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London Grammar performing on its recent tour with support from the combined efforts of Brit Row and Eighth Day Sound. (Photo Credit: Ed White)

Brit Row & Eighth Day Team Up To Support London Grammar On The Road

Tour marks first time such a partnership has come to fruition since Eighth Day’s acquisition by Brit Row parent company Clair Global Group.

Electronic pop trio London Grammar (vocalist Hannah Reid, guitarist Dan Rothman and multi-instrumentalist Dot Major) recently hit the road in support of its latest album, Californian Soul, with a control package from Britannia Row Productions and a PA system from Eighth Day Sound in the first time such a partnership has come to fruition since Eighth Day’s acquisition by Brit Row parent company Clair Global Group.

“I use Brit Row because Tom Brown is an amazing client handler,” states production manager Mark Sunderland. “And for this tour, I was worried because Jake [Rudd, front of house engineer] wanted to move to a d&b audiotechnik system. At first I thought it wouldn’t be available to us, but it worked out due to Eighth Day becoming part of Clair.

“Reassuringly, we could have the kit required and maintain that same level of service. Even though our rider is technically from two companies, all of my interfacing from start to finish is via Brit Row, with every request handled perfectly.”

The band’s new PA comprises d&b audiotechnik KSL loudspeakers, GSL subwoofers and Y-Series cabinets for the requisite fills and delays, all driven by d&b D80 amplifiers. Although the configuration was adapted to suit the tour’s varying venue size, it was arranged as a main left-righ hang, with flown and ground stacked subwoofers.

“Hannah is super-sensitive to lots of sub and rear rejection on stage,” notes Sunderland. “So if there’s lots of bleed, it messes up her monitoring.” Systems engineer Craig Burns adds, “The GSL and the smaller KSL boxes have inbuilt drivers and cardioid capabilities that create low levels on stage, which gives us the best shot at keeping it as quiet as possible for her performance.”

At FOH, Rudd chose what he calls his “go-to” desk, a DiGiCo SD12 with Waves Sound Grid Extreme Server, joined by a Bricasti M7 Reverb. Rudd selected a Telefunken M81 microphone for Reid’s vocals after a process of elimination. “With the added sounds of their latest album, it’s now a very dynamic live set,” he notes. “There are some very quiet, delicate moments where it goes back to their roots – ethereal vocals and piano-led songs – as well as these very big electro moments when the room becomes a club. The mix has to bounce well between the two.”

From the stage, the crew had an SD Rack with a 32-bit card taking care of all the drums, keyboard, synthesisers, guitar, bass, and an acoustic guitar. All of the playback runs through an Optocore DD4MR-FX; an interface well suited for use with DiGiCo digital consoles. The support band – Eloise – employed a Brit Row-supplied SD11 at FOH and an SD Mini Rack sitting on the existing Optocore loop.

Brit Row also provided Shure Axient IEMs, Shure PSM 1000s and a DiGiCo SD11 for all of the band’s RF and monitoring needs; a choice that Sunderland – who pulls double duty as London Grammar’s long-standing monitor engineer – believes is the right choice for the band. “I think the key for good monitoring is addressing your artists’ needs,” he says. “It’s totally down to communication. The hardest thing is extracting information from someone who doesn’t use technical language and interpreting it. You need to hear their concerns and understand what will make things right for their show.”

The core audio crew was completed by Eighth Day Sound PA tech Grant Cropley, who notes the reality of the new hybrid era: “It’s still all very new to us, blending the companies, but it’s been really seamless. Plus, it’s great that the band and crew are so happy with the results.”

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