Grim Audière
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 375
Loc: UK and France
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Top tips for live rigs
#26469 - 03/10/04 02:14 PM
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Just wondering for us rank amateurs whether there are some top tips out there from the
more experienced. Most of the stuff I do (did) is in churches and schools, but
some examples I canthink of from amateur/mobile rigs: - A
constant sound is better than an improving sound - resist the temptation to fiddle and try
and improve things during a song.
- If (when) the singers complain about the
monitor mix, go up there and hear what they hear. It may be something else needs to be
turned down rather than the sngers turned up. Just using headphones FOH may not pick this
up.
- Walk around the auditorium as the desk, even if it's in the middle of FOH,
may not be representative of the whole room.
Are there more technical tips out
there?
-------------------- Andrew
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PWGLE
Joined: 04/05/03
Posts: 3439
Loc: UK - Cardiff/Bath
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#26575 - 03/10/04 06:47 PM
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*** do this while you are setting up, and no one is in your venue!!!  ***
I always whack the faders at +10,
Then tweak the gain till feedback is just
starting.
Knock the gain back enough to theres no feedback. (only a little)
Then put the channel back to 0, this means if you need to get more level you can, and
you know that you wont get feedback
Some desks have this built into there PFL function I think.
-------------------- P.I.G.L.E.T - where is polly?
Edited by Giant with Laser Eyes (03/10/04 06:48 PM)
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Grim Audière
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 375
Loc: UK and France
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#28190 - 06/10/04 03:33 AM
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Not many tips round here ...
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fletch
Joined: 03/10/04
Posts: 7
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#28215 - 06/10/04 07:32 AM
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My experience is that alot of vocalists dont know how to express what it is that they
need, so they say they need more or put up with it and tell someone else that its crap...
going on stage and hearing what they hear is a good idea (during sound check!). If you havent been given a sound check you can't be expected to get it right on stage,
you've got to look after FOH. I put only vocals in the vox mons unless its a
massive stage. I bought some amp stands for keys and guitars, and point the
cabs at the players heads, that generaly keeps their level below 10 and it doesn't need to
be as loud through FOH so more headroom for vox. The larger/est sound companies
have FOH in mono, that way all the audience will hear similar levels from across the
stage. The above is before 9am so take it with a pinch of salt...
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Guy Johnson
Joined: 02/05/03
Posts: 3983
Loc: Pembrokeshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: fletch]
#28807 - 06/10/04 07:13 PM
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Try to get to the Venue, and/or set-up the PA early - this allows you time to voice the PA
and Wedges. Voicing is saying things like 'One, Two', or in my case, 'Quite The Thing'.
After a bit of practice, you get to know the sound of nasty hotspots in systems (Use an
SM58, they work, and are everywhere a known quantity).
Check for uneven
bass-responses. A tip for helping this is to turn down one of the bass-bins, so it just
fills in the bass near it's stack.
When voicing wedges from the FOH desk, turn
them towards you: It's much easier, this way!
Try to set the stage up for the
band: Vocal and instrument mics in the right places, and make sure they can go loud, by
'ringing-out' the PA and monitors. Saves a lot of time, and deafened musos. Of course, on
lots of occasions, there is no time for all of the above.
When the band arrive,
offer them tea/coffee, if possible.
Be polite, and look interested. Always a
good start. You may lose it later, with some people - try not to show it. Only Chefs are
allowed to throw tantrums! Mind you, I have - just three, but not any more. If you
do get too stressed, pop out for ten minutes.
Make sure there is
coverage near the stage - A lot of engineers face the stacks straight down the room. This
means: A) Crap coverage near the stage, B) Terrible slap-back for the band, and C) nasty
reflections off the side-walls.
Test the sound all over - and make sure it's
not too boomy at the rear.
Listen to the stage sound when the band are playing,
if you are doing monitors as well.
If the band are having problems hearing
themselves, turn down the backline/drums(!!!) and/or pull down the PA 3 to 5 dB's.
Have an SM 57 Beta A ready for weak vocalists. If you get just one mic . . .
Keep well clear of ludicrously large bands with loads of miked instruments, like
Sax, Tabla, Congas, 5 vocalists . . . If you do badly, it's depressing and embarrassing -
and if you do well, you get to do lots of them, and it's always bad for the
heart!
Try to improve the sound, but carefully.
If there is a Very
Annoying Manager, or Very Annoying Band, do the best you can. Be polite, stick to the
letter of the contract . . . and refuse to do the band again. Probably best not to tell
the band, but tell the venue or the promoter.
