Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey all,
I play on a praise team at a local church. The soundman is one of the worst I've ever heard. I'm not sure if he's told to mix a certain way, or if he's just plain bad and they are too scared to do anything about it. Anyway, the church has a Yamaha DM2000. I've been a recording musician for some time, and I know a little bit about live sound. I certainly feel like i have the ears for it. Anyway, the church records the services live to CD, and this board mix is absolutely DREADFUL. (His housemix is horrid also). But I was wondering if it is possible to somehow come out of this board into another one that handles the "board tape mix"? That way we can handle a board mix, totally independent of his BAD mix. Where if he has the drums really low, I can bring them up hotter and it have no effect on his house sound? That if he SUPER limits EVERYTHING, I can have a signal indepenant of his butchering? Or is the advice to simply fire the sound man. To independent him further, I'd be happy to post samples of his record mixes. They are hilariously bad. And he runs a $75,000 PA. Nice. can anyone help me out? What info do YOU need to better give ME advice on how to approach the situation? I really appreciate it! Jason (change the"at" to @ when replying to me directly) |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Following up on what Mike said- Chances are pretty good that what is
being recorded is simply what is going through the board to the PA- and that what goes through the PA, plus whatever is coming from the stage, is what is heard in the house. When I am in this situation, I will do everything I can to discourage anyone from recording my board mix. All it can possibly do is needlessly undermine people's confidence in the house mix. A recording of this mix will NEVER sound good. You may be absolutely right right that the guy stinks- how would I know? But, it could also be that you are judging his mixes based on a misguided set of criteria. R |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Funny... our sound man sits back there and barely presses a button. It looks
like he's half asleep. He's not "mixing" or even TRYING to mix. If he were trying, he'd be working his ass off. And If I were him, I'd lose sleep knowing the "board mixes" were that awful and it was somehow my fault. j "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1087910080k@trad... In article writes: the Dm2K has enough ability to send at least a dozen independent mixes there is no reason the house mix needs to go to the recorder Other than that this is all the operator knows how to do. Churches are often like that - someone buys the equipment, sets it up, and then leaves it for someone else to operate, someone who may have a little musical experience, but probably no system engineering experience. It should be simple enough to set up a recording mix on a stereo auxiliary send pair, and with a push of the correct button, have the main controls (faders, pans, and EQs) control that mix. Once the operator gets the house mix settled to the point where he can leave it alone for a while, he can switch the console surface into the "recording" mode and set up a recording mix. For things like vocals that change a lot, he can link those channels to the faders controlling the house mix, so when he switches back to controlling the house (after all, this is his primary responsibity) after getting a recording mix going, riding gain on vocals in the house will make similar adjustments in the recording. But you gotta know how to set it up, and which buttons to press to control what. You don't want to hear feedback, turn down every fader on the board, and discover that you've just shut off the recording mix. A digital console in a situation like this is a mixed blessing. It's great for pre-setting for different recurring situations, but it's risky for mixing live shows when the operator doesn't really understand how it works. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 17:08:15 GMT, Jpop Rockus wrote:
Hey guys. Yes, the DM2000 is a killer board. It's not the problem. The inability to properly run it IS the problem. Let me gather some info on exactly how we have things set up now and get back to you. I do know that to make things even more complicated, everyone on stage (Probl 20+ people) are all using headphones as monitors. We use these Audio Technica personal mixers on stands so that each person can SOMEWHAT dial in their own mix. Usually, it sounds like crap too, but it's good enough. Part of the problem is, the room is huge. The stage is big too. They need a curtain behind the stage to cover up that HUGE wall of drywall. That will deaden the sound a ton. PLUS, I think they are going to buy a plexiglass drum cage. I'm afraid the curtain won't do what you expect it to. Go on over to Ethan Winer's page and absorb all you can about sound treatment. Pun intended. A plexiglass cage DOES limit some of the direct sound, but the sound will merely bounce off the plexi, then bounce back off the wall. Headphones as monitors? On stage? Ummmmm . . . . Here's a real simple rule that's served me well for over twenty years of live performance: To get a good sound, FIRST, you need to sound good. The first thing your praise team needs is to figure out how to sound to to itself. Individual monitors are a GREAT luxury if you have 'em. BUT, the best monitor in the Universe can't make you sound better than you sound. I've heard great sound with no monitors, and lousy sound with the best monitors money could buy. I blame both on the players. The team needs to get a handle on their stage sound. The reflective surface is a fact of life that you have to learn to deal with. For much less than a curtain, you can hang 4" rigid fibreglass panels from the upstage wall up to about 8' or so. Cover them with any fabric you can blow through for a "finished" appearance--loose canvas works. That will help tame the direct reflections from the live drums. But without an a priori handle on their own sound, there's not much that can be done FoH to improve things. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Sorry your really between a rock and a hard place
how did you end up with a desk like the DM2K without someone having the confidence and experiance to properly operate it seems like you would have been better served with a gl3300 a split snake and a second gl 3300 for recording/media feed and it still would have cost less Water under the bridge I guess but you should call the consultant that designed the project and have them provide the in depth training (several sessions ) to get the value out of the money he spent on you If I was the contractor , that is what I'd be doing making sure you get so much out of your system it is the envy of the community instead of the emperiors new clothes if your dealer , consultant or contractor will not help , yamaha has feild customer service folks for just these kind of problems address and contact info should be in the manuals or visit yamah on line Peace george |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Headphones as monitors? On stage? Ummmmm . . . .
