Showing posts with label PA System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PA System. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Why Do We Make Soundcheck. Part Two

Making it easier on junior engineers makes your band sound better.
Earlier today I went over the basic preparations required to make a sound check run smoothly. Now, we’ll get down to the nitty gritty of how you and the house technical staff can best work together to bring your audience a truly memorable and killer show.
Follow the procedure.
The venue engineers will guide you through the process of sound checking, but knowing what’s coming saves time, and demonstrating familiarity with the process provides reassurance to the technical team and the promoters.
The first step involves finding the peak level for each source, so that no matter what happens in the show, the channels won’t overload and will operate in their butter zone for the majority of dynamics levels. Thus, when the engies call for you to play, tell them, “OK, here come some peaks,” then really dig in and give themthe loudest thing you could imaginably play during your set.
For those using pedals, be sure to stage your gain such that turning on or off any given effect doesn’t cause any significant volume changes. For those using patches or samples, be sure all your sounds produce a fairly consistent level. Depending on your medium, normalizing or gently compressing your sounds in advance can help this tremendously. Start with a clean and clear tone or sound, and play long, resonant notes.
Once you’ve caught the engineers’ eyes, you can move on to step two, the tonal and textural stuff. With the input level in place, the engineers will start applying inserts and EQ to the channel, so this is the time to begin playing throughout the full range of the instrument, loud and soft, high and low, staccato and legato, clean and effected. [Vocalists who use effects, please see NOTE #1 at the bottom.]
When this process of level and tone setting has been iterated across every source, you’ll move on to the third step, building your monitor mixes. The monitor engie will ask each player in turn what (s)he wants in his/her wedge. When answering, try to follow the same order of channels you just worked through, indicating for each source how loud or “forward” it should be in the mix. If one or two sources are significantly more or less crucial to monitor than the rest, be sure to note that after providing the complete list of what you’ll need to hear. For example:
• A singing guitarist might say: “I’d like just a touch of kick and snare, a moderate amount of bass, a bit of my own guitar, a fair amount of the other guitar, and plenty of keys and my voice. The most important thing for me to hear is my own voice and the keyboard. If you have to cut something, pull the drums out.”
• A drummer who also plays a sample pad could reply: “I don’t need any of my kit, but please give me a bunch of bass, a middling amount of guitars and keys, a ton of my sample pad, and just a little vocals. The most important source for me is my sample pad, and the vocals can go away if they have to.”
Once the monitor engie has basic mixes up for all the wedges, the band should play and loop a part of a song that uses the most sources possible. [Why? See NOTE #2 at the bottom.] While continuing to loop the part, each member should catch the engie’s eye, one at a time, to fine tune his/her mix.
When it’s your turn, point at a source, then point up or down, then point at the wedge where you want the change. This says to the engineer, “I want source in mix.” Keep looping the part until all the monitor mixes are to taste. A smile and a nod or the “OK/perfect” hand sign indicates to the engie that your mix is to your liking. Repeat as necessary until you’ve covered all your sources.
You may have to tolerate some feedback during your check while the engineers maximize their gain staging and chase down trouble frequencies. Keep playing through the feedback [Again, see NOTE #2.] so the engineers can find the ringing frequency amidst the dynamic and shifting signal. Realize that although standing over a ringing wedge is obnoxious and even occasionally painful, it certainly beats gambling on feedback returning mid-show, so taking a few extra minutes to properly and sufficiently ring out a wedge is always time well spent.
When you and your bandmates are happy with your monitor mixes, it’s time for step four. Stop the loop you’re playing, and tell the engineers that your mixes are good and that you’re ready to play a song and check the house. Pick a couple songs from your set and play them from beginning to end, without stops. [See NOTE #2.] If your wedges need further tuning, signal the monitor engineer while you play.
