SAN FRANCISCO — If you did not get to make it to the City by the Bay for this year’s AES, you missed out. Fun show. Great chance to see and meet old friends. Lots of new and shiny gear. How much of it is applicable to what we as live audio providers do every day? Well, that’s a different story.
In fact, it is telling to look at the list of companies whose focus is on live event and installed audio that were not exhibiting at the show. Midas, KT, TC, EV, Martin Audio, L-ACOUSTICS, DAS, DiGiCo (sort of, they had an SD7 in the Adamson booth), InnovaSON. Yamaha was there, but had no booth on the show floor, opting instead to do training classes in an adjacent meeting room. Watch that last one. As costs for doing these kinds of shows rise, I expect to see more companies looking for hands-on demo and training opportunities than traditional “walk-up-and-down-the-aisles” trade shows.
But it was not a total drought for live audio, although most of the coolest stuff was very niched, not really ready for live gigs or closer to the musician and band side of the business.
Leading the niche pack was Meyer with the new SB-3F Sound Field Synthesis Loudspeaker. This big (at least four-feet-across) hexagon is designed for projecting mid- and high-frequency energy over distances up to 1 km. The high-powered device employs Meyer’s sound field synthesis technology, which uses multiple small-point sources (a total of 448 high-powered one-inch neodymium transducers purpose-built to create a highly directional wavefront) to create a focused, coherent long-range sound field. According to Meyer, it will project mid- and high-frequency energy over distances up to 1 km. Very cool, but it will likely not show up on a lot of riders or make it to your next corporate gig.
Another cool thing that will not be on a gig was the “subwoofer fan” by Eminent Technology. Yes, I said a fan. While the output is only enough for home theatre use, the company claims it moves enough air to push a door open at frequencies all the way down to 1 Hz.
Hi-Tech Can’t Have Its
Our next category is technically brilliant stuff that will likely —eventually — make it into our little world. Audio-Technica (in addition to introducing the AT8022 and BP4025 stereo mics) won a TEC award for its ultra wideband wireless technology that negates the issues we will all be facing with wireless come February.
Also on the wireless tip, Sony introduced fully digital wireless for the broadcast market. That’s initially, and they expect the technology to make it down to the live audio market — again — eventually. Hopefully, at a price that is quite a bit less than the $7K-range-per-channel price tag that the broadcast units will carry. But with the ability to transmit up to 12 channels in the bandwidth of a single UHF station it could go a long way in clearing the digital landscape.
One piece that is almost at the “you can actually buy it” stage is the Mongoose from Music Sciences. Mongoose as in it eats snakes. This 64 x 32 digital snake is wireless and transmits all that information in the microwave range and uses proven true-diversity technology to avoid dropouts. The cost saving in fuel alone for trucking a 500’ copper snake capable of carrying that kind of traffic is going to make it very attractive to touring acts, and the lack or wires makes it a natural for sensitive installs including houses of worship.
Ready For Prime Time
There was some stuff that was ready to ship that we could use right way. Renkus-Heinz introduced an addition to their VerSys line of line arrays, which we profiled in the issue of FOH that should be in your grubby paws as we speak.
Yamaha previewed the SB168-ES — an Ethernet equipped 16 x 8 stage box that is scalable. Four units can be chained together to get up to 64 x 32. The unit is being billed as a “perfect companion” to the popular M7CL and LS9 digital mixers.
DiGiCo had a working version of the SD7 in the Adamson booth. Besides the cool gold tone, it has many of the features beloved by DiGiCo users and — for the first time — at a price point under $50 grand.
Useful, but Less than High End
First up in this batch of stuff that may seem more apropos to bands and musicians than to soundcos (but don’t be too quick to judge. I am guessing I will see most of this stuff on small and mid-sized gigs in the next year) is the new iteration of the ubiquitous EON powered speakers from JBL, which you can read all about here.
Next up is a pair of mixers that are too small in channel count for anything but small gigs, but are way cool nonetheless.
First, from PreSonus is a digital board called the StudioLive with their comps and gates on every channel, full re-callability, a couple of effects processors and FireWire out for recording. With a price tag of just $1,999, this may be the perfect way for the anklebiters among us to dip our toes in the digital mixing world.
Allen & Heath took a very different route to get to the same “use it in the studio and then take it out on a gig” place with the Zed R16. This is a 16-channel ANALOG mixer with FireWire out for recording. “Big deal” you say, noting that this is hardly the first of that variety of mixer. But check this: Some of the knobs and every fader on the R16 send MIDI continuous controller info, which means it can double as a control surface for any digital recording program except Pro Tools. In addition to the analog ins and outs, it sports LightPipe. Even being a Pro Tools guy, I would be interested in it just as a mixer for live recordings made with my trusty old Alesis HD 24.
Finally, under the “how come I never thought of that” heading is a new series of sub-snakes from Planet Waves (part of the string-making company D’Addario and best known for well-made but still affordable cables sold in places like Guitar Center).
This modular system can only do eight channels, but it uses three different lengths of “snake” and three different “breakouts” — XLR male, XLR female and 1/4” TRS. All of them terminate in DB-25 connectors, which means that the core snake can have any ends on it that you need. The core and two breakouts are already priced well-below similar snakes on the market, and when you add a couple of extra breakouts and one snake can take on several different forms, the savings really add up.
More to come in the November issue of FOH, but that oughta hold over the gear heads among us for the few weeks between now and the time that issