anal asshole” and that in certain ways it’s part of our job description. If you have successful gigs then consider the sobriquet a badge of honor. One should take solace in the fact that being an “anal asshole” is better than being a “horse’s patoot.” Try not to feel self-conscious about your “anal assholiness” and remember that you will be in a convention center surrounded by like-minded souls. Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/ Ad info: http://foh.hotims.com/