If you do loads of PA hires,
join the MU, if you're not already a member. It helps in getting paid in some dodgy
places.
Last but not least, a comprehensive toolkit.
Guy
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Grim Audière
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 375
Loc: UK and France
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Guy Johnson]
#28872 - 06/10/04 09:03 PM
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Quote Guy Johnson:
...
Last but not least, a comprehensive toolkit.
Hey Guy - lots of good tips.
Amen to the toolkit. I have a
toolbox that I carry that has basic tools, a couple of spare DI boxes, a cable tester and
lots of "odd" leads to convert various plug types such as XLR to TRS or split signals etc.
It's saved my bacon on no end of occasions. The latest I remember was when someone
announced they needed to plug a video projector through the PA 10 minuts after the event
started. By crawling around carefully, I managed it without most of the congregation (for
t'was a church event) noticing.
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Guy Johnson
Joined: 02/05/03
Posts: 3983
Loc: Pembrokeshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#29253 - 07/10/04 11:49 AM
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Hi, yes - millions of various adaptors - everything to everything else; ie XLR to jacks
(ts and trs), XLR pin 2 & 3 reverse, splitters and sex-changers, various phono - phono,
phono/jack & mini-jack all very useful.
G
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Guy Johnson
Joined: 02/05/03
Posts: 3983
Loc: Pembrokeshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#34148 - 14/10/04 08:39 AM
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I forgot the most important one - wear earplugs when it's loud - you want to continue to
hear, don't you? Just think of how many deaf engineers there are.
-------------------- PA stuff on FB
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#37431 - 18/10/04 11:00 PM
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its the little things that make your job easier/save your arse/make the band remember you
for the right reasons. there's a lot of little things. a few that come to mind are:
Look after your mics and DI boxes, get a box with padded gaps. this will also show
you if all are back after the show.
make all your own mic and stage leads.
learn to solder well and buy good flexible cable, use Neuitrik XLRs and Jacks. You'll
build up a collection of quality, reliable cables at a relatively inexpensive price. Then,
look after the buggers, coil them without any twist and fix them with lx tape or velcro
wraps, not knots. They'll be more reliable, last much longer (some of mine are nearly ten
years old and have probably done nearly a thousand gigs) and they'll be easy to uncoil at
the next gig where you might be in a screaming hurry. CABLES ARE THE WEAK LINK IN A PA
SETUP, PROTECT THEM, LOOK AFTER THEM.
invest in some canford 4-way, 8 way...
jacketed multicore and make some stage tails, 5,10, 20m long whatever, tidies up those
long cross stage runs and makes setup quicker. A dedicated 12way stage core (with box and
short set of XLRs is best) for the drums and nearby stuff will make your stage cabling
sooo much tidier and safer. might cost you a couple of hundred quid to make a good one,
but you'll never regret it.
always carry a box of adapters (jack-phono esp) and
adapter leads (jack-XLR, both genders and bal and unbal; XLR gender changers; XLR
Y-splits; 1m XLR patches; 1m jack patches; jack and XLR insert leads; a Z-lead)
Other items in a get the band out of poo kit: Gaffa, lx (ins) tape, IEC "kettle" leads,
jack speaker lead for guitar stacks, spare RCD plug for stage backline supply, box of
plectrums (i pick them up off stage at the end of gigs an put them in a tin -saves a dozen
guitarists a year), guitar leads, guitar strap, guitar strings (why are guitarists so
crap?), any leftover drumsticks too, a drum key, smattering of 20mm fuses, 13A mains
fuses, 13amp plugs... .
my most common thank-you is for "a great stage sound"
take a bit of care with it if you can, get good compression drivers with horns in all your
wedges and get good crossovers fitted, fire them with at least 500W per channel amps for
rock and roll (you need headroom for monitors!), use 1/3 octave graphics (even the
behringer £100 quid jobbies will do wonders) get on stage during soundcheck and listen at
each performers position (not just to sort problems out -this impresses band members) even
if you are mixing mons from FOH, try to run at least 4 mixes (for four musos or more) it
makes your job easier, than less mixes, at satisfying everybody. Learn about mic polar
responses and think about mic to wedge positioning.
above all, be polite and
honest, listen, try to help. many problems are due to communication. admit if you've
cocked up. mutual respect and a sense of humour will help as much as technical solutions
at a difficult gig.
keep a towel next to your console. always.
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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John G
member
Joined: 13/11/01
Posts: 290
Loc: UK
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Nathan]
#46567 - 07/11/04 03:24 PM
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Quote Nathan:
admit if you've
cocked up
YES!!!! Admit you have cocked
up and learn from your mistakes. There is NOTHING worse than working with someone who
tries to blame others for their mistakes!
