Major Midas
Three Midas consoles were used for house mix,
all in a line at a special mix position set up at the back of
the first floor. A Midas XL3-48, with eight stereo and 32 mono
inputs, was exclusively for Tritt, whille a Midas XL3 24-channel
extender was shared by Tritt and the supporting acts. The extender
handled the effects returns, DAT returns, CD player, "Voice
of God" mics and DJ's.. A Midas XL3-40 handled primary mix
duties for the four supporting acts.
"It was pretty impressive looking. There
must have been 20 feet of console," noted Borne. "We're
fairly new to Midas products and have been nothing but impressed.
from a performance standpoint, the preamp, EQ, and headroom of
the XL3 are phenomenal. We've also recieved excellent support
from the company."
He added that with the XL3's offered plenty of
routing flexibility, with 16 group sends, Eight were used for
effects, four for front fill, with the remaining four used as
needed.
Sum and Matrix
All outputs were summed to a Midas XL-88 X 8 rack
mounted matrix mixer, with separate matrixes for house left and
right, front fill, and delays. Feeds were also provided for press
and recording.
House EQ was handled by two Klark-Teknik DN3600A
digital programmable 1/3-octave equalizers, also a relatively
new addition to the Allstar stable. "The DN3600A really opened
up the sound and made the high end more transparent," Borne
said. He also gives it high marks for convenience. |
Allstar programmed
and locked in their "standard" Opry House settings,
which each acts engineer could use as a building block for their
own tailored mix, which could also be saved and recalled instantly.
A pair of dbx 160XD's provided the house system
compression, with cross over and limiting via an EAW MX-8001.
Each console had it's own Yamaha REV-7, SPX-90, Lexicon PCM-70,
and LXP-15, along with eight channels of Brooke-Siren or dbx compression
and Brooke-Siren or Drawmer gates.
Take Five
The five-minute set changes presented one of the
biggest challenges. Wile the acts shared a good deal of the equipment,
there were three different drum kits and configurations.
For quick drum micing changes, Allstar used custom
satellite boxes with 12-channel multipins channeled down to a
single multipin that could be patched into subsnakes feeding the
system.
All the careful preparation paid off, with the
show running right on schedule and with exceptional sound quality.
Borne stressed that a good deal of the credit goes to his crew,
which included house tech John Dauphinee, monitor engineer George
Argeropoulos, and stage techs Erich Turner, John Johnson and Jeff
Schmidt.
With things running smoothly, Borne was able to
take time to view the show from the audience perspective, noting
that he was impressed in particular with Russ Taft, a contemporary
Christian artist crossing over to the country market.
Copyright©1995 Live
Sound! International |