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The Stage Sound
By Dan Laveglia
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Speaker Placement
I am always amazed at how many guys don't take the time to really
place the loudspeakers properly. Aim them at the players' faces,
and away from troublesome acoustic instruments. (Like a grand piano)
Try to keep from firing in to open microphones and the FOH mixer
thank you. Drum fills are particularly troublesome. I like to get
them as far down-stage as possible along side the riser, and aim
them just up-stage of the drummer. Orient the box so that the narrowest
horn dispersion is in the horizontal plane. (Usually on it's side)
This will help to keep the foldback out of the tom and overhead
microphones.
Be careful when you are using more than one enclosure on a mix.
Play with the placement of your wedges and find out what works.
You will be amazed at what a difference a few inches can make when
it comes to hot spots and nulls. Usually I try to find a place where
they are close enough together and down-stage to still be in front
of the musician, but far enough apart to aim the high frequency
axis past the microphone at his ears. When they are too far apart,
you loose that "In Your Face" feel. Avoid crossing the
HF axis from both boxes at the microphone itself. Also be prepared
for reflections from hats or costumes.
For fill speaker positions, if you have multiple enclosures try
to stack them, as opposed to a side-by-side configuration. Horns
that are not splayed properly will have several well-defined nulls
and peaks in their response when acoustically added together. This
is a classic case of non-coincident arrivals at the listeners
position and cannot be fixed with an equalizer! You would have to
splay the boxes for a very wide coverage pattern in order to add
the horns together properly. (Depending on the horns of course)
There are many more enclosures with 60-degree horns than with 30-degree
horns.
Low Frequency Reality Check
Look around you. A reality check will tell you that if you have
a relatively large FOH system with low frequency and sub-bass enclosures
that your monitors will not be able to compete with the LF information
on stage when everything is up to show speed. Unless of course you
want to turn everything up to warp nine, or add lots of sub-bass
enclosures to you monitor rig, but this generally results in escalating
levels with the backline amps and then the FOH system to overpower
all of the information coming off of the stage. I think we all know
what this leads to! If you have to overpower the band with your
stage rig, the FOH mixer will hate you and the show will suffer
for it! (Just as it does if the band plays too loud.) Use the low
frequency information from the FOH system to fill out the bottom
end in your "Stage Sound". If you are carrying a smaller
FOH system or playing on well-damped theater stages, this effect
is not so prevalent and you can maintain a full bandwidth from your
monitor system.
The "Stage Sound"
The best approach is to try to meld the
backline amps, your wedges and the FOH loudspeakers in to a system
that all works together to attain the overall stage sound you are
looking for. To develop this environment the spectral
response of the mixes should be tailored to fill in what is not
heard on stage from the backline amps and the FOH system. This usually
involves a lack of nearby instruments and VLF frequencies coming
from the wedges. (*A bonus for you!!)
This is where the receptive players come in. You may have to point
out the low frequency phenomena during a sound check, but it will
be obvious to them if they listen. Also point out the nearby instruments
and how they may be heard with out being very loud in their mix.
Maybe even re-aim a stage amplifier to be more effective. How many
times have you seen guitar players wailing away with their speakers
aimed at their butts??? Tilt them back and aim them at their heads.
I promise they have no idea what kind of havoc they cause the FOH
mixer about 75 to 100 feet away.
Of course this will not work in every situation. It depends on the
music, the venue and the players among other things. But if you
can make these principals work you can achieve the most clarity
with the least volume in your wedges.
Use localization to help keep things clear on stage. It is easier
to hear different instruments if they are coming from different
directions. The fewer sources in any mix, the easier it is to hear
them a noisy environment.
Also consider the individual instruments and a mix containing all
of them. You have a certain bandwidth in which to fit them. It's
pretty easy if it is just a violin and a tuba, but not so straightforward
with several guitars and keyboards and drums. Work at making all
of the instruments sound different and fill the available spectrum
with more distinct differences between them. If a player insists
on a particular tone in his monitor, but it doesn't work for the
rest of your mixes' split the input into multiple channels on your
desk so that you can tailor the sound for everyone.
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