Ok so I went into a new venue yesterday to run sound for one of my steady bands. They have a new install from I don’t know who but is clearly not qualified. As I walked in I saw hanging from the roof joist a pair of MRX 215's or whatever their # are but wait those aren’t meant to fly. They had two eye bolts in the side at the tops and one in the back for a pull back. Fail #1 of so many I won’t go on to count. Then on the back wall next to the stage I see a huge install amp rack about 7 feet tall. Inside was a Furman power supply an analog dbx x-over and 8 crown xls1500 amps spaced a few spaces apart. Ok so there are four wedge mixes two tops and four single 18 subs in the system. Except for the two wedge amps the other six were all bridged and into the remaining rig, I mean four amps for four single 18" subs (harbinger I believe about 800w program) and one amp each for the two tops. I asked the expert house engineer wtf is up with that and he says it is clearly the best way to do it all the real pros do it this way. I said I believe they would have proper sized amps and less of them run stereo. But these are the newest and best technology Crown has, I said they are the entry level amps from Crown and their best would be the I Techs. That drew a blank stare for a min and then he told me that the guy from Crown or whoever said that these were the best and the best way to run them. So the subs run bridged at 8 ohm on four XLS 1500, is clearly better and cheaper to say run all four on one proper amp at 4 ohms a side. Yep because these amps don’t pull any power and I can have all 8 in one 20 amp circuit, and so he did, all ran into the Furmin power supply. At this point I give up he is clearly the man and knows uhh something, maybe.
So a walk out to FOH and we have a 24 ch. GL2400 Ok not bad I can work with this. So I look at the massive rack next to it, big slant top rack with many below. On top we have a light controller then a DBX 1046 and a DBX231 under that so I go we are compressing the mains aren’t we, well yeah all the pros do it. Under that, a sonic crapamiser then two DBX 215’s for the four wedge mixes, because the 15 band is better for monitors. I think that was all that was on the top slant part so looking down the main rack were a bunch of 266xl a couple of 1074’s and two DBX I didn’t recognize. The #’s were covered in tape but they had a grey face so I asked what these two were. He said they are the desser’s and they are the greatest thing yada yada then some more cheap stuff and then finally at the bottom were two Lexicon MX200’s. There was more processing than channels and inserts combined but every possible insert point had something in it and I mean everything. I tell the guy sometimes less is more but he didn’t get it.
This part I just don’t know what to think. He had the snake head right next to the 1 foot drum riser and I see him start patching in a sub snake for the drums that was just on top of the riser maybe 18” away. I say are you seriously going to patch a sub snake to go 18”? Yep it makes it easier to mic the drums, I should have known that. So there it sat all 30 feet of sub snake coiled up 18”away from the main snake with 25’ mic cords in it.
Ok on to sound check kick sounds ok out front but no monitor. Theirs vocal in monitor but no kick he runs off to look to see if its plugged in. Me I’m going if there is vocal in it, it must be plugged in but I guess it was worth the check just to be sure. So I’m looking at the 15 band graph and it is death to all I mean just about every fader was cut all the way or just about so I go uhh Mr. soundman I think the problem is here but he’s looking at the back of the amp so I pull the freqs. Back up and hey the monitor starts to come alive, go figure. So he comes back and pulls out a book of pictures of everything and says well that’s not the way it’s supposed to be set. Me I really want to know this so I ask why is that. Well we had some guy with a RTA mic come in and get the best sound out of everything and the wedges need to have a curve like this. But its death to everything not a curve, I then tell him you know the little dent in the middle that’s nothing when you pull down that’s a cut , up is a boost and you really only need to cut frequencies that are a problem . They can’t all have a problem. Oh I get your type of soundmen that come in here and think you know everything and try to change it all that’s why we have pictures so we can set it right. So he set the drum monitor eq the way the pic was and then guess what the drummer started complaining monitor stopped working. At this point I realize I am in the presence of a total pro maybe even a genius. So he sets all the comps and gates etc. by the pics and were on to vocals but they keep cutting out so I say man sounds like bad cords so off he runs to the stage with cords and I’m looking at the comps and the gates are cutting everything off. And on it goes.
