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Mixing in the lawn area of the Blossom Music Center in Cuyahoga Falls with an SSL Live 200 console.

SSL Upgrades Lawn Performances By The Cleveland Orchestra At The Blossom Music Center

Live Remote Tile and SOLSA (SSL On/Off Line Setup Application) software driving a Live L200 digital console upgrades the approach for optimizing coverage in the venue’s lawn area.

This year’s Blossom Music Festival, which annually runs from the Fourth of July weekend through Labor Day at the Blossom Music Center in Cuyahoga Falls, OH, the summer home of The Cleveland Orchestra, saw the introduction of a Solid State Logic Live Remote Tile and SOLSA (SSL On/Off Line Setup Application) software driving an SSL Live L200 digital console.

The new mix system is for the audience occupying the venue’s lawn area, replacing the previous approach where engineers had only some measure of remote control of the installed loudspeakers covering the lawn from a Wi-Fi tablet. There was a definite downside, according to Bill Fertig, IATSE audio department head at Blossom Music Center and a front-of-house engineer with more than 35 years of touring experience.

“It was fraught with a lot of problems,” he says, “the least of which was Wi-Fi.” Expecting a reliable Wi-Fi signal while mixing in the middle of as many as 15,000 people, many carrying smartphones, was always a risk, he adds. “It’s not a very good mix environment, either. On an iPad, when you’re pushing a fader you can’t work on the EQ, unless you allocate the whole display to the EQ, and then you’re not pushing the fader. You could maybe use a bigger display, but it’s not the ideal situation,” says Fertig, whose touring credits extend from Metallica, Eddie Murphy and Ringo Starr in the 1980s to Dream Theater, Jewel and Cat Power more recently.

When The Cleveland Orchestra partnered with a new production management team two years ago, Fertig pitched them on the idea of installing a Live L200 console in the recording studio below the 6,000-seat Blossom Pavilion amphitheater. Such a setup would enable an engineer to mix for the lawn audience using a physical console surface — the 12-fader Remote Tile, which is identical in operation to the tiles in the console — instead of a tablet. It would also provide an interface to the Merging Technologies multitrack recording system that The Cleveland Orchestra’s recording engineer, Gintas Norvila, uses at Severance Hall, the organization’s year-round home.

Fertig needed to interface to the Dante network cards in the Yamaha amplifiers driving the NEXO line arrays covering the lawn, and he also needed a simple and elegant way to interconnect the L200 console and the Merging DAW in the studio. “We have a pair of Yamaha switches in the amp room and with some VLANs we take that control to the top of the pavilion where there’s an amp rack that services some newly installed subwoofers on the lawn,” he explains.

From there, on show days, the Blossom audio crew pulls a network line and a power cable onto the lawn and plugs in the Fader Tile and a stand-mounted Microsoft Surface tablet running SOLSA software, providing the mix engineer with real-time control of the remote L200 console. Fertig hopes to eventually run some permanent underground Cat-6 and power lines to the lawn mix position.

The lawn mix setup is also a necessity in the region’s changeable weather, he adds. “You just pull the power and network cables, lift up the Tile, grab the computer and walk everything out of the rain. The audio is still working and the guy in the studio is now in control of the mix.” In the studio, the L200 console connects to the DAW via MADI and is also used to generate a stereo mix of each concert for the archive.

Having a second operator working in parallel in the studio also offers advantages. “In the past, if you were mixing out on the lawn, you couldn’t solo-in-place. But you have that advantage in the studio,” Fertig says. “It translates to a well-tuned mix, having two people working on it, one who can listen and solo instruments while simultaneously the other person is sitting on the lawn in front of the speakers and pushing the faders.”

Having used the SSL L200 console setup for a season, Fertig believes it could solve some problems at other venues. “I don’t know if there is anybody else doing this, but it seems like the Tile and SOLSA technologies lend themselves to a few other applications.” He and the orchestra’s recording engineer have also discussed remote mixing over an even greater distance. “He lives in New York, so we’ve talked around the scenario of him not having to come here for some things. There are a lot of cool things that could be done.”

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