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FOH engineer James Hill working with the Allen & Heath dLive C1500 surface on the recent tour by British metalcore band While She Sleeps. (Photo Credit: Volca Media)

Allen & Heath dLive Checks The Right Boxes For “While She Sleeps” On Tour

Front of house engineer James Hill sought a compact footprint at the mix position, deploying a dLive C1500 paired with a DM64 MixRack providing 128 input processing channels.

British metalcore band While She Sleeps recently wrapped up a UK & EU tour supporting Australian act Parkway Drive, taking in 18 shows across nine countries in rooms ranging from 3,000 to 12,000 capacity and supported by front of house engineer James Hill using an Allen & Heath dLive C1500 compact surface.

Hill was keen to find a package that would help keep his mix position footprint to a minimum while still meeting his needs sonically. The dLive C1500 surface, supplied by SSE Audio, is paired with a DM64 MixRack providing 128 input processing channels and stated 0.7 ms latency, all controlled via a rack-mountable control surface with 12-inch touchscreen.

“The C1500’s small format is great for squeezing into FOH areas as a support band,” Hill says. “During pre-production, I was scared about dropping down to 12 faders from my usual 17, but the customisation of the fader banks meant that 12 was perfectly fine and I could easily switch to what I needed when I needed it.

“The stage end was 42 inputs hitting an analogue split into a DM64 stage box for the C1500,” he continues. “The monitor mixer had a limited input count, so the dLive at FOH was also used to route all stage talkbacks & different talk sends to reduce the channel count for the monitor mixer.”

Additionally, a Waves V3 card was fitted to the C1500 surface, which was utilized for multitrack recording and virtual soundcheck via Hill’s MacBook Pro. However, originally Hill had different plans: “I included the Waves card with the hire with the intention of using multiple plugins to help my mix, but I ended up using no external processing at all, the dLive’s built-in effects and processing were absolutely spot on for what I needed.”

Hill also notes that he made effective use of dLive’s DEEP Processing, a collection of zero-latency emulations of classic hardware processors: “The 16T compressor really added punch and depth to my drum shells and the parallel path option really gave extra impact for the metal band sound. The BUS compressor was great for glueing together my mix on my stereo groups, and the Peak Limiter 76 gave a little bit of extra character to elements that required it. The Source Expander really let me dial in a clean-sounding mix on a pretty hectic and loud stage. As a support band, our stage space was limited even in the arena-sized rooms, but the Source Expander allowed me to bring that stage bleed down to a minimum allowing for clear, loud vocals without washy cymbals constantly in my mix.”

The tour may have now concluded, but Hill states that he is already looking forward to his next chance to take dLive on the road. ”I had a great time using the C1500 on this tour,” he concludes. “I’m excited to try the console out on future tours and really dial in my mix as I discover more features of the dLive system.”

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