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Monitor engineer Travon Snipes at his DiGiCo Quantum7 console on Post Malone’s If Y’all Weren’t Here, I’d Be Crying World Tour.

Travon Snipes Delivers Mixes To Post Malone With DiGiCo Quantum

Whether on a Quantum5 or Quantum7 console, the artist’s monitor engineer stays in sync with front of house engineer Kevin Brown, who's also on a Quantum7 desk.

Post Malone. in the midst of his Live Nation-produced If Y’all Weren’t Here, I’d Be Crying Tour that’s moving on from North America to Latin America, Asia and Oceania, is receiving mixes from monitor engineer Travon Snipes working with a DiGiCo Quantum console, with front-of-house engineer also on a Quantum desk.

The Houston-based Snipes has worked with Malone since the summer of 2019. He’s also supported a long list of other artists such as Blackbear, Jaden Smith, Swae Lee, Rae Sremmurd, Neyo, Megan Thee Stallion, Fantasia, Brandy, and B2K. Regardless of who he’s mixing for at FOH or monitors, his two consoles of choice are the DiGiCo Quantum5 and Quantum7.

While the previous Twelve Carat Tour was a solo show with the artist performing to tracks, Malone’s latest run is a much bigge setup. “The previous tour was just Post on stage, featuring a combination of tracks, his vocals, an acoustic guitar, crowd mics, and talkbacks going into the mix,” Snipes explains. “I only needed to provide six or seven in-ear mixes each night depending on guests. On the current run, however, we have 10 musicians on stage, including Post. There’s a four-piece string section, keys, bass, drummer, two guitars, and the man himself, who is playing acoustic and electric guitars.

“We still have all of our original 16-track inputs as well as some additional triggers implemented, so it’s a much more complex arrangement. I’m running 16 stereo in-ear mixes, and there are no wedges, but I do have subs on stage for adding some low-end feel.”

Earlier this year, Snipes found himself most frequently seated behind a Clair Global-supplied Quantum5 desk, which has since been swapped out with a Quantum7 for the new run. “I really love the layout of the Quantum5 and have been using it for a long time, so, for me, the muscle memory of how I have everything laid out for monitors helps me be as fast and efficient as possible,” he says. “On the current tour, having a full band obviously changes things, so I’ve made the switch to the Quantum7. With so many IEMs, I wanted quick access to all of my mixes while still having my control groups right underneath. I did bring parts of my Quantum5 file over to the Quantum7, but I pretty much had to build most of it from scratch since we have never had a band out with Post.”

In the process of transitioning between consoles and tours, Snipes reports that the crew also added “another SD-Rack and a lot more RF, mics, and outboard gear, which I use a fair amount of to get the sound that I’m looking for. That being said, I use quite of bit of onboard Quantum processing as well, such as the Mustard EQ and compressors on multiple sources. I love the DiGiTubes, they make everything sound more ‘real’ and full, plus the audio enhancers give me some of the frequencies that I feel like I’m missing. I also love the console’s effects and use a number of reverbs to create space in the mixes.”

Out at front of house, Kevin Brown is mixing Malone’s show on a matching Quantum7 console. “Kevin and I are sharing two SD-Racks, with a combination of AES I/O and 32-bit cards, and we have close to 90 inputs,” Snipes notes. “Having DiGiCos at both ends of the Optocore definitely helps our workflow with communication and patching. If I don’t have an input in monitor world, he doesn’t either at FOH, so it allows us to be on the same page at all times. Also, there’s no need for a split with us sharing racks. Both desks have been playing very well together and the reliability and sound quality have been phenomenal.”

With Malone’s Latin American, Asian, and Oceanian tours all on the immediate horizon, Snipes states the he is thankful that his Quantum-range console will be going with him wherever he heads off to next. “I’ve definitely enjoyed mixing on the Quantum7. The main challenge that DiGiCo helps me overcome is being able to customize my layout to exactly what I need. It feels like this desk was made just for me, having outputs and inputs next to each other. Also, macros are a huge part of my workflow, and I have a ton of them, so being able to program every little detail makes a massive difference. For me, there’s no other console brand out there that can do what DiGiCo does.”

DiGiCo
Clair Global

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