After a couple songs, ask the front of house engineer if (s)he has heard enough and has the mix dialed in. Once the FOH engineer is happy, ask to play one more tune so the band can hear the sound in the house. Take turns, one band member at a time, walking through the house. If you have any requests for the FOH engineer, now is the time to make them. When every band member walked the house, and the band and engineers are all sufficiently satisfied, then the check is complete.
If your gear must be moved before your set, follow this procedure immediately, well before you consider heading to the green room or the bar or to dinner:
• Mark the onstage position of your gear, using 2-3” strips of tape placed in right angles at the corners of each piece of gear, including mic stands and stage monitors. Using bright and uncommonly-colored tape helps these “spike” marks show up under low stage lighting and allows for your setup to be easily distinguished from other acts’.
• Once the positions of all your gear has been spiked, carry or roll your gear from the stage to your cases at side of stage. Don’t bring your cases to your gear, as that, as before, both doubles the amount of carrying you have to do and screws up the backline staging occurring both onstage and next to it. Start with the delicate items (guitars, cymbals, electronics, etc.) and work towards the rugged stuff (stands, drum hardware, amps, etc.), all the while making sure that the gear will be accessible in the reverse order from side of stage come show time, so the last things to get uncased before your set are also the most delicate. This protects your gear as much as possible and allows for a quicker changeover later on.
• If you are sharing any of your own gear with other bands, be sure that it’s properly labeled and placed somewhere immediately visible to them when they arrive. If you aren’t sharing anything, carefully remove every last piece of gear you care about; an unlabeled power strip or 1/4″ cable or hi-hat clutch left on a stage quickly becomes the property of whomever picks it up.
• Do a quick “owner’s walk” of the stage to be sure you’ve collected every last thing you brought with you. Once this is done, enjoy your break! The engineers, not to mention the bartenders and waitstaff and barbacks and management and security and promoters and bathroom attendants, usually don’t get such a break, so saying thank you and shaking their hands on your way out, as a demonstration of your appreciation for the work they performed, is always a welcome and valued show of respect.
NOTE #1: Unless you are using very particular, obscure, and uncommon effects, you will be much better off by letting the engineers use their house effects. Reverbs and delays are ubiquitous and the engineer will likely put some on your voice even without you asking.
Unless you are running an advanced real-time autotuning rig, or absolutely have to punch in a flanger at only a few crucial moments in a couple songs, or have a calibrated and road-proven harmonizer that needs different settings recalled between each song, let the engineers handle your effects. Otherwise, you’re stuck with the inferior preamp (if there even is one) in your unit, and the monitor and FOH engineers’ hands are severely tied since they can’t separate your vocals from the effect in the channel, meaning the effect will carry into any monitors and submixes, will throw off any inserts and EQ on the channel, and will, sometimes drastically, lower the gain before feedback. Your other option is to pickup a quality mic splitter so that you can send two channels to the engineers, one clean and one effected. Thus, the clean channel hits a proper mic preamp, inserts, and EQ before any effects, meaning both your monitor and FOH mixes will be cleaner, more flexible, and deliver more gain before feedback.
NOTE #2: An engineer cannot fix or adjust something that isn’t happening or being played, so stopping a song to ask for an adjustment is usually completely counterproductive. Instead, keep the tune going and ask over a vocal mic, loudly if need be, for what you need. Alternatively, or if you need something during the show, just catch the engineer’s eye (as any engineer worth their pay will look across the stage periodically, just like a good driver scanning his/her mirrors), and indicate what you need with a couple hand signs. If there is a monitor desk at side of stage, you can also always walk over to talk to the engie, so long as you keep playing. Remember, if in the process of dialing in a mix, an engineer doesn’t want to hear something, they can always mute the related channel, but if they need to hear something when you’ve stopped playing, nothing can progress.