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neilneil
member
Joined: 22/12/03
Posts: 92
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#112204 - 08/04/05 03:41 PM
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i keep all my leads in a ziplock bag each, it keeps them tidy, dry and fresh!
Sometimes when i get in a cocky 'im brilliant' lead singer and they keep asking for more
of themself in the monitors but i cant send them anymore (cos i already checked at which
point the monitors will feedback before they came in), sometimes its better to look down
at the desk and pretend to turn them up than have them complain about how crap the pa is.
8 times out of 10 you will get them saying "just a little more...perfect"
neil
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griffter
Joined: 26/03/05
Posts: 43
Loc: London
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#112413 - 09/04/05 12:31 AM
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As we have just done today.. setup your monitor desk next to catering..
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legitmik
member
Joined: 23/01/04
Posts: 278
Loc: location, location...
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#112955 - 10/04/05 04:55 PM
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if things are getting out of hand in monitor world, (everybody is asking to get everything
turned up in the wedges to stupid volumes), I've found if you stop the soundcheck for a
few minutes, ie turn off the wedges, under the pretence of having to check something/take
a leak etc, when you turn the mixes back on, have them a lower volume. The performers ears
will have reset and miraclously they can now hear everything at a lower volume in the
wedges. This approach has gotten me out of the 'everything louder than everything else'
problem more times than I would care to admit.
-------------------- "Your ideas are bigger than your budget..."
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Guy Johnson
Joined: 02/05/03
Posts: 3983
Loc: Pembrokeshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#113149 - 10/04/05 10:38 PM
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That's brilliant. I'll give it a go, next time. Nice! G
-------------------- PA stuff on FB
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neilneil
member
Joined: 22/12/03
Posts: 92
Loc: Glasgow
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: legitmik]
#114186 - 12/04/05 05:16 PM
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Genius sound guys 1, musicians 0
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Pbassred
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 111
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#125934 - 07/05/05 06:42 AM
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Quote:
The larger/est sound
companies have FOH in mono
I once said
this on this very forum and got ripped to shreds. I was only talking about subs
(which have almost no sterio image). I guess some people just like to argue!
My
tips would be: to insist that everyone put their amps on crates so that it points at
their own heads. (Musicians need to hear themselves most.) It keeps the stage level down
so you can mix FOH without the backline interfering.
Nothing sounds worse
that a distorting FOH amp. Better quiet than crap.
Oh yeah ...... and little
red lights usually mean turn it down. Big red lights mean turn it the hell down!
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...................
member
Joined: 23/02/04
Posts: 781
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#126852 - 09/05/05 02:00 PM
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Don't Panic!
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IvanSC
Joined: 08/03/05
Posts: 7762
Loc: UK France & USA depending on t...
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#126997 - 09/05/05 06:25 PM
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Further to the sticking amps on crates thang, I once persuaded a guitarist with TWO Fender
Twins pointing straight at his trouser legs to turn them round and angle them back on
their little chrome leg thingies till they were pointing one at each ear - he turned down
but also reckoned it was the best he had ever heard himself! Deaf bastard! Still, it
helped the FOH mix no end.....
Oh and how come you can put accents on where
they should be, Grimaudiere? Clavier francais? Is there a magic button in Windows that
lets you swap easily between keymaps? I know NOTHING about Windoze...
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bill borez
Joined: 16/05/05
Posts: 22
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#129808 - 16/05/05 05:59 PM
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I'm the in house at LSE ( Holborn London ) among other things , there are some good tips
here . Here's some more tips for engineers walking into a venue with an in-house engineer
..
1 . Listen to him , it's his rig and he's used it a thousand more time's
then you have ...
2. Don't walk in like some prick did the other week , and
reset ( flatten ) all the 31bar graphs ( all 8 in my case ) ... These have been set up
over time with care to remove the feedback frequencies ,by the way the band's all sounded
crap that night coz of his stupidity ...Thanx fool !!!!
3. Don't think that
your better than the in house guy , he has the job cos he's good , and not coz he just
happened to be in the right place at the right time ... + he has the ability ( if he
want's ) to make your life hell without you even knowing it's him ... Bad attitudes No No
No !!! , leave em outside please ...
4. Work with him not against him !!! ,
it's only a job , not an ego battle people !!
5. if your having a problem ,
tell him , we love problem solving , it's our job ... We won't think any less of you
...
6. If you have lots of band's on in one night , try to share a bit of
backline it's so much easier , sounds better , and it will run a lot smoother ... try
changing over six sets of drums in four hour's , get the picture ...
