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On the Digital Edge

Seal at the EnergySolutions Arena in Salt Lake City

When There’s No Familiar Ground, Start Digging

This past weekend, I had the pleasure of mixing a performance by Seal for a large corporate event held at the EnergySolutions Arena in Salt Lake City. This event was my first time working for this particular artist, and I must admit it was a completely enjoyable experience. Although I was familiar with his hits, I had no previous experience of any kind with Seal’s live shows. When taking on a fresh project, I believe two things to be of paramount importance: preparation and networking.

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Fig. 1: MLA cabinet cutaway shows the horn loading of the various drivers.

The Martin MLA System: Audio from the Audience Perspective

I recently had the pleasure of journeying to On Stage Audio in Las Vegas and attending a hands-on training session on Martin Audio’s MLA system. The event was hosted by OSA vice-president Jim Risgin and skillfully taught by OSA’s director of engineering services, Martyn “Ferrit” Rowe. Over the past year, I have seen this innovative system in action at a tour stop at the venerable Sports Arena in San Diego; critically listened to and experimented with MLA arrays erected in the back parking lot of Delicate Productions (Camarillo, CA); and more recently, mixed a show on the MLA at a large outdoor venue.

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The input screen simplifies console setup/configurations.

My Day with the SSL Live Console, Part 2

Last month’s column (FRONT of HOUSE, Aug. 2013, page 30) presented an operational overview of the Solid State Logic Live console from a mixing engineer’s perspective. This entry will focus more closely on individual channel operations and onboard processors. But before I dive into those areas, I need to discuss a critical organizational number — 192. As explained by SSL product specialist Fernando Guzman, 192 is the total number of mono audio “paths” the SSL Live processing system is able to support when operating at 96K.

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My Day with the SSL Live Console, Part 1

Lsst week, I had the unique privilege of spending the day with Fernando Guzman, Solid State Logic product specialist and point man for the Live console project here in the USA. Jay Easley, SSL’s new vice president of live consoles in the Americas, joined us in our listening tests. The SSL Live (solidstatelogic.com/live) is still in its Beta version, and a few hardware and software functions are still “under construction.” However, the desk has evolved enough from its Alpha stage to allow for an honest listening test.

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St Kitts Music Festival

Preparing for Festivals and One-Offs, Part 2

Last month, I wrote about working with James Taylor at a one-off outdoor event in Greenwich, CT. At this show, I was able to use my normal Avid VENUE console system with existing show files modified for this particular event. The PA system, the monitor system and the microphone complement were not our accustomed touring gear, but being able to initiate our work from a familiar console platform with saved individual song snapshots gave both me and monitor engineer Dave Staub an advantageous starting point. The Greenwich show and the two subsequent one-off shows in this short run went extremely well.

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Fig. 1: David Morgan’s stage input list for James Taylor at the 2013 Greenwich Town Party event in Greenwich, CT. He provided the asterisked (*) mics.

Preparing for Festivals and One-Offs

I’m on a plane heading back east to work three one-off events with James Taylor. The first is a music festival in Greenwich, CT. James will be the headline act following a full day of entertainment on the main stage. Mr. Taylor will be performing with the full band and singers. The second event is a benefit concert in Newtown, CT. The musicians comprising this performance will be as follows: James on guitar, Larry Goldings on piano/keyboards, Owen Young on cello, Andrea Zonn on violin/vocals and vocalist Kate Markowitz. The third concert will be a multi-performer event at Boston’s TD Garden benefitting Boston Strong. In addition to appearing with the full band and singers, Mr. Taylor will share the stage with Carole King and Jimmy Buffet. Two members of Mr. Buffet’s entourage will also be sitting in during James’ segment of the performance.

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This up-front console placement during the setup for the James Taylor show was later relegated to a less-than-ideal position where near-field monitors were a must.

Near-Field Monitors for Live Shows, Part 2

Last month, I wrote about the role played by using near-field studio monitors during band rehearsals. This month I will concentrate on show applications for these small but very useful speaker systems. During rehearsals, I ran these speakers off the console’s monitor bus as one would in a studio. Once we are out on the road and working, I use a different output configuration to drive the near-fields. Because I don’t want the output signal interrupted whenever I PFL an input channel or AFL a VCA group or output bus, I put the near-fields on their own stereo matrix output, instead of using the console’s Monitor Out. The monitor function is reserved solely for headphones.

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Tannoy T12 Dual Concentric near-fields are useful in providing a reasonable representation of a large array’s sound.

Near-Field Monitors for Live Shows, Part 1

Working as a front of house engineer for high profile performers, large-scale loudspeaker arrays are my stock-in-trade. So, why do I have those small speakers sitting on my meter bridge? Good question. Let’s start at the beginning — back in pre-production, when I am attending band rehearsals and creating the product that will eventually emerge from the components in those large arrays.

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Fig. 1: The NLS Channel page

Waves NLS Non-Linear Summer Plug-in

In recent years, most of my work is performed at seated shows rather than at large outdoor or indoor events with festival seating. At seated events, promoters want to sell as many unobstructed view floor seats as possible to maximize the dollar return from each show. And with live performance becoming the most popular (and lucrative) sector of the music business, the motivation for optimum financial return has reduced the amount of space allotted to FOH mix positions. It’s also driven productions to mandate lower shipping costs and fuel expenses. This has resulted in the ascendancy of smaller, lighter digital mixing systems over the larger and heavier analog consoles (and outboard racks) on a majority of tours.

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Selecting the

From Russia, with Cher, Part II

The 12-hour time difference between Moscow and Los Angeles definitely caused gaps in communication. Upon hearing the news that the Avid VENUE Profile consoles were unavailable, monitor mixer Brian Hendry and I cobbled together a modified equipment spec for the rehearsal day in Moscow. Both of us decided to go with small analog consoles, as neither of us would have time to program an unfamiliar digital desk. However, when we arrived at work for the last day of rehearsal in Los Angeles, we were greeted with the news that the Avid consoles were now going to be in place on the Moscow rehearsal day. The upward trend was definitely continuing.

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Cher at sound-check in Moscow

From Russia, with Cher

How far would you go to work a show with one of your favorite artists? When I was first contacted about traveling to Moscow to participate in a performance with Cher, my internalized answer was, “Really?” but my externalized answer was, “Oh yeah!”

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Cafe Press sidechain T-shirt

So What Do YOU Want for Christmas?

Holiday Gift Ideas for Sound People

Hopefully we have all survived the annual gastronomical excess known as Thanksgiving, so it’s time to start working on that holiday gift list. If there’s an audio engineer lurking on your list, maybe it’s time to break away from the clichéd multi-tool that always seems to appear under the tree. How many Leathermans or Gerbers does one really need? Plus, one always runs the risk of losing these tools to a lapse of memory that results in sheepishly handing the tool to that smug TSA person who noticed that you hadn’t removed it from your carry-on.

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