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#1
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I have signed up to assist doing live sound for my kids' production of
a musical play. I backed into engineering from playing an instrument but have some engineering skills (see the link below). I don't have time to research the stage play field in depth but would like to help them, as I am already more qualified than most of the volunteers. Anyone know of any articles or short publications that deal with the logistics and proximities of miking a stage play? I have quite a few cardioid condensors and dynamics and a couple of lavaliers. Would omnis be helpful? peakester http://home.earthlink.net/~peakester |
#2
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peakester wrote ...
I have signed up to assist doing live sound for my kids' production of a musical play. I backed into engineering from playing an instrument but have some engineering skills (see the link below). I don't have time to research the stage play field in depth but would like to help them, as I am already more qualified than most of the volunteers. Anyone know of any articles or short publications that deal with the logistics and proximities of miking a stage play? I have quite a few cardioid condensors and dynamics and a couple of lavaliers. Would omnis be helpful? Yikes, a potential nightmare. A friend of mine used a brilliant solution a few years ago. He got all the kids together in the studio and produced the play radio-drama style, then had the same kids lip-sync to themselves in the live stage production. Everyone was amazed at the excelent sound :-) Remember that there is a newsgroup specializing in live- sound reinforcement: news:rec.audio.pro.live-sound |
#3
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![]() "Richard Crowley" wrote Yikes, a potential nightmare. Indeed! Something I've used is Countryman hyper cardioid "lavalier" mics on special floor brackets, but don't expect to get much sound from them. Julian |
#4
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Years ago an older engineer told me about a technique that he termed an
'old broadway' style of micing where you create a pressure zone on a hardwood stage floor by placing the capsule of the mic about 1/16 inch off the floor. He claimed that a couple of those would mic the whole stage and create no obtrusion to sightlines. Basically a PZM. You're micing the reflections off of the floor. Never had the occasion to try this out, however. Maybe someone here that's an 'old school broadway' audio guy could comment. |
#5
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will wrote:
Years ago an older engineer told me about a technique that he termed an 'old broadway' style of micing where you create a pressure zone on a hardwood stage floor by placing the capsule of the mic about 1/16 inch off the floor. He claimed that a couple of those would mic the whole stage and create no obtrusion to sightlines. Basically a PZM. You're micing the reflections off of the floor. Never had the occasion to try this out, however. Maybe someone here that's an 'old school broadway' audio guy could comment. This works pretty well, and EV used to sell a thing called a "microphone mouse" which did this. The problem, though, is that kids can't project. A kids musical is about the worst possible job to have. You can't do without PA, because of the lack of projection. You can't afford to bodypack everyone. You _maybe_ can use just proscenium and foot mikes, except that kids won't be careful enough with their blocking. The PZM route seems like a good one until one of the kids steps on one. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#6
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will wrote:
Years ago an older engineer told me about a technique that he termed an 'old broadway' style of micing where you create a pressure zone on a hardwood stage floor by placing the capsule of the mic about 1/16 inch off the floor. He claimed that a couple of those would mic the whole stage and create no obtrusion to sightlines. Basically a PZM. You're micing the reflections off of the floor. Never had the occasion to try this out, however. Maybe someone here that's an 'old school broadway' audio guy could comment. IME this old guy was giving you the real stuff. it's kinda ironic because I remember when the PZM was hot new technology and the latest panacea. In the long run it became just another tool... From time to time I've made recordings of lectures, etc. by simply putting a cylindrical end-address mic on the floor, pointed at the source, and situated it won't roll round and so nobody will step on it. As you and Scott point out, its a kind of poor-man's PZM, unless of course the mic is expensive in which case its a rich-man's PZM ;-) But, IME it's not really like you are micing reflections off the floor. Indeed, this method seems to do a good job of minimizing reflections from the room. Instead, the floor seems to act more like a waveguide. |
#7
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![]() How do these floor mounted PZMs avoid picking up all the foot noise? Mark |
#8
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
The problem, though, is that kids can't project. A kids musical is about the worst possible job to have. You can't do without PA, because of the lack of projection. You can't afford to bodypack everyone. You _maybe_ can use just proscenium and foot mikes, except that kids won't be careful enough with their blocking. The PZM route seems like a good one until one of the kids steps on one. To the OP who initiated this topic: FWIW, I have been involved with a local childrens acting troupe for going on 7 years now. Most of our productions have taken place in a 750 seater which supplies their own sound tech, lighting tech etc. Typical setup is 7 to 10 wirless mikes for main actors and sometimes a couple of overheads for "dead" spots. Average number of children actors per show is around 30 with ages ranging from 5 to 16. Scott is dead on with his observation that children have a tendency not to project.....unless their acting coach hammers it into them they must! Our troupe's coach advice to the kids is, "Slow down, articulate, project and address your lines directly to the audience." If you can, go to some of the rehearsals and observe (it will probably give a good indication which kids you are going to have a problem with)...see if the coach is consistently reminding/correcting the actors about projecting etc; if not ride his/her ass until they do!! grin Break a leg...... :-) |
#9
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Mark wrote:
How do these floor mounted PZMs avoid picking up all the foot noise? With kids on stage, they won't. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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#12
