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Peavey Offers Free Focus Software

Peavey Offers Free Focus Software

MERIDIAN, MS–Peavey has partnered with Software Design Ahnert GmbH to offer its Ease Focus acoustic simulation software free of charge to users of the new Peavey Versarray line array system.

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Feeling the Beat at Bay Beats

SINGAPORE–After several years hosting the annual Bay Beats festival, a concentrated exposition of local south-east Asian talent featuring five "Indie" bands a day for three days, this year a decision was taken by Singapore's Esplanade Theatres on the Bay to purchase a large format line array to cater for the festival's audio needs.

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Pittsburgh's Benedum Reaps Audio Benefits

PITTSBURGH–The Benedum Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Pittsburgh is a historic theatre that hosts over half a million visitors a year. Named the "Number One Auditorium in the US" by Billboard and ranked third in Pollstar's 2004 Top 50 list of theatre venues worldwide, the 2,800-seat Benedum Center provides turnkey production services to everyone from first-run national Broadway tours to regional groups like the Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre and the Pittsburgh Opera.

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Republic Parties With New Speakers

TORONTO, ONTARIO–Republic, a busy Vancouver Club on Granville has revamped their entire sound system with Adamson Speakers. Republic is open seven days a week; during the day Republic is a busy pub and sports bar, and at night it features live DJs and entertainment transforming itself into a dance club.

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Sub Finishes P

OXNARD, CA–L-ACOUSTICS' has completed its P-Series line of self-powered amplifiers with the release of a self-powered subwoofer. The addition of a self-powered subwoofer SB15P for extended LF response in bi- and tri-amp configurations widens the performance range of the P series for small to medium format applications.

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Doctoring Up Your Rentals

Dear Fellow Anklebiters,

I rent out my digital console to regional sound companies once in a while. I rent out EFX processors as well. What is the proper protocol for a console that is to be rented out? Should it be cleaned of all saved scenes? Will the engineer who ultimately uses this console just need to load his/her own libraries? Should the EFX processor have any custom programs on it or should it be factory clean?

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What's New(s)?

I have now rewritten this column three times. Every time I try I end up covering too much ground and just rambling. This is the last shot. In the past few months I have been involved in a number of conversations and situations that all forced the same basic question: What is news?

The easy answer is to quote Reuven Frank, the one-time head of NBC news who said, "NEWS is what someone wants to suppress. Everything else is advertising." That statement is at once overly broad, confrontational, outmoded and completely true. And smart marketers both know and take advantage of it.

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On The Bleeding Edge

Along with all of the other computerrelated technology we love to play with, synthesizers have planted a strong foot in the world of software. Only a few years ago, software synths were a novelty. Once they caught on, they quickly moved from the studio environment onto the stage. Now many acts are using software synths to augment or replace their hardware keyboards and rack modules for touring purposes. Let's take a look at why, and whether or not this is a good idea.

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Parnelli Innovator Honoree, Father of Festival Sound

All you need to know about Bill Hanley is this: as a kid he fondly recalls a local roller rink. But it's not the fun he had skating with his friends, or perhaps the scene of his first crush he most wants to talk about.

No, it's the speakers he speaks of with precision.

"I was skating every day and I fell in love with the music," he recalls. "There was this organ, and it was played loud with 12 Hammond B-40 tone cabinets and two 20-watt amplifiers with four 12-inch electro-dynamic loud speakers in a rink with excellent acoustics. I would go hear other, bad, sound systems and wonder why something couldn't sound as good as that roller rink."

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Regional Sound Companies Hailed as Hometown Heroes

Let’s have a tip of the glass for the hometown hero, the relatively little guy who shuns the mega-tours and life on the road, and focuses instead on serving the local community for fairs, festivals, theatre in the parks and one-off concerts.

Despite the differences in their respective regions, the number of full-time employees (ranging from one to 100) and length in business (10 years to 60 years), they have much in common. Most started out as musicians and offer a variation on Clearwing’s Gregg Brunclik’s “I started out as a musician but decided I wanted to eat” quip. And they all share a never-ceasing passion for quality sound, razor-sharp survival instincts and most indispensably, a sense of humor.

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Party On, Wayne. Party On, Garth.

In the world of live sound I have often heard the term "sexy" used to describe certain inanimate objects such as consoles, speakers and effect processors, either singularly or in combination with each other. For example, an engineer said to me that he had seen a Brittany Spears show and that "The rig was great, a very sexy set up indeed." He said nothing at all about the show or the very sexy star herself, but he did give me the whole run down regarding the audio system and the "luscious" sound that was produced by this very sexy system. My engineer friend is inspired by technology and has a passion for audio and all its related components and my assumption is that he uses the term "sexy" and "luscious" metaphorically to describe a desirable system which produces a full sound.

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Shockingly Good Sound

I'm part of a mid-size audio rental company, we rent for productions and will-call gear. One day a new client called and said, "I need to rent a mic." We said OK, and rented them a SM58. About two hours later the client called and asked us if we were trying to kill her husband.

Confused, I asked her, "Uh, how?" She said that they had plugged the mic in, and it shocked him.

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