Read more: http://ilhamnurulresources.blogspot.com/#ixzz1LQRLC9zB

Why Do We Make Soundcheck. Part One

One of the single greatest indicators of a band’s degree of experience, expertise, and general savoir-faire is the manner in which it conducts sound checks. So for those of you looking to take a simple step towards professionalism, or for anyone who prefers eating, sleeping, showering, and hitting on that cute bartender to playing quarter notes to an empty room while feedback swirls around you like a class three tornado, I offer these five bullet points on how to perform a painless, efficient sound check.
First, the basics:
Send all relevant information ahead of you.
The minute your show is booked, you should send your rider and contract to the promoter and venue. Ask the venue, in writing, to forward your rider to the sound and lighting engineers. When in doubt, include more, not less, information: you can never be clear or specific enough. By seeing your rider well in advance, the venue crew can better prepare for your arrival and save crucial time going over basic requirements. Riders should include, at the very least:
• Stage Plot: a detailed picture of the position of all performers, instruments, monitors, and power drops. Drawing it on a bar napkin with a crayon does not count; use any word processor that can draw shapes and lines and save the image as a JPG.
• Input List: a complete account of every input source, including all mics, DIs, and wireless systems. Just about any engineer you will meet will appreciate you following the industry standard convention of channel/source order, so stick with that unless you have a really good reason not to.
• Technical Requirements: a description of what, at minimum, constitutes an acceptable sound system and backline. If you need to clear 1200 decibels SPL, or your drummer must have a 62″ plasma subwoofer to accompany his monitor, or your keyboard must be a Chrysler Grand Caravan, or you’re sponsored by SlimJim and have to use one of their mics, or the system must respond up to microwave frequencies, this is where to say so.
Extra Credit: Send sound files along with the rider. This lets the engineers hear who you are and what you’re about. It also provides a reference so they know if their mixes are hitting the mark. If you have decent audience recordings of any shows you think were mixed particularly well, those can be of great use to an engineer, in addition to your studio tracks. Similarly, sending photos or video of lighting you’ve enjoyed in the past helps the lighting designer plan and program his looks.
Bring complete instruments.
Cables, rugs, power strips, picks, sticks, mallets, bows, reeds, and tambourines are all part of your instrument: a guitarist without a pick isn’t a guitarist, a drummer without a rug isn’t a drummer, a keyboardist without a power cable isn’t a keyboardist, and so on. If you need it, and the venue hasn’t guaranteed you, in writing, that it will be there, then bring it. In fact, bring two. In general, unless otherwise specified by a contract, musicians should bring, at the very least:
• Drummers: sticks, cymbals, snare, felts, multitool, drum key, and hi-hat clutches to fit various diameter stems. If you’re bringing a kick drum, then you need to bring a rug. Having a spare kick pedal and extra cymbal stands around never hurts either.
• Guitarists and bassists: picks, power strip, 1/4″ cables, change of strings, multitool, strap, 9V batteries. If you’re savvy, you also travel with at least one spare 1/4″ cable, one spare power strip, one spare IEC cable, and a bunch of 9V DC transformers.
• Keyboardists: stand, power strip, 1/4″ cables. Really slick guys have extra 1/4″s and power strips, as well as redundant power cables for their keyboards.
• Computer Musicians and DJs: table or stand, power strip, 1/4″ cables. If your outputs are XLR, then don’t sweat the 1/4″s. If they’re TRS, bring TRS-to-XLRmale adaptors. Again, spare 1/4″ cables, power strips, power supplies, and output adaptors are all good to bring along.
• Brass & Strings: reeds, bows, rosin, change of strings, and stands are all requisite. Spares of all are a bonus.
• If you use music stands, bring your own clip lights with extension cords and spare bulbs even if there are stands at the venue.
Extra Credit: EVERY player, regardless of instrument, should bring an extra 1/4″ cable, power strip, pack of picks, pair of 5A drumsticks, roll of gaff tape, Sharpie, pen, multitool, and zip ties in an “emergency kit.” All of this fits in a small bag and weighs just a couple of pounds, but it’s well worth it for the gloating you can do after you save your idiot bandmate’s ass when he forgets something crucial.
Extra Credit: Bring your own vocal mics and DIs. Professional quality gear please – no RatShack, no B******er, no PG series, no cheap/unreliable/flimsy stuff. This affords you the delight of not having to taste the mouth of whomever last used the venue’s mics, and it means you’ll always have spares on hand in case something goes down during the check or the show.
Load in intelligently.
Place your cases to side of stage so the full stage is available for gear and cable runs. By bringing your gear from its case at side of stage to its onstage position, you both keep from cluttering the stage right when it needs to be its cleanest for cable running and dressing, and you save yourself the trip of carrying an empty case offstage. The exceptions to this rule are amps and cabinets in top-over-style cases. Leave the top at side of stage and roll the amp into position on the bottom/caster plate. (Don’t forget to lock your casters once your amp is in place!)
Start by helping each other move the large and heavy objects like drums and amp cabinets. Once all the big stuff is staged, break off and finish the details of your rig by yourself. Any pedal setup involving more than two pedals should live attached a pedalboard, with its patching and power configured for plug-and-play readiness.
Extra Credit: Use exclusively ATA-rated hardcases in standard sizes. Such cases’ dimensions, durability, and recessed hardware make packing, stacking, and moving much easier. ATA-rated cases also meet the most demanding specifications for the transport of delicate materials, so your gear travels as safely as possible.
Be on time!
It might sound obvious, but lateness screw up dozens, hundreds, or even thousands of people’s days. It pushes back all the other checks at least, and the door and show times at worst. If you’re lucky enough to be the headliner, you will likely check first; checks usually run in the opposite order from that of the show, so that when the first opener finishes their check, everything is set and ready to go come show time. When other acts are late or run long at check, it’s almost always the poor opening act that suffers the most, as it’s ultimately their check that will get shortened, or even cut entirely.
Extra Credit: Be 30 minutes early. If the venue is open, load your gear to side of stage, and begin prepping the gear, making sure to leave room for any other acts’ backline. If the venue is closed, line up your gear neatly by the stage door, big and heavy stuff first, small stuff last.
In the next installment, I’ll go over the nuts and bolts of how to make the most out of your check once you step on stage.


