Skip to content

Crest Audio HP-8 Mixing Console, Furman AR-15 Voltage Regulator and Power Conditioner, beyerdynamic

Crest Audio HP-8 Mixing Console, Furman AR-15 Voltage Regulator and Power Conditioner, beyerdynamic

Crest Audio HP-8 Mixing Console

By Mark Amundson

When the Crest Audio HP-8 Mixing Console was first announced at Winter NAMM 2004, it sparked a great deal of anticipation. Finally, here was a console with pro features at an anklebiter price. But we got through the better part of a year before we actually got our hands on one and, truth is, we were underwhelmed. A call to Crest engineering confirmed that they were aware of the same issues we had noted (manufacturing and not design-related) and said they were being addressed. We opted to wait to review the HP-8 until that happened and it appears to have been worth the wait.

Read More »

Flying High

[We're pretty sure that Richard Rutherford is on vacation this month. He'll return with his insights in our October issue. We're pretty sure… –Ed.]

Talk about a mega church. While some church sound systems can get dicey when the size of the congregation reaches into the thousands, production company Band World of Toronto, Ontario, had an interesting challenge on their hands while rigging the site of this year's 58th Session of the General Conference for the Seventh-Day Adventist Church–the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, Mo. The venue, which serves as the home base of the St. Louis Rams, has a capacity of 70,000.

Read More »

Wireless Microphones

My favorite saying is, "Everything is an antenna, some things just work better than others." When it comes to wireless microphones for live sound, the rules of the game are stacked against wireless mic manufacturers. The best we can do as users–and operators–of wireless mics is to understand the situation and play it to our best advantage. This article takes a practical look at how to best operate wireless mics and introduces some rationale into how things are done.

Read More »

Gently Padding The Pillowman

One of the most compelling plays on Broadway in recent memory, the Tony Award-winning The Pillowman stars Billy Crudup as a writer of morbid, Grimmlike tales that are being replicated by a child murderer. When the police of his totalitarian country (Jeff Goldblum and Zeljko Ivanek) haul him and his dim-witted brother in for questioning about the homicides, they are faced with issues of trust, truth, fate and freedom of expression. Further amplifying the dark drama unfolding onstage is the music of Paddy Cunneen and the sound design of Paul Arditti, which interlock to create an ominous, unsettling atmosphere for the show.

Read More »

Road Dogs and Studio Cats

I was sitting in Nashville airport one day in July, waiting for weather to clear at LaGuardia. My gate shared a seating area with the adjacent gate, where delayed Los Angeles-bound passengers were also waiting for air traffic control to give their flight the all-clear. Someone tapped me on the shoulder and I turned around to see Bruce Bouton, pedal steel player extraordinaire, standing there surrounded by other top studio Nashville names, including guitarist Jerry McPherson, whose work appears on tons of records for artists like Amy Grant and Toby Keith, and keyboardist Jimmy Nichols, who has equally impressive credits. What was more surprising than finding this concentration of studio talent together outside of a recording studio was that they were all part of singer Reba McEntire's touring band, headed out to play the last date of her 2005 tour in Paso Robles, Calif.

Read More »

Nick Savarino and Steve Poulton

Nick Savarino

Owner, FOH Engineer

Megawatt Sound and Lighting Systems

Amite, LA

megawattsound@charter.net

Quote: Don't just pray for something you want; give thanks for what you already have.

I am a 53-year-old drummer and a junior high and high school band director. In 1984, while playing drums in a local band, I bought a small sound system consisting of lower level gear to use with my band. I started doing sound system rentals on a small scale as a sideline/hobby to my playing and teaching career. What started out as a hobby–providing sound and lighting systems for bands in small clubs–has grown into what is now a fairly serious regional sound company, Megawatt Sound and Lighting Systems, which provides state-of-the-art gear and experienced personnel for fair, festivals and large clubs, as well as production for national acts who pass through our area.

Read More »

New Kid on the Block

Dear Sirs,

I don't have my own sound company. I don't even have a job working for a sound company. I am currently graduating high school and volunteering at my local church, but I have aspirations of one day owning my own company. However, I currently have very little experience and would appreciate any advice you can give me on what are the most important things to consider when mixing live sound. I am an Anklebiters fan and I want to thank you for considering my request.

Read More »

Odds and Ends

Lots happening out there this month, but nothing that I am inspired enough about for a whole 700-word column. So, let's do a collection of short bits, shall we?

The Squeeze Is, Apparently, On

A few months back, we talked about the consolidation at the top end of the live event audio world and how it might result in a squeeze on mid-sized providers. It seems like that vise is beginning to tighten. In just the past couple of weeks, I have heard about some mid-sized companies that are struggling, and rumors of ballooning deficits are running rampant. At the same time, word on the street is that some of the big boys are tightening the screws. One regional provider looking to move up into the touring world said that he had been told that one national company "will not be under-bid. If I bid $100, they will come in at $50."

Read More »

There's No Crying in Monitors!

My friend Abby, who is Cyndi Lauper's tour manager, called me the other day and asked if I would like to do a one-night stand minding the monitors for Ms. Lauper and her band. The show was to be at the new Time Warner Center in New York City, and we were to play The Rose Theater as part of the Pride Week celebration. Ms. Lauper and her band were to close the show with three songs after a variety of acts from Broadway singers to dancers, all backed by a small orchestra. Rose Hall, which holds the theatre, is a brilliant architectural structure that can supposedly shape-shift and transform into the perfect venue for any style of gig. I think the intention was that it could morph into a larger or smaller jazz venue, and not necessarily a rock 'n' roll venue.

Read More »

Billy Huelin and John Adair

It is going to sound like a cliché (or B.S., take your pick), but for the band and crew for Hootie and the Blowfish, it really is a family affair. Ten years after their debut record exploded out of South Carolina to sell something like 16 million copies, the same four guys are in the band with auxiliary players who have been with them for years. And back at the bus, you'll find much of the same crew that started with them. That includes FOH mixer Billy Huelin, who has been at the console for 13 years ("since they were doing frat parties"), and monitor guy John Adair, who has been at side of stage for seven years.

Read More »

Two Words: Underwater Monitoring

Le Rêve: A Small Collection of Imperfect Dreams debuted in April at the fabulous new Wynn Las Vegas, Steve Wynn's $2.7 billion entry as the latest and greatest on the Las Vegas Strip. Created by Franco Dragone, formerly of Cirque du Soleil and the man behind such legendary shows as O, Alegria and Celine Dion's A New Day, Le Rêve is an acrobatic water show that pushes technology and technologists to new heights–and new depths.

Read More »

Up, Up and Away

There are a lot of obvious uses for the space in front of a stage at an outdoor music festival. Band-watching and dancing jump to the top of the list, yet at the Temecula Valley Balloon & Wine Festival, those two activities just round out the top five. There, that space is used for the earlymorning launch of hot air balloons.

While the situation might not provide a sonic challenge for the Murrieta, Calif.-based Star Way Productions, it does provide a dramatically colorful backdrop for the bands playing one of the two stages at the festival. The festival celebrated its 22nd anniversary this year, and Star Way handled all aspects of the sound, stage and lighting.

Read More »