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Audience Mics for In-Ears
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<blockquote data-quote="Jim Roach" data-source="post: 19398" data-attributes="member: 282"><p>Re: Audience Mics for In-Ears</p><p></p><p>I have been in the exact situation on past theater tours and had great success using a VP88 (I'd like to try a Royer in the future) down-stage center. I also used two shotgun mics, one far stage left/right. The singer I work for didn't move too much from DSC so I played with delay and polarity until they sounded good with the vocal mic open.</p><p>In arenas, I've found that you get too much audience bleed though the vocal mic to use audience mics a lot. When I do use them in arenas it's to give a wide stereo image to the audience. I'll usually delay one side a few milliseconds to widen the image. </p><p>In all situations I mix the audience in/out as needed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jim Roach, post: 19398, member: 282"] Re: Audience Mics for In-Ears I have been in the exact situation on past theater tours and had great success using a VP88 (I'd like to try a Royer in the future) down-stage center. I also used two shotgun mics, one far stage left/right. The singer I work for didn't move too much from DSC so I played with delay and polarity until they sounded good with the vocal mic open. In arenas, I've found that you get too much audience bleed though the vocal mic to use audience mics a lot. When I do use them in arenas it's to give a wide stereo image to the audience. I'll usually delay one side a few milliseconds to widen the image. In all situations I mix the audience in/out as needed. [/QUOTE]
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