7. Don't
walk in , hand the in-house guy a list of channels and walk away , his blood will boil ,
he's getting paid , your getting paid , do some fricken work yourself !!!! , I personally
hate this ...
8. just coz you've brought your own drum or instrument mics you
don't HAVE to use them , vocal mics fair enough but all other's " leave it out mate !!! "
, two set of drum mics need two sets of XLR's and twice the channel's unless you hot swap
, which is a knightmare on a dark stage ...
9. Watch how he sets up the desk ,
it's done like that for a reason ... Even if it's unortodox , sometime's I put vocal's on
the first four channel's ( you rarely get more than four vocal's ) ,as I have no idea what
the band line up's are till they turn up ( sometimes late ) , this lets me add channel's
without leaving the vocals in the middle of say two guitar's a sax and a keyboard (
confusing ) !!
10. Your not God , don't strut around like you are !!!
11. Don't get too pissed , it show's believe me I know ...
And that's
about the size of that ...
Have fun , and love your job , your lucky !!
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Guy Johnson
Joined: 02/05/03
Posts: 3983
Loc: Pembrokeshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#129839 - 16/05/05 06:44 PM
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Good points, but I'd take some issue with the EQ point: 1) Often it's not the
proper house ones you are left with, it's what's left after a gig . . . sometimes OK,
sometimes not. Assuming it's the proper house set-up . . . after hearing the system &
monitors, I may well want to alter something. 2) The house and mon eq's should
all be easily re-set, as a good starting- point. A good way is a sealed eq, with a
flat user eq next in the chain. G
-------------------- PA stuff on FB
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3779
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Guy Johnson]
#129878 - 16/05/05 08:06 PM
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>A good way is a sealed eq, with a flat user eq next in the chain.
Great Idea,
and I have found its a good idea to take it a step further, if you are doing a tour make
sure you have your own EQ for this purpose that you can flatline at every venue and work
from there.
And yea listen to the InHouse Engineer, most of the time they know
more about that system than you do, and can give good advice as to what has or has not
worked in that space.
Now as a question, over here in the US most of what I do
is live theater in small to mid-sized venues. As a result there is almost never a shared
ground(I have found one in this entire tour I am currently on thus far;) between FOH and
Backstage for sound to use to help prevent groundloops. I am curious what people have
done to get around this other than lifting the ground on any equipment mains backstage(I
detest doing this, have had to on occasion but still hate it) or lifting the ground on
every channel sent to the FOH(Unfortunatly money limits this or time does, or the fact its
not my equipment(Rental) to screw with and wire it in). So I am curious as to other
solutions that people use.
Oh one other tip, take a moment to observe people
and know who can and cant coil cable. I have lost more time disentangling badly or just
not coiled cable that in-house crews had one bad person on their crew that didnt know how
to do it. Take a moment to either teach these people how to do so, or make sure they
arent striking your cable at the end of the night.
Seablade
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Michael Harrison
active member
Joined: 10/09/02
Posts: 1865
Loc: Glasgow, Scotland
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#129969 - 17/05/05 01:17 AM
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A lot of great tips here - thanks guys!  I do a lot of live sound for small venues, and 'student' & 'indie' club nights - some of
the techinques for getting a good sound can differ from the norm, used in larger theatres
and the like. A club I regularly engineer in has a ridiculously small stage,
which can make seperation/feedback avoidance tricky. Here's some thoughts:  Know your
mics' characteristics & polar patterns. Make sure their null points are pointing at the
monitor wedges, for max. feedback rejection. Sounds rudimentary? How often do
you see an SM58 on a boom, with the mic horizontal in front of the singer's mouth? An SM58
is cardioid and has its null at 180 degrees - if horizontal, the null cant possibly
be facing the monitor! A horizontal mic will work better with a Beta 57 or Beta 58 - these
are hypercardioid, and have nulls at 120 & 240 degrees, or threrabouts. Educate
the singers - I have a chat with them beforehand & tell them "Keep the tail (cable) of
the mic pointing towards the monitor - it's less likely to feed back, and I can give you
loads more monitoring level". Normally, they appreciate this and trust you a whole lot
more.  Mixing desk: Start with the LPF (sub filter) switched in on all channels. Only
switch it out again if the instrument actually needs reinforcement down below
100Hz. This leads to a cleaner sound overall, and conserves some amp power...  Use
compressors on channels to prevent level overshoots; avoid using makeup gain, as this only
increases the chances of feedback.  Cut, rather
than boost with EQ. I normally start with cutting a bit of the lowest band, to compensate
excessive proximity effect. Following that, a sweep through the lower-mid band to kill any
resonances or boxiness... increases clarity no end.  Avoid using
loads of reverb. It generally doesn't help, and it can be suprising how good a 'dry' (or
dry-ish) mix can sound, especially in a small venue. That's all for now - hard
to add much as so many good tips have been given already. Mike
-------------------- www.ehsound.co.uk - Live Sound Hire & Services
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bill borez
Joined: 16/05/05
Posts: 22
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#129983 - 17/05/05 03:14 AM
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Yep I like the idea of the sealed eq thing , I'm gonna do that on our next budget revue
!!!
