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Venues in Norway are Early Adopters of Meyer Sound’s Leopard System

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TRONDHEIM, Norway — For the 1,200-seat Grand Hall, a central meeting place for close to 1,700 students in Trondheim, Norway, Oslo-based Bright Norway AS installed Meyer Sound’s compact Leopard linear sound reinforcement system. Bright Norway AS has also provided a Meyer Sound Leopard system at Oslo’s 650-capacity Vulkan Arena to support hard rock shows. Bright Norway AS’ Trond Kristoffersen supervised the Grand Hall install in Trondheim, and Bright’s Stian Smith and Fredrik Frostad assisted with the deployment of the Leopard system at the Vulkan Arena in Oslo.

More details from Meyer Sound (www.meyersound.com):

Norway is the first European country with permanent installations of the compact Meyer Sound Leopard linear sound reinforcement system. The 1,200-seat Grand Hall at Studentersamfundet (Student Society) in Trondheim uses Leopard to support community events such as theatrical performances and conferences, while the Leopard system at Oslo’s 650-capacity Vulkan Arena primarily powers hard rock shows.
 Both systems were provided and installed by Oslo-based Bright Norway AS, with project supervision by Trond Kristoffersen and on-site assistance at Vulkan Arena from Bright’s Stian Smith and Fredrik Frostad.

“When we first saw Leopard we were amazed by its size,” reports Torgeir Aadland, project consultant for audio renovations at the Grand Hall. “It was easily one of the smallest in its class, and we had some concern about it performing to our standards. But Leopard has provided excellent sound quality even at the highest levels, and gives us even horizontal coverage—it’s everything we were looking for in a new system.”


The circular Grand Hall is a central meeting place for the Student Society, an independent organization of around 1,700 Trondheim students. It is used for concerts, cabaret theatre, student conferences, and other community events.
 The installation included twin arrays of six Leopard loudspeakers each, six 900-LFC elements, two UPQ-1P loudspeakers for front fill, and a Galileo loudspeaker management system with one Galileo 616 processor.

“After installation, the hall hosted the UKA festival featuring concerts, revues and standup comedy, giving the system an intensive test across different genres,” says Aadland. “The sound quality was definitely improved from past years for every event, giving the audience a much more satisfying experience.”


The installation at Vulkan Arena comprises twin flown arrays of four Leopard linear array loudspeakers and two 900-LFC low-frequency control elements each, two UPJ-1P loudspeakers for front fill, and a Galileo loudspeaker management system with one Galileo 408 processor for optimization and signal distribution.

The new Leopard system has already supported a number of heavy rock shows at the Vulkan such as The Weeknd, Y&T, Acid Mothers Temple, and Wire. “Leopard may look small, but it packs one helluva punch,” says Bjørn Hinkel, technical manager for the venue. “The comments I’ve gotten from band techs are pretty much the same every time. They see the PA and think it’s too small. Then at the end of the night, I get hugs and praises from all of them. It’s a genuine pleasure to have Leopard in my venue.”