So band comes on and its ok a few tweaks here and there and it’s ok a little build up of lows but the main eqs are boosted there, well because that’s where the pic says to. Anyway he sits down to mix or rather just sit there and I reach over to mix and I ask how long you been at this and he says 10 years I think that’s a stretch but hey I say I’ve been at it almost 30 years. So I ask some basic stuff for weeding out the posers and guess what, fail. Nothing like a well seasoned house sound guy. The week before one of my friends touring band had heard that the week before, the touring headline guy was so pissed that they brought in their own rig. Its Texas country on Wednesday night there and they are trying to get some big names. Anyway that was my night, big fun lots of laughs next time I’ll bring in my rig.
So a walk out to FOH and we have a 24 ch. GL2400 Ok not bad I can work with this. So I look at the massive rack next to it, big slant top rack with many below. On top we have a light controller then a DBX 1046 and a DBX231 under that so I go we are compressing the mains aren’t we, well yeah all the pros do it. Under that, a sonic crapamiser then two DBX 215’s for the four wedge mixes, because the 15 band is better for monitors. I think that was all that was on the top slant part so looking down the main rack were a bunch of 266xl a couple of 1074’s and two DBX I didn’t recognize. The #’s were covered in tape but they had a grey face so I asked what these two were. He said they are the desser’s and they are the greatest thing yada yada then some more cheap stuff and then finally at the bottom were two Lexicon MX200’s. There was more processing than channels and inserts combined but every possible insert point had something in it and I mean everything. I tell the guy sometimes less is more but he didn’t get it.
This part I just don’t know what to think. He had the snake head right next to the 1 foot drum riser and I see him start patching in a sub snake for the drums that was just on top of the riser maybe 18” away. I say are you seriously going to patch a sub snake to go 18”? Yep it makes it easier to mic the drums, I should have known that. So there it sat all 30 feet of sub snake coiled up 18”away from the main snake with 25’ mic cords in it.
Ok on to sound check kick sounds ok out front but no monitor. Theirs vocal in monitor but no kick he runs off to look to see if its plugged in. Me I’m going if there is vocal in it, it must be plugged in but I guess it was worth the check just to be sure. So I’m looking at the 15 band graph and it is death to all I mean just about every fader was cut all the way or just about so I go uhh Mr. soundman I think the problem is here but he’s looking at the back of the amp so I pull the freqs. Back up and hey the monitor starts to come alive, go figure. So he comes back and pulls out a book of pictures of everything and says well that’s not the way it’s supposed to be set. Me I really want to know this so I ask why is that. Well we had some guy with a RTA mic come in and get the best sound out of everything and the wedges need to have a curve like this. But its death to everything not a curve, I then tell him you know the little dent in the middle that’s nothing when you pull down that’s a cut , up is a boost and you really only need to cut frequencies that are a problem . They can’t all have a problem. Oh I get your type of soundmen that come in here and think you know everything and try to change it all that’s why we have pictures so we can set it right. So he set the drum monitor eq the way the pic was and then guess what the drummer started complaining monitor stopped working. At this point I realize I am in the presence of a total pro maybe even a genius. So he sets all the comps and gates etc. by the pics and were on to vocals but they keep cutting out so I say man sounds like bad cords so off he runs to the stage with cords and I’m looking at the comps and the gates are cutting everything off. And on it goes.
So band comes on and its ok a few tweaks here and there and it’s ok a little build up of lows but the main eqs are boosted there, well because that’s where the pic says to. Anyway he sits down to mix or rather just sit there and I reach over to mix and I ask how long you been at this and he says 10 years I think that’s a stretch but hey I say I’ve been at it almost 30 years. So I ask some basic stuff for weeding out the posers and guess what, fail. Nothing like a well seasoned house sound guy. The week before one of my friends touring band had heard that the week before, the touring headline guy was so pissed that they brought in their own rig. Its Texas country on Wednesday night there and they are trying to get some big names. Anyway that was my night, big fun lots of laughs next time I’ll bring in my rig.