Thanks ...
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3779
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>Mixing desk: Start with the LPF (sub filter) switched in on all channels. Only switch it
out again if the instrument actually needs reinforcement down below 100Hz. This leads to a
cleaner sound overall, and conserves some amp power...
Err I admit to having
several drinks already, but wouldnt that be a high pass filter you are referring to?
>Use compressors on channels to prevent level overshoots; avoid using makeup gain,
as this only increases the chances of feedback.
Actually I do use makeup gain,
especially on certain instruments depending on the style of music. Rock music for
instance at times I will.
Also on a related note, for both people coming into
venues and for venue's, make sure you put a limiter on your installed system. And if you
are coming into a venue, make sure you know if there is or not, and if there isnt, make
sure you dont blow out their system. I have already come across two venues thus far
without a SE on site that dont have limiters on their system that have had their systems
blown out by various groups.
>Cut, rather than boost with EQ. I normally start
with cutting a bit of the lowest band, to compensate excessive proximity effect. Following
that, a sweep through the lower-mid band to kill any resonances or boxiness... increases
clarity no end.
Heh I still gotta get used to doing this, but it is very
useful. Though on another related question, do most of you EQ during Soundcheck while
you are setting your gain or do you wait till afterwards?
Seablade
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Michael Harrison
active member
Joined: 10/09/02
Posts: 1865
Loc: Glasgow, Scotland
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: seablade]
#129997 - 17/05/05 05:56 AM
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Quote:
>Mixing desk: Start with
the LPF (sub filter) switched in on all channels. Only switch it out again if the
instrument actually needs reinforcement down below 100Hz. This leads to a cleaner sound
overall, and conserves some amp power...
Err I admit to having several drinks
already, but wouldnt that be a high pass filter you are referring to?
Erm... yup. Well spotted! 
After reading another thread where the exact opposite of this type of confusion
happened, I should have spotted this myself!! 
To clarify, High-Pass-Filters (Lo-Cut) was what I meant!!
Cheers,
Mike.
-------------------- www.ehsound.co.uk - Live Sound Hire & Services
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James Perrett
Joined: 10/09/01
Posts: 9709
Loc: The wilds of Hampshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: bill borez]
#130061 - 17/05/05 09:54 AM
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Bill has some good points but I do get the impression that some of his problems might be
down to his attitude. Most student union systems seem to be run by people with little
experience outside their own venue. They might have a perfectly workable way of doing
things but if they're doing it in a completely different way to the rest of the industry
then a visiting engineer isn't going to be impressed. I've often met student engineers who
think that they know everything when they don't - which makes for a very difficult night.
Bill, if you are finding that you are constantly battling with visiting engineers then
maybe you need to have a good think about what you are doing differently. Maybe you need
to spend time as an assistant on a large tour or something.
Your comment
about channel assignments is one thing I would take issue with. I just wouldn't be happy
if the engineer insisted on a strange channel layout. There is an industry convention for
this and there is absolutely no reason to change unless you know that certain instruments
will be missing. This convention extends not only to most of the live sound business but
also to the recording business.
I'm also very suspicious of graphic eq's -
especially if there are any boost settings or more than a few dB's of cut on any channel.
If I saw a graphic eq setting that didn't look sensible then I'd be tempted to flatten it
too. Monitor graphic eq settings won't be constant either because they totally depend on
the stage layout and the distances between mics and monitors.
Cheers.
James.
-------------------- JRP Music - Audio Mastering and Restoration.
http://www.jrpmusic.net
Edited by James Perrett (17/05/05 10:19 AM)
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Arse Bandit
Joined: 17/09/01
Posts: 2795
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#130086 - 17/05/05 10:58 AM
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Here's a tech tip:
When you're setting up, walk round the stage with a 58 (or
whatever you're using on vocals) on a long lead and wave it near each wedge and spot the
feedback frequency, notch out a bit on a graphic (nice to have a monitor mix for each
wedge but not always possible), up the gain and repeat. Eventually you'll aim to have the
monitors as loud as the environment they're in will let them get away with. It's much
faster if there's two of you, one with the mic and one at the knobs. It's also much
faster if you learn to spot the frequencies as soon as you hear them.
