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Bette Midler’s Divine Intervention Tour On The Road With L-Acoustics

Solotech specifies a K1/K2 system for a complex production requiring several compromises in system configuration.

On her first run since 1994, Bette Midler is out on the “Divine Intervention” tour, which began May 8 at the Hard Rock Live in Hollywood and finishes up July 19 at the O2 Arena in London, UK.

Tour sound provider Solotech designed a system composed primarily of L-Acoustics K1 and K2 enclosures that works with Midler’s complex stage design, as well as a pair of DiGiCo SD7 consoles for front of house and monitors that share a single SD-Rack.

“The show has some physical requirements that cause us to have to position some elements of the PA system in order to accommodate sightlines,” explains front of house engineer Steve Guest.

Because of the complexity of the production taking place on stage each night, the sound system has to be flown higher, and the left and right hangs of the system need to be positioned wider apart, than would be typical for these types of arena shows.

Guest says that he and system technician Frédéric Cantin use the time before and during sound checks to fine-tune the system in each new venue, using the wireless capability of L-Acoustics’ LA Network Manager and its toolset, including the Array Morphing tool for tonal balance adjustment.

“After I get the sound exactly as I want it at the front of house position, we can move to different seating areas and tune system to allow each area of the venue to experience what I experience as I mix the show,” says Guest, who has mixed Midler’s live shows in the past, including some during her 2008-2010 residency at Caesars Palace, as well as tours for artists including Janet Jackson, Ricky Martin, The Backstreet Boys and David Bowie. “I can’t put the boxes exactly where I’d want them on this show, but L-Acoustics gives me the tools to compensate for that.”

Cantin adds, “The great thing about the L-Acoustics enclosures is that they sound great right out of the box. They are very, very musical, and that helps us with challenging situations like these can be.”

The system is comprised, per side, of 14 K1 and four K2, as well as eight flown K1-SB and four SB28 floor subs, 16 additional K2 as side hangs, three coaxial 8XT and one 12XT front fills, three Kudo side fills, and three more 12XT for onstage monitors, all powered by 51 LA8 amplified controllers loaded into 17 LA-RAKs.

To illustrate, Toronto Star music editor Nick Krewen described Midler’s June 20 concert by writing, “Someone should track down Midler’s live sound engineer for the secret of making the Air Canada Centre sound so clear and pristine—it transformed a good show into a great show. If he can work that magic, he should be hired as a consultant to other acts visiting the venue, the sound was that crystalline.”

“It blows me away some nights,” Guest agrees. “I have a lot of experience with the V-DOSC system, but this is my first time with the K1 and K2 and they are incredible. I’ve always wanted to have the same kind of experience mixing a live concert that I have when mixing in the studio, and this is the closest I’ve ever come to that in an arena. What surprised me was the fidelity—what comes off that stage is what comes through the PA. It’s the best tool I’ve ever had in an arena environment—the software lets us predict how the system will be at its best in each venue.”

L-Acoustics
Solotech

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