Grace Immanuel Bible Church Upgrades With Allen & Heath dLive

Located in Jupiter, Florida, Grace Immanuel Bible Church holds two identical worship services each Sunday with a smaller service Sunday evening in its 650-seat sanctuary. Services feature a blend of traditional and modern worship music for all ages and cultures with several vocalists and a variety of instruments and percussion.

To support its worship services and special programs, Grace Immanuel recently acquired an Allen & Heath S7000 digital mixer with a DM64 MixRack and DX32 Expander.

Dan Kreider, Grace Immanuel’s minister of Music, says the church’s special services may include a 12-voice mixed ensemble and an orchestra resulting in as many as 78 sources. To accommodate this quantity of inputs and provide separate mixes for its sound reinforcement system, in-ear stage monitors and live broadcast, the church had been cascading a pair of older, 32-channel digital mixers. However, this setup was complex to operate, the channel count was insufficient and the broadcast feed had “hit its limits”.

As part of their research into new mixers, Grace Immanuel contacted Kenny Bergle at Sweetwater who recommended Allen & Heath’s dLive S7000. “We discussed several competing mixers,” Bergle said. “But I recommended the dLive because we could configure it with the channel count they needed and it had plenty of flexibility along with Allen & Heath’s great sound quality.”

Grace Immanuel’s mix booth is home to their new dLive S7000 Surface and the DX32 Expander for the church’s 16 wireless microphones. The DX64 MixRack, near the stage, receives wired microphones and instruments and connects to the S7000 with CAT5 cables using Allen & Heath’s GigaACE dual redundant network link.

Kreider says he and his tech team were able to do most of the dLive setup themselves but appreciated the training provided by local Allen & Heath rep firm, Mainline Marketing. “The dLive was easy to learn,” he says. “And we love the color-coded channels, mute groups and recallable scenes which make it easy for volunteers to log in and mix simple services like weddings.”

The dLive’s versatile DSP allowed the church to eliminate most of their rack-mounted effects. Kreider says they’re using compression on selected vocals along with “careful EQ which helps us find each place in the mix.” Each service is recorded and broadcasted over internet radio and the church’s website via the dLive’s Dante feed. Kreider saves the entire dLive configuration to a USB thumb drive for backup.

For its special services and programs, the church sets up multiple dLive layers and uses them with scene recall to provide extra flexibility while maintaining a simple work flow. “We live on the touch screens,” said Kreider. “And we really customize the mixer. The dLive has lots of flexibility but mixing is far simpler than it’s ever been for us.” He added, “We plugged in the dLive on the first day and tested the pulpit mic. One of our tech crew walked in and asked, ‘What is that?’ We’d never heard it sound that good.”

Allen & Heath
American Music & Sound

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