And a
'dealing with it' tip:
There's a list of people who need to be made happy by
your job today.
The top of the list:
The person who will pay you at
the end of the night (whoever that is) The venue owner The band(s) Their
manager(s) The non-sound engineering staff in the venue The audience
And the bottom of the list:
You.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3779
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: James Perrett]
#130090 - 17/05/05 11:01 AM
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>Your comment about channel assignments is one thing I would take issue with. I just
wouldn't be happy if the engineer insisted on a strange channel layout. There is an
industry convention for this and there is absolutely no reason to change unless you know
that certain instruments will be missing. This convention extends not only to most of the
live sound business but also to the recording business.
I am a little curious
on this, I have never been aware of a standard in the industry myself, but as I have said
I usually am doing live theater so maybe I just havent run across it yet. Typically there
isnt much variation in our setups, vocals, then band or playback, and usually the exact
layout depends on the engineer running the show. The only times I have ever had to worry
about the layout in a house was when they had their own permananatly installed system for
recording shows, or for cry room monitors and such, and usually that only affects a couple
of outputs and inputs, nothing to major in our work due to the lack of monitor sends we
need on stage usually with a canned setsup, and if we were touring with a large orchestra
then typically we will use our own board anyways so it is a moot point, at most we would
then just drop a line(Or multiple depending on the venue) into theirs, set up their board
once and walk away, running everything from ours.
So really I am curious what
you consider the industry standard channel layout for you all.
>I'm also very
suspicious of graphic eq's - especially if there are any boost settings or more than a few
dB's of cut on any channel. If I saw a graphic eq setting that didn't look sensible then
I'd be tempted to flatten it too. Monitor graphic eq settings won't be constant either
because they totally depend on the stage layout and the distances between mics and
monitors.
Heh depends on who sets up the graphic EQ. Some people I know for
instance max everytyhing out and then cut from the max. Still should be within a certain
range of everything else though. Usually I dont have to boost or cut much, till I got on
the tour I am currently on(Small children's show tour) and found that their system I have
to severly cut the midrange and severly boost the low end to get a decent sound. Of
course I didnt spec out their system they are renting either;)
Seablade
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jimdrake
new member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 602
Loc: wherever
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#130142 - 17/05/05 12:54 PM
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Industry standard channel list? Well, this is what I regularly see:
Kick Snare Top Snare Bottom Hi-Hat Tom 1 Tom 2 Tom 3 Tom 4 O/H Stage Right O/H Stage Left SPARE Bass Guitars(s) SPARE Electric/Acoustic Guitar(s) SPARE Other Stuff (keys, horns,
etc.) SPARE Vocals
With regard to the visiting/house engineer thing.
The house engineer should provide whatever the the visiting engineer wants. The house
engineer should only intervene or impose their views when the visiting engineer is
clipping amps or physically damaging anything.
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legitmik
member
Joined: 23/01/04
Posts: 278
Loc: location, location...
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: jimdrake]
#130439 - 17/05/05 11:59 PM
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having done both in-house and visiting jobs, I always try to contact the venue/band in
advance (phone/email) to see what they have/want. Some places won't have the stuff you
need, so bring it with you. If a touring engineer lands with a spec in his hand, it
cuts down the time til soundcheck as you can start wiring (you know your own stage the
best) and he/she can be organising the backline/desk-outboard stuff. I totally
agree that the house eng shouldn't offer an opinion until asked, and should only step in
if the system is being run dangerously. Common courtesy really. And that channel list is
fairly much the norm. I remember being told it was so that the channels you move
the most, (vocals, guitars usually) are close to the master section of the desk and
hopefully in the middle of the pa stacks. And if you think something is wrong with
the PA, let the house know. Having been fobbed off by an experienced in-house after
telling him his PA was out of phase, he realised mid-gig and swopped the phase there and
then. I was not best pleased to say the least, nor was the front few rows who suddenly had
a tad more bass than they expected...
-------------------- "Your ideas are bigger than your budget..."
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adrian_k
Joined: 30/01/03
Posts: 1741
Loc: Gloucestershire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#130480 - 18/05/05 07:13 AM
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I don't have any top tech tips, I'm learning as I go, but a couple of organisational tips
for what they are worth - don't believe anything you are told about the gig (assume the
worst), and let the customer know you're going to need a break at some point.