Read more: http://ilhamnurulresources.blogspot.com/#ixzz1LQQzDK1w

Saturday, January 29, 2011

5 Proses Asas Rakaman dan Produksi Muzik

Home Recording Workshops

Untuk rundingcara dan khidmat nasihat berkaitan Home Recording sila hubungi
Mr.Pojie 017-6477528


(1) Rakaman (Recording)

Proses di mana alat-alat muzik dirakam di dalam studio. Bagi pemuzik berkumpulan, proses ini biasanya melibatkan kesemua ahli di dalam studio untuk merakam basic track atau rhythm track.

Kesemua alat muzik dan mikrofon biasanya akan dirakam ke trackindividu masing-masing untuk memudahkan rakaman dan juga kerja suntingan dan adunan.

Satu lagi kaedah, terutamanya bagi pemuzik solo, adalah penyediaansequenced track di mana kesemua atau kebanyakkan alat muzik diprogram melalui rakaman MIDI, virtual instrument, sampling dan lain-lain.

(2) Overdub

Proses ini dilakukan setelah siap rakaman basic track. Rakaman vokal, gitar utama dan alat muzik solo biasanya dilakukan pada masa ini kerana pemuzik atau penyanyi memerlukan basic track untuk mengiring persembahan mereka.

Bagi sequenced track, rakaman overdub dilakukan untuk alat muzik yang tidak diprogram, alat muzik yang diperlukan secara live dan vokal.

(3) Suntingan (Editing)

Setelah selesai rakaman untuk kesemua alat muzik dan vokal, prosesediting biasanya dilakukan di mana sebarang kerosakan atau masalah kepada track-track individu diperbaiki dan dibersihkan.

(4) Adunan (Mixing)

Mixing adalah proses di mana kesemua track-track individu yang telah dirakam diadun untuk menjadi satu track lagu di dalam bentuktrack stereo.

Di dalam proses ini, tahap bunyi (level) dan posisi (panning) setiaptrack vokal dan alat muzik ditentukan dan setiap track biasanya akan diproses dengan menggunakan equaliser dan compressor dan diberikan effect seperti reverb dan delay.

(5) Mastering

Mastering adalah proses di mana setiap track lagu yang telah selesai diadun ke dalam bentuk track stereo dikumpul dan dikemaskan lagi dengan lebih teliti dan terperinci dengan menggunakan rawatan daneffect untuk memastikan kesemua track-track lagu mempunyai tahap bunyi (level), tone dan kualiti bunyi keseluruhan yang sesuai, seragam dan sedia untuk dikeluarkan secara komersil.

Setiap track lagu juga disunting dan disusun menurut susunan di dalam album yang bakal dikeluarkan dan salinan CD untuk dicetak di kilang disediakan.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

How to Set Up a P.A. System




For consulting guide before you get start with your systems kindly contact Mr.Pojie 0176477528.





Basic instructions on setting up the type of personal address system normally used by solo artists, duo's, bands, musicians for live work.

Please Note:- The advice below is suitable for a basic powerpod or mixer amp, however, systems vary considerably and some are more complicated than others.
Rode Microphones
When purchasing a P.A. or any other amplification equipment make sure that the seller provides you with all manuals and instructs you in the correct set up or get some help from an experienced person. Don't buy a second hand equipment unless you are knowledgeable about the pitfalls (or have someone with you who is!).
  • Place the speakers on the stands at a height of approx 5' to 6' high and 6' minimum apart.
  • Plug the speaker leads into the connectors provided at the back or side of the speakers and amplifier. Some connectors plug straight in, others require inserting then turning (usually clockwise) to 'lock' them in place. If you are using a mixing desk the outputs are sometimes located at the back of the unit or on the top right hand section above the volume meters.
  • If using a minidisc, cd, audio cassette or other player for your backing tracks or interval music, plug the phono leads into the back of the player and the jack or phono plugs into one of the equivalent sockets (located at the front of the amplifier or top of the mixer).
  • Plug the microphone lead into another socket of your amplifier and connect the other end to the microphone. Cannon to Cannon leads are preferred for microphones and Jack to Jack leads for Instruments, Effects, Tone Generators and Sequencers.
  • If you have a monitor you will usually find the slave or monitor outputs marked clearly at the front or rear of the amplifier, use a speaker lead to connect the amplifier to the monitors input socket. (Most Slave & Powered Monitors have an input and output socket so you can link the sound out to more than one monitor if required). Powered monitors are also connected to the mains using a normal power lead.
  • Check that all volume levels and power switches are OFF and all leads are connected correctly before switching on the mains power. (At the end of the gig turn off everything including the mains power before disconnecting plugs and leads).
  • Use your Extension power leads and plug the amplifier and player in - switch on & BINGO - you should be up & running.