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![]() "will" wrote in message oups.com... Years ago an older engineer told me about a technique that he termed an 'old broadway' style of micing where you create a pressure zone on a hardwood stage floor by placing the capsule of the mic about 1/16 inch off the floor. ...... Never had the occasion to try this out, however. Maybe someone here that's an 'old school broadway' audio guy could comment. I've tried them out with kids in an old school and was trained by an old school guy how to do it this way! Maybe that counts? Short of putting a bodypack on every kid it is the best way. Or do this plus a bodypack on the main kids. Either way you're going to be pressing up against feedback the whole time! Julian |
#13
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![]() "SSJVCmag" wrote Not old school but current. Actually you use as MANY as you can afford, in an odd number so that one ends up dead center, the rest positioned according to where th stage action happens and you NEVER turn on more than two at a time... Yes that means a trustable audio mix person is MANDATORY who KNOWS the blocking and LIVEs to stay 1/2 step ahead of the script and action) AND LOTS of EQ. Spend some fosuced time ringing them out to get max gain before feedback Aside from laying a shure 57 on the floor pointing at the stage You REALLY want a bunch of the CROWN PCC160 floor mics. I do like the Countryman Hyper cardioids better! You can get 6 dB more gain that with anything else I've done this with. Julian |
#14
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#16
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I'm with you all the way. Much more could be said, but as
you say, those that "Get it" really do get it. And, of course, there is the tangential issue that the more and earlier the collective "we" introduce children and young people to dependence on electronic support, the longer it will take them (if they ever do) to understand the principles and practice of good vocal production and projection. I'm starting to lose count of the times I've had to deal with a snotty, egocentric 11-year-old or his/er parents who demand a wireless mic. Most of the time, it is quite adequately proven that the kid should never have been cast in the first place - often, embarrassingly so. Can't wait for them to get into high school or college - what a treat. So, when we're all complaining some day about how "these kids" coming along have no idea how to produce vocal quality, let's not forget who taught them they didn't have to learn how. The conditioning they received consisted of "stomp, scream, roll on the floor - get a belt pack." Never made sense to me how they can hear each other across a playground with no assistance whatsoever, but can't be heard past the footlights on stage. Carry on... TM SSJVCmag wrote: On 4/7/05 6:15 PM, in article , "bill" wrote: (SNIP details about bunches-o-bodypacks on community show) Quite a few people thanked us for the "excellent sound". Maybe or maybe-not we should get into what means 'excellent sound'. While -admiring- Big Broadway Sound Design and the more-oft-than-not resultant Huge 70mm Big Movie Sound that thus is completely viscerally detached from the relatively miniature figures running around the stage, I find it absolutely destroys the whole point of live theater. I'm in a very definate minority on this as a sound designer but those that Get It make Magic happen. There are a coiple here in the Dc area, most notably for me was John Kalbfliesh, Musical Director who, when allowed to, DEMANDS a show that is indistinguishable from an acoustic character and has achieved this with the better techs around here both WITh and WITHOUT any or all forms of voice reenforcement. |
#17
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From my experience, pretty much what everybody above has mentioned.
Logistics? In addition to the zone mics, wWe had to scrap up as many wireless units as we could, hid little ATR35s everywhere, etc.. The parents will keep compaining until you can prove you were out of mics... Aside from the mics, do start pondering ahead about running the board with all these little kids prancing about and they love banging the mic to see if it works (mute alot). Gates and compressors on large subgroups helped herd things along too. A feedback destroyer helped too... Good luck, Andy |
#18
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SSJVCmag wrote:
On 4/7/05 6:15 PM, in article , "bill" wrote: (SNIP details about bunches-o-bodypacks on community show) Quite a few people thanked us for the "excellent sound". Maybe or maybe-not we should get into what means 'excellent sound'. While -admiring- Big Broadway Sound Design and the more-oft-than-not resultant Huge 70mm Big Movie Sound that thus is completely viscerally detached from the relatively miniature figures running around the stage, I find it absolutely destroys the whole point of live theater. I'm in a very definate minority on this as a sound designer but those that Get It make Magic happen. There are a coiple here in the Dc area, most notably for me was John Kalbfliesh, Musical Director who, when allowed to, DEMANDS a show that is indistinguishable from an acoustic character and has achieved this with the better techs around here both WITh and WITHOUT any or all forms of voice reenforcement. Point taken. "Excellent sound" was an amalgam of many different comments. To expand, some said (and I paraphrase, my memory ain't what it used to be) "Everyone was balanced, I could hear even the quiet kids", "It was enjoyable, I didn't have to strain for 2 hrs to hear the words". I've been to some Broadway shows where the sound was just *way* too much 'in your face', it took away from the overall performance I thought (JC superstar comes to mind for some reason). And to answer T Maki's post; we were doubly fortunate in that we had no snotty kids demanding mics nor demanding parents. The kids were very respectful to me and our light/sound crew. Maybe it's me, but when I go to a performance and I can't hear/understand the actors my mind wanders, I'm just not paying attention! bill |
#19
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![]() "SSJVCmag" wrote Another HARDEr thing to wrangle is a really FOCUSSED speakers system that has real directional control below 1kHz. Yeah! Good point. Julian |
#20
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No intent to dis' your kids. Most kids are pretty good about
it. And they are fortunate to have supportive adults who help and want them to succeed. TM bill wrote: we were doubly fortunate in that we had no snotty kids demanding mics nor demanding parents. The kids were very respectful to me and our light/sound crew. |
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