I did an open mic thing a while ago that they told me would be "a couple of acoustic
guitars on set for people to come and play". They also said they had mics and stands, just
needed a small rig. Lucky I bought all my stuff, because the place was bare when I got
there. Then over the course of 5 non-stop hours I had to set up on the fly:
- an
African drumming band
- a cellist with special feedback-inducing transducer that he
insisted on using
- some electric guitarists who turned up with PODs but no cables
at all.
- a digeridoo player + bass/guitar/hand drums
- various fingerstyle
singer/songwriters with very quiet acoustic guitars that needed mic'ing up (feedback  )
Didn't want to leave my stuff unattended because it was all so unpredictable.
Hardly had time to have a pee, and was absolutely starving and shagged out at the end.
Next time (if!) I want a committed running order with breaks scheduled
in.....
Edited by dunch (18/05/05 07:14 AM)
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James Perrett
Joined: 10/09/01
Posts: 9709
Loc: The wilds of Hampshire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: seablade]
#130553 - 18/05/05 10:39 AM
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Quote seablade:
Heh
depends on who sets up the graphic EQ. Some people I know for instance max everytyhing
out and then cut from the max. Still should be within a certain range of everything else
though. Usually I dont have to boost or cut much, till I got on the tour I am currently
on(Small children's show tour) and found that their system I have to severly cut the
midrange and severly boost the low end to get a decent sound. Of course I didnt spec out
their system they are renting either;)
Seablade
Some graphic equalisers only have cut
settings - that makes sense to me because I rarely boost any bands. If someone had maxed
out a normal graphic equaliser rather than a cut only equaliser then I'd know instantly
that they hadn't a clue and would reset the graphic. You get all kinds of amplitude and
phase anomalies with graphic eq's when the controls aren't in the zero position.
There's one venue around here that always has their graphic with everything on
full cut. The real problem is that they've got their gain structure completely wrong. I
always set it up properly when the band I work with is playing and, to me, that night
sounds better than the other nights I go there.
As far as channel assignments
go - Jim has got it spot on. For a gig or recording session with real drums that's the way
to go.
Cheers.
James.
-------------------- JRP Music - Audio Mastering and Restoration.
http://www.jrpmusic.net
Edited by James Perrett (18/05/05 10:41 AM)
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Nathan
Joined: 13/09/04
Posts: 1872
Loc: lincolnshire government experi...
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#131000 - 19/05/05 11:57 AM
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for Dunch... sometimes you have to be a tad assertive. remember you have
control of the desk, if you put a CD on and mute everything else then there WILL be a
short break while you get a drink/ eat sandwiches/ have a pee. people sometimes
forget you aren't an automaton yet you need to be there for things to happen. (sound just
"happens" doesn't it?) I know what you mean about not wanting to leave your
gear unattended tho. Five hours? -you part-timer! i dream of gigs that short!!
-------------------- planet nine
lincoln, uk.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3779
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: James Perrett]
#131334 - 19/05/05 10:08 PM
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>Some graphic equalisers only have cut settings - that makes sense to me because I rarely
boost any bands. If someone had maxed out a normal graphic equaliser rather than a cut
only equaliser then I'd know instantly that they hadn't a clue and would reset the
graphic. You get all kinds of amplitude and phase anomalies with graphic eq's when the
controls aren't in the zero position.
Now I am curious, why does this throw in
phase problems? Amplitude I am guessing is just from the bandwidth of each filter not
lining up perfectly with the one beside it and having them all resting anywhere but at
zero will cause problems, but then why wouldnt this cause a problem with just a normal
boost or cut of 3-6 dB over several bands? Am I just missing something completly obvious
there?(By the way inc ase it isnt obvious I have never tried the max everything/cut method
with good success myself, part of the reason why I am curious;)
Also going back
to a discussion going on in this thread earlier, about the house engineer... Heh I
just(Yesterday) ran a show in a venue, first thing that happened when I walked into the
venue is the house engineer gave me an ultimatum of lifting the electrical mains ground on
all my equipment or I couldnt use the venue sound system because of the ground loop hum he
knew it would cause....
While I can understand the concern about the hum, and
wanting to avoid a ground loop, I also understand that it is my show, and the sound of it
is both my responsibility and my descision. Not even having heard to see if a ground loop
would be a problem yet being told I had to endanger my equipment for that(Which wouldnt
endanger his in any way without some REALLY bad wiring in his venue which shouldnt be run
off of) is a bit much, so yes there are definitly limits that you should listen to a house
engineer in my opinion. When I suggested letting me hear it before I did anything and see
if it was a problem he refused and went to go get an 3 to 2 prong adapter for me. Similar
story when I suggested isolating the grounds on the audio cables that would be connecting
our equipment(All 2 of them). Funny thing is after I was done wiring my stuff, there
wasnt a single problem from a ground loop, although his system was so cruddy that the hiss
coming out of his speakers practicly overpowered any volume coming from the actors on
stage if I wasnt blaring them through the cluster.
