Skip to content

QSC TouchMix-30 Pro Digital Console

QSC TouchMix-30 Pro Digital Console

QSC TouchMix-30 Pro Digital Console

A Popular Mixing Platform Takes a Big Leap Forward

QSC has a long history of excellence from its earliest days as an amplifier-only manufacturer. And when the company first branched out into building loudspeakers, it did so methodically and waited until its new offerings were rock solid before launching them onto the world.

Read More »
Edward Charles 'EC' Wente

100 Years of the Condenser Microphone

Here we are in 2016, and we are just a matter of weeks before an important milestone in audio history — the invention of the practical condenser microphone. While names like Edison bring up images of celebrated inventors, the name of Edward Charles (E.C.) Wente, who played a major role in developing the direction of professional audio, is almost completely unknown — even in his own industry.

Read More »
MXL DX-2 Dual-Capsule Guitar Mic

MXL DX-2 Dual-Capsule Guitar Mic

I’ve been around for a while (a good while) and thought I had seen and heard everything, particularly in the area of microphones, where it seems every possible idea or new product concept has already been tried or taken. So earlier this year, when I heard that MXL microphones was launching a new guitar amp mic, my initial reaction was a resounding “Meh!” You see, I already have just about every conceivable transducer that could be used to capture guitar amps.

Read More »
The author, in his post-op healing phase.

The Myth of the Invincible Roadie

Okay, I’m back! Please accept my apologies for being absent from last month’s issue of FRONT of HOUSE, but I do have a legitimate excuse. At the end of August, I underwent a much-needed surgical procedure on my left shoulder, and I just recently regained the ability to type with both hands. I have now been liberated from the bulky, intrusive sling apparatus that has imprisoned my left arm and dominated my life for the last four weeks.

Read More »
Be afraid, be very afraid, but don’t despair. The world will get scarier — you just need to get the right costume.

Scary Stuff

Be afraid, be very afraid, but don’t despair: The world will get scarier — you just need to get the right costume.

t’ll be Halloween in a couple of weeks, so it’s time to toss a little scare out there. During a deep dive into the changing production-rehearsal studio market recently, I learned that the average size of rehearsal rooms is getting bigger.

Read More »
One example of a popular channel strip, the Millennia Media STT-1, employs the company’s Twin Topology approach, which allows the user to select from tube or solid state signal paths for the preamp, EQ, de-ess and optical compressor sections.

Where’s Your Money?

Let’s do a little math. (I know, you hate math.) But do it anyway. Let’s suppose a 32-channel digital mixing console has a retail price of $15,000. And let’s say that this mixing desk has 16 outputs. That yields a total of 48 I/O channels, each of which requires a certain amount of audio circuitry. Granted, most of the audio processing happens in the digital domain, so we’re not exactly in need of 48 hardware parametric EQs, but we certainly do need 48 amplifiers plus A/D and D/A conversion. That comes to around $312 per channel.

Read More »
Fig 1: Location of the ‘Listen to Copy’ and ‘Set Listen Source’ buttons on the Audio Router screen of a DiGiCo SD5 console.

Techniques for Great Virtual Sound Checking

The first time I heard the term “virtual sound check,” I wasn’t sure exactly what it meant. In fact, the idea of using pre-recorded multi-tracks as sound check material goes way back. I’ve been playing back multi-track audio as a teaching tool for well over a decade, before I even heard the term “virtual sound check.” I have no idea who came up with this or who tried it first, but certainly it has been around for quite some time, going back to the days when brave souls toured with racks of Alesis ADATs and Tascam DA-88 tape drives.

Read More »
Illustration by Andy Au

Gearaholics

I have a confession to make. Like many other folks in the business of audio, I am a recovering gearaholic. While having a compulsion for collecting equipment may sound somewhat innocuous compared to other forms of addiction, I can honestly stand before you and say that the habit is real and the consequences of said craving can be severe and debilitating.

Read More »
MIPRO ACT 2400 Series

Avlex, MIPRO Introduce ACT 2400 Series Wireless Systems

Avlex Corporation announces the new MIPRO ACT 2400 Series wireless systems. Consisting of several models encompassing both single- and dual-channel half rack receiver systems with a variety of transmitter options, the new MIPRO ACT 2400 Series wireless systems use the 2.4 GHz ISM band and offer stable 4-frequency FSK (frequency shift key) modulation circuitry with exceptional range, strong RF signal stability and channel density.

Read More »
"With our previous sound system, coverage had always been a problem - we had entire corners of the venue that were just dead zones."

Legendary So. Cal Venue Modernizes with Renkus-Heinz

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, CA  – Opened 36 years ago, The Coach House has become an icon on the Southern California music scene. But its legendary status carried with it another legacy: a history of bad sound. The venue contacted ESP Management, who designed a system based around Renkus-Heinz. Touring sound engineers have voiced some of the most enthusiasm for the new system.

Read More »
Pohoda has grown exponentially over its nearly 20-year history and is now the biggest annual music event in Slovakia, with more than 30,000 in attendance each day.

JBL by Harman Powers Top Music Festivals in Slovakia

TRENČÍN & PIESTANY, SLOVAKIA – JBL VTX Series speakers and Crown I-Tech HD amplifiers help production company RentalLive bring an eclectic mix of music to life at Slovankai’s two largest music festivals, Pohoda and Topfest. System engineers Marek Barabas and Tomas Oravec discuss how they deployed the gear for a diverse group of artists and musical genres at the events.

Read More »
FOH engineer Jim Ebdon at the tour’s house mix position.

Maroon 5, L-Acoustics Share ‘One More Night’ Night After Night

LOS ANGELES – Though Maroon 5’s tour started in February 2015, it wasn’t until that summer when a K1/K2 system became available through Sound Image, which has been the tour’s main sound reinforcement vendor throughout. FOH engineer Jim Ebdon has been tweaking the arrangement of the K1/K2 system’s components ever since and continues to do so as the tour runs through March 2017.

Read More »