Yep. In ear monitors, with these "mixer pods" set up everywhere to plug our headphones into. I can't recall who makes them. I'll look tonight. If I need more male vocal, I turn it up (it's almost all grouped). If want nothing but guitars, I turn everything else off but guitars. You can forget about hearing bass though. That's a problem. The frequencey is too low and you can't hear it. I wonder, can the soundman send me a bass signal that has mostly mid-high's so I can actually HEAR it without sending that same signal to the house?? I don't need to feel the low end fullness in my headphones, I need to hear what I'm playing. Dig? Right now, as with the house mix, the bass is so sub-sonic you can't make out a single note the bass player plays. It's quiet too. The team needs to get a handle on their stage sound. The reflective surface is a fact of life that you have to learn to deal with. On stage, it's all drums. Everyone is turned down very low. We're not at all loud. But the sanctuary hears all of us and stage volume drums because he won't bring any thru the mains. But on STAGE we get along just fine w/ stage vol drums. Does that make sense? For much less than a curtain, you can hang 4" rigid fibreglass panels from the upstage wall up to about 8' or so. Cover them with any fabric you can blow through for a "finished" appearance--loose canvas works. That will help tame the direct reflections from the live drums. But without an a priori handle on their own sound, there's not much that can be done FoH to improve things. What does FoH mean? HA! Sorry. Maybe I'll take some pictures of our set up and post them for you to see if you'd like? Thanks! Jason |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
They just built this $7million dollar church, and from what I was told... so
called "experts" came in a pitched to them what they needed and the church went for it (to the tune of $75K). We're dealing with people that "think" they know what they are doing who are calling the shots. In reality, they really have NO CLUE. Then they bought it all from a large local dealer (that eagerly took all their money) and had them come up and "set it up". They came in and spent a few days getting it running and "training" the sound guys. I think the church even sent the sound guy to a seminar (that did no good). He came out of the seminar energized with one main thought, "That if I'm too loud, we can be sued for it". Great. He really learned a lot then. It really wouldn't have mattered what kind of equipment they purchased to be honest. The sound in the old building was exactly the same if not worse... and it was ran off some simple analog Mackie board. The problem isn't the gear... is the doofas running it. Right now, I'm trying get advice from people like you guys, so that I can plan my attack so to speak. This split snake thing sounds like the way to go. I've heard they have ordered a second "audio mixer". I'm hoping this is what it's for. A separate feed. When that comes, I want to be involved first hand. I want to be the one they train on how to get a good recording mix, so that I can pass it along to the others. Thanks! J "George" wrote in message ... Sorry your really between a rock and a hard place how did you end up with a desk like the DM2K without someone having the confidence and experiance to properly operate it seems like you would have been better served with a gl3300 a split snake and a second gl 3300 for recording/media feed and it still would have cost less Water under the bridge I guess but you should call the consultant that designed the project and have them provide the in depth training (several sessions ) to get the value out of the money he spent on you If I was the contractor , that is what I'd be doing making sure you get so much out of your system it is the envy of the community instead of the emperiors new clothes if your dealer , consultant or contractor will not help , yamaha has feild customer service folks for just these kind of problems address and contact info should be in the manuals or visit yamah on line Peace george |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
George wrote
the Dm2K has enough ability to send at least a dozen independent mixes there is no reason the house mix needs to go to the recorder George Yeah- Of course the board is capable- that isn't the issue. The issue is that the mix sounds really bad, and it seems to sound bad in a fashion that might indicate that the recorded mix is simply the audio that's passing through the board on its way to the house. That said, if the guy truly is having a tough time getting the house mix right, having him try to set up a concurrent recording mix seems like a bad idea. Either split the mics, get another board and have someone else mix the recording, or record the raw tracks to multitrack and mix it post worship. Then the original poster himself could do it if he wanted to. R |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() or mix it for recording and send that mix to the house if it is really that bad then a decent recording mix should be a improvment in the house as well George |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