Ok my little related
story/vent.
Seablade
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jimdrake
new member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 602
Loc: wherever
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: seablade]
#131370 - 19/05/05 11:24 PM
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Quote:
Now I am curious, why
does this throw in phase problems?
Filters alter the phase of a signal as much as they alter the amplitude. That's
just life.
With regards to the ground loop issue. Lifting the ground on the
mains connection is not the way to fix hum problems. Are you in the USA? I seem to hear
many more horror stories from the other side of the pond.
I would refuse to
work in a venue where any equipment was not properly grounded. To do so would most likely
endanger the lives of any musicians on stage as well as my own.
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seablade
Joined: 21/11/04
Posts: 3779
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: jimdrake]
#131397 - 20/05/05 04:09 AM
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>Filters alter the phase of a signal as much as they alter the amplitude. That's just
life.
Probably getting more into the electrical theory than most people need to
know here;) What causes them to affect the phase so much? Is it just a latency in the
electronics?
>With regards to the ground loop issue. Lifting the ground on the
mains connection is not the way to fix hum problems. Are you in the USA? I seem to hear
many more horror stories from the other side of the pond.
I completly agree on
the lifting the mains ground issue, and yep good guess on the location, in the US doing a
tour.
I have lifted the mains ground on certain equipment at times, for example
my wireless mic rack with a good surge supressor on it, but I do my best to avoid it, and
have only done it once in the past, good grief dont know how long, several years. And
that was because I didnt have any other choice to get rid of a hum that was loud enough to
distrub the entire show. Still not happy about it though. Thankfully no musicians
physically wired into any of the sound system in that case, so really if anyone gets fried
it woulda been me at the board;)
Seablade
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jimdrake
new member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 602
Loc: wherever
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: seablade]
#131433 - 20/05/05 08:46 AM
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Quote:
Probably getting more
into the electrical theory than most people need to know here;) What causes them to
affect the phase so much? Is it just a latency in the electronics?
Yes. A simple electronic filter will delay a
signal passing through it. This delay will be depend on frequency and so it's easier to
talk about phase changes rather than absolute time delays otherwise the numbers would just
get silly.
Some sophisticated DSP units run digital filters which don't alter
the phase of a signal. These may be found in processing units for large loudspeaker arrays
but the results are not always desirable. Similarly, some digital filters can be used to
alter the phase without altering the amplitude of a signal. These are know as "all-pass"
filters.
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adrian_k
Joined: 30/01/03
Posts: 1741
Loc: Gloucestershire
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Nathan]
#131581 - 20/05/05 12:57 PM
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Quote Nathan:
for Dunch...
sometimes you have to be a tad assertive. remember you have control of the desk,
if you put a CD on and mute everything else then there WILL be a short break while you get
a drink/ eat sandwiches/ have a pee.
Yeah that's a good idea, in fact I did have a CD running for a while
but I used the time to tidy up the stage in case someone fell over the gear and cables
that the "artists" had thoughtfully left lying about, retrieve my broken mic stand , and
move my monitors in an attempt to stop one particular tw*t standing on them 
Quote:
people sometimes
forget you aren't an automaton yet you need to be there for things to happen. (sound just
"happens" doesn't it?)
I know what you mean about not wanting to leave your
gear unattended tho. Five hours? -you part-timer! i dream of gigs that short!!
yeah, well I know I'm a lightweight
..
looking forward to my first 10-hour show
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jimdrake
new member
Joined: 29/10/02
Posts: 602
Loc: wherever
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: adrian_k]
#131855 - 20/05/05 10:30 PM
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Quote dunch:
yeah, well I know
I'm a lightweight .. looking forward to my first 10-hour show
How does starting at 10AM and finishing at
3AM the next day suit you? Or, how about starting at 7AM and finishing at 4.30AM (not
strictly a live gig, but)?
big gigs = long hours
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--
active member
Joined: 29/05/03
Posts: 6085
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Re: Top tips for live rigs
[Re: Grim Audière]
#131936 - 21/05/05 08:51 AM
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Not for much longer. If all the legislation goes through, you'll be monitored by crowds
of Europeans making sure that you can't work more than 48 hours a week (with no opt-out
clause) and nailing your head to a coffee table if you do!
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