DO


Yamaha DSR Family

  • Keep your LEADS neat and tidy - use GAFFA Tape on trailing leads to avoid trips and wires being pulled out of the sockets.
  • LOOSLY wind the Speaker leads around the stands or use tape to keep them neat and prevent accidents.
  • ALWAYS use an extension lead or plug with a safety cut off feature. Extension leads should always be fully extended and checked for breaks or kinks in the wire before use.
  • Clean your leads regularly with a soft (slightly) damp cloth & check for wear & tear.
  • Perform regular maintenance checks on all equipment, cables, leads, plugs and accessories.
  • Carry spare fuses/batteries/strings/plugs/screwdriver/pen/paper & a torch!



DONT



  • Have glasses full of liquid on stage or placed on speakers/amps or equipment - Drink from a screwtop or resealable bottle (less likely to tip & ruin your electrical equipment & cause electrocution or severe equipment damage!).
  • Plug anything but Speaker Leads into the Speaker Outputs!
  • Use leads or plugs that are split or broken.
  • Cover the aeration vents on any equipment
  • Block emergancy exits with equipment
  • Have loose trailing leads that people can trip over!
Ground Support system carrying concert sound system
The latter are very important, local Health & Safety departments can stop your performance if these exits are not accessable and if an audience member is injured by tripping over your leads or falling equipment you can be sued for damages, so make sure you are fully insured and be careful.

Sound And Light Training

For further information about Clearance Sales do not hesititated to contact Mr.Pojie at 017-6477528.


. SET-UP OF A SOUND SYSTEM

  • Proverbs 16:3 Commit to the Lord whatever you do,
    and your plans will succeed.
  • Make a diagram of the stage layout with the location of all people and all instruments identified and all mixer inputs numbered
  • Decide what equipment needs to be transported
  • Carefully pack equipment for transport
  • Unload equipment at destination
  • Place all equipment (mike stands, speakers, amps, mixer) in its desired location
  • Resolve equipment and people placement problems
  • Run "snake" from stage to mixer (if snake is being used)
  • Put mikes on stands (with stands set too high so that there will be enough slack in the cords)
  • Select correct length cord for every mike, instrument, and speaker and lay out cords
  • Label all channels on the mixer board
  • Run all mike, speaker, power, and instrument cords NEATLY
  • Connect mixer to main and monitor amplifiers
  • Connect auxiliary equipment such as FM microphone receivers, equalizer, effects unit, taper recorders, and CD
  • Power up all equipment
  • Perform a sound check with a tape or a CD, confirming that all main and monitor speakers work
  • Check all mixer controls to see that they are in the correct position. Set channel trim pots to expected operating level (from previous experience). Set equalization flat (unless there is a reason not to). Set all monitor send controls to half-way position (unless there is a reason to set them different). Determine which channels should be assigned to each sub-group. Set any other controls unique to the mixer to desired starting point. Start with all channel faders off!
  • Perform a sound check on all microphones and instruments (one at a time) to see that they work and are connected to the correct channel
  • Carefully position all microphones and speakers in their final positions
  • If time permits, use the graphic equalizer spectrum analyzer, a pink noise source, and a calibrated microphone to analyze the room acoustics and set the equalizer to compensate
  • Play a good CD through the main speakers and adjust equalization ONLY if needed so that it "sounds good"
  • With master control and monitor control off, set all mikes at their expected working level (normally the "0" position on the channel sliders), then slowly turn up monitor and master levels
  • "Ring Out" monitor system using graphic equalizer spectrum analyzer
  • "Ring Out" main speaker system ONLY if necessary to get enough gain before feedback (this will effect the overall tonal quality of the performance)
  • Perform a sound check with all people in their final positions
  • Watch carefully for any overload lights and adjust channel trim pots if necessary.
  • Listen to each input channel (mike or instrument) individually and adjust its channel trim pot to balance with the rest of the system
  • Listen to what the performers hear on stage and adjust monitor mix to suit the performers
  • Listen to tonal quality of the sound from the position of the audience and adjust ONLY if necessary