That is the TOTAL TRUTH buddy!! The guy running the house mix has NO
BUSINESS running the record mix. Which is why if they get this other mixer they are talking about, I want my hands on it from day one. I play w/ the band on a rotating schedule, so I can't always be the one running the board (I wish). can someone give me an idea of how "splitting the mics" work?? Running two snakes, etc? I need to understand that more. Does it get split out of the Yamaha or the snake? Also, they talked like they wanted to get recording equipment. For now, I have strongly urged them not to. I told them that they may have the tools they need right now to improve their record mixes. That before they go buying whatever to record to... they need to first prove they can actually run a real PA. I don't think they realize how much time is needed to master both the live mix and recording process. Since I know way more about recording, that should SURELY give me a massive heart attack! The frustration level would be at an all time high! Tell me, one guy was saying you can optically come out of the board to some "cards" into a computer of some kind. Is that true? I've never worked w/ a recording set up stemming from a live rig. I use a Mac and a Digi 002r. But in this case, we're dealing w/ at least 32 tracks of live audio. Maybe less if we group stuff. And a lot of stuff doesn't even have to go to tape if we could retrack it. But to them, the stage is their "room". They think that guys could recut vocals standing on stage, etc. It's a joke. They need a ROOM for that. If they want to spend tons of money on recording equip just to get a better record mix, then they are seriously wasting their money. Also, is it possible to send a totally uneffected, dry, flat mix from the main house mixer to a secondary mixer? That way I'm not mixing stuff that he's already mixed? Like, if he keeps the house drums low, *I* can boost them on my end. And if he brings something way up in the mix, It will have no effect on *my* fader setting, etc? Or is that why you need two feeds? THAT being said, when you say, 'Record the raw tracks"... can that be done without buying a separate mixer? Can the outs be fed to the recording gear, unprocessed, for mixing later?? That might be cool though. Could also be a gigantic time killer too. They like to move quickly and spit these CD's out for worship team reference, etc. They don't have two nights of mixing to spare. Thanks guys j "R Tyck" wrote in message om... George wrote the Dm2K has enough ability to send at least a dozen independent mixes there is no reason the house mix needs to go to the recorder George Yeah- Of course the board is capable- that isn't the issue. The issue is that the mix sounds really bad, and it seems to sound bad in a fashion that might indicate that the recorded mix is simply the audio that's passing through the board on its way to the house. That said, if the guy truly is having a tough time getting the house mix right, having him try to set up a concurrent recording mix seems like a bad idea. Either split the mics, get another board and have someone else mix the recording, or record the raw tracks to multitrack and mix it post worship. Then the original poster himself could do it if he wanted to. R |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Jpop Rockus wrote: can someone give me an idea of how "splitting the mics" work?? Running two snakes, etc? I need to understand that more. Does it get split out of the Yamaha or the snake? The concept here is using a snake that has splitters in it. In addition to the mic inputs, it's got two or three outputs. These are usually transformer balanced, and can cost mucho bucks. The better idea, as stated by another poster, is to use one of the other mixes that the Yamaha can provide. I've never been in a church "band". (I tend to prefer pipe organs and such.) But I've been involved in these kinds of "volunteer" situations. The general rule is, "No good deed goes unpunished". Good luck, Don |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
So, that Yamaha is able to provide a house mix, and a totally separate
record mix... both independent of each other, at the same time? Thanks Don! j "Don Cooper" wrote in message ... Jpop Rockus wrote: can someone give me an idea of how "splitting the mics" work?? Running two snakes, etc? I need to understand that more. Does it get split out of the Yamaha or the snake? The concept here is using a snake that has splitters in it. In addition to the mic inputs, it's got two or three outputs. These are usually transformer balanced, and can cost mucho bucks. The better idea, as stated by another poster, is to use one of the other mixes that the Yamaha can provide. I've never been in a church "band". (I tend to prefer pipe organs and such.) But I've been involved in these kinds of "volunteer" situations. The general rule is, "No good deed goes unpunished". Good luck, Don |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Jpop Rockus wrote: He came out of the seminar energized with one main thought, "That if I'm too loud, we can be sued for it". I thought it was, "If it's too loud, you're too old." Don |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Jason Sheroan wrote: So, that Yamaha is able to provide a house mix, and a totally separate record mix... both independent of each other, at the same time? Thanks Don! I take no credit for the suggestion. Mike Rivers made it. But that's what you can do with the sends. They're designed to send level to external deices (effects, etc.) and set up other mixes. As Mike said, perhaps the vocals can follow the house mix (or at least be set up post-fader, so they'll track with it). Do you have documentation on the mixer? If not, download some ASAP. Don |
#20
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Figured I'd give you guys an update.
It appears that Sr. Leadership WANTS that "flat" house mix. That the company they purchased the sound system from came up and trained the guys, plus dialed in a killer mix. But for some reason, leadership afraid that the change would scare some of the older, loyal congregation away. So, they want the mix to be all vocals, and little drums. I'm still pretty convinced that the soundman only knows how to do what he needs to do to get by. And though he IS following orders, I'm not at all sold that he's a good sound man. But we'll worry about that later. The second thing is that they ARE feeding a totally different mix from within the board, to a "record mix". But the problem is that no one can really hear how it sounds. They have to make adjustments based on the weeks prior performance. No bass? Then turn it up and see what happens. But the problem with this is that the players all rotate and change! I like to run my bass wide open. Others roll off highs and lows, suck mid's, etc. Some drummers have different touch, acoustic players... some play hard some soft. So I can see how this is really a big battle for them. The goal is build an isolation booth and feed that room the mix so that someone can actually sit there and dial the board mix in. That will make things MUCH better. Other problems they are hoping to address is the super loud room and stage, and to get plexiglass around the drum kit. The long term goal is to deaden up that stage as much as possible. The state is basically the size of a small or highschool auditorium. So, it's pretty big. The room is HUGE and Cavernous too. That doesn't help. But they are working towards trying to dial it in. Thanks for the advice though guys. They were very helpful as usual! Jason "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1087942951k@trad... In article 3IZBc.95593$0y.31494@attbi_s03 writes: Part of the problem is, the room is huge. The stage is big too. They need a curtain behind the stage to cover up that HUGE wall of drywall. That will deaden the sound a ton. PLUS, I think they are going to buy a plexiglass drum cage. The curtain will come later because it's expensive. The sound man keep the mix down too low. That and the mix is really bad anyway. This sounds like a restaurant review I read once: "The food isn't very good, but the portions are small." He is battling the stage volume of the drums too. So, what he does is he doesn't bring the drums thru the house Sounds to me like he's trying to do the right thing but has a difficult source to work with. He needs to bring more of the drums thru the PA, dial in the bass better, then bring EVERYONE up more. Right now, it's not even in the ballpark of loud. Sounds like you just need to sit with him and try to get a decent mix. Maybe you can and he'll get the idea, but maybe you can't either. Hard to say without being there. When they play a special music song where a singer will sing to a CD, that CD sounds KILLER. So, I know that the PA CAN sound good. I think it all starts with those drums. How's the drummer? Does he listen to what else is going on? I do know that church politics are at play too. That's often a problem. Then there is the whole issue where the soundman we have now IS very loyal and IS there ALL the time. For FREE basically. He's done it for 5 years. Is this his only sound gig? It's hard to learn very much, even in five years, if you only work once a week. And I think he has them somewhat held hostage. he refuses to let anyone help him mix (probl because he doesn't want to expose the fact that he really doesn't know what he's doing). Nothing will solve that problem except perhaps an accident. He can't mix with two broken arms. g They don't have anyone else to take his place when he gets mad and quits. If the church has indeed grown, perhaps they can hire someone rather than depending on what they get for free. I know they don't like doing things like that, but if the congregation (not just you) is unhappy with the sound, they're the ones paying the bills. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Figured I'd give you guys an update.
