Live Sound

Supported By
ProSoundWeb
A perspective of Yoshi's in Oakland with the new system that incorporates Meyer Sound loudspeakers in place. (Photo Credit: Steve Jennings)

Meyer Sound Again The Choice At Legendary Yoshi’s Jazz Club In Oakland

After relying on a system utilizing Meyer Sound loudspeakers since first opening at its current location in 1997, recent audio upgrade is headed by UPQ-D1 and UPQ‑D2 loudspeakers for mains, and more.

Legendary jazz club Yoshi’s in Oakland, CA recently upgraded to a new system incorporating the latest technologies from Meyer Sound supplied by Advanced Systems Group (ASG), which is based nearby in Emeryville.

“Every artist that has come in here has been blown away,” says Yoshi’s production manager Marcel Quiroz. “Haley Reinhart’s engineer told me it was the best house system he’d ever heard, and the engineer for Dave Weckl said that hands down we now have the best-sounding room in the Bay Area. After his set, Freddy Jackson came up, gave me a hug, and said, ‘Thank you!’”

The previous system serving the 330-seat music venue, in place since the club opened at its current location in 1997, was also headed by Meyer Sound components in reinforcing the music of jazz, R&B, and pop luminaries for a quarter century. But a schedule of two shows six or seven nights a week, when combined with some changes in front-end processing, had dulled the luster of the system. These signs of aging, along with demand for stronger bass by contemporary R&B acts, prompted Quiroz and general manager Hal Campos to look at giving the venue an audio renovation.

Preliminary plans were put on hold during the Covid shutdowns, but when business rebounded, Yoshi’s gave the green light to move forward with a new system. Final designs were generated by Joe Mistretta of Meyer Sound Design Services working in collaboration with the ASG audio team and key accounts manager Tom Menrath.

The new Yoshi’s system comprises two UPQ-D1 wide coverage and two UPQ‑D2 narrow coverage full-size loudspeakers for the mains, supplemented by three ULTRA-X20 compact wide coverage loudspeakers for downfill and seven UP-4slim compact installation loudspeakers for frontfill. Enough audio power for contemporary R&B acts is now available through four 900-LFC low-frequency control elements, mounted in pairs on the walls. A Galileo GALAXY 816 Network Platform provides system drive and optimization, while artist foldback has been upgraded with the addition of 10 MJF-208 and two MJF-210 stage monitors.

“Down time is expensive for Yoshi’s as it costs not only the performance venue but their foundational restaurant business,” notes ASG’s Menrath, “so it was vital to get the new system up and running as fast as possible. Working with Brad Katz of Waveworks, we were able to get the old system out, the new one in, tuned, and back in action within nine days.”

Among the first to hear the new system were two of Yoshi’s founders and owners, namesake Yoshie Akiba and Kaz Kazamura. “When I turned it on, it literally brought tears to their eyes,” recalls Quiroz. “They had never heard this room sound so good.”

As a musician, Menrath says he found this relatively small project to be highly rewarding. “We do a lot of major projects with Meyer Sound, including huge installations for well-known Silicon Valley corporations, but Yoshi’s has been particularly satisfying,” he says. “This new system with the most advanced loudspeaker technologies is a stunning upgrade, and the artists who perform at Yoshi’s certainly deserve nothing but the best the industry can offer.”

Meyer Sound

Live Sound Top Stories