It appears that Sr. Leadership WANTS that "flat" house mix. That the company they purchased the sound system from came up and trained the guys, plus dialed in a killer mix. But for some reason, leadership afraid that the change would scare some of the older, loyal congregation away. So, they want the mix to be all vocals, and little drums. I'm still pretty convinced that the soundman only knows how to do what he needs to do to get by. And though he IS following orders, I'm not at all sold that he's a good sound man. But we'll worry about that later. The second thing is that they ARE feeding a totally different mix from within the board, to a "record mix". But the problem is that no one can really hear how it sounds. They have to make adjustments based on the weeks prior performance. No bass? Then turn it up and see what happens. But the problem with this is that the players all rotate and change! I like to run my bass wide open. Others roll off highs and lows, suck mid's, etc. Some drummers have different touch, acoustic players... some play hard some soft. So I can see how this is really a big battle for them. The goal is build an isolation booth and feed that room the mix so that someone can actually sit there and dial the board mix in. That will make things MUCH better. Other problems they are hoping to address is the super loud room and stage, and to get plexiglass around the drum kit. The long term goal is to deaden up that stage as much as possible. The state is basically the size of a small or highschool auditorium. So, it's pretty big. The room is HUGE and Cavernous too. That doesn't help. But they are working towards trying to dial it in. Thanks for the advice though guys. They were very helpful as usual! Jason "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1087942951k@trad... In article 3IZBc.95593$0y.31494@attbi_s03 writes: Part of the problem is, the room is huge. The stage is big too. They need a curtain behind the stage to cover up that HUGE wall of drywall. That will deaden the sound a ton. PLUS, I think they are going to buy a plexiglass drum cage. The curtain will come later because it's expensive. The sound man keep the mix down too low. That and the mix is really bad anyway. This sounds like a restaurant review I read once: "The food isn't very good, but the portions are small." He is battling the stage volume of the drums too. So, what he does is he doesn't bring the drums thru the house Sounds to me like he's trying to do the right thing but has a difficult source to work with. He needs to bring more of the drums thru the PA, dial in the bass better, then bring EVERYONE up more. Right now, it's not even in the ballpark of loud. Sounds like you just need to sit with him and try to get a decent mix. Maybe you can and he'll get the idea, but maybe you can't either. Hard to say without being there. When they play a special music song where a singer will sing to a CD, that CD sounds KILLER. So, I know that the PA CAN sound good. I think it all starts with those drums. How's the drummer? Does he listen to what else is going on? I do know that church politics are at play too. That's often a problem. Then there is the whole issue where the soundman we have now IS very loyal and IS there ALL the time. For FREE basically. He's done it for 5 years. Is this his only sound gig? It's hard to learn very much, even in five years, if you only work once a week. And I think he has them somewhat held hostage. he refuses to let anyone help him mix (probl because he doesn't want to expose the fact that he really doesn't know what he's doing). Nothing will solve that problem except perhaps an accident. He can't mix with two broken arms. g They don't have anyone else to take his place when he gets mad and quits. If the church has indeed grown, perhaps they can hire someone rather than depending on what they get for free. I know they don't like doing things like that, but if the congregation (not just you) is unhappy with the sound, they're the ones paying the bills. -- I'm really Mike Rivers ) However, until the spam goes away or Hell freezes over, lots of IP addresses are blocked from this system. If you e-mail me and it bounces, use your secret decoder ring and reach me he double-m-eleven-double-zero at yahoo |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Need some advice and help on using a Yamaha 4416 as a control surface for a Digi 001. | Tech | |||
Need some advice and help on using a Yamaha 4416 as a control surface for a Digi 001. | Pro Audio | |||
Denon vs Yamaha receiver | Pro Audio | |||
Audio Advice | Pro Audio | |||
Repost: Reason 2.0 on a Celeron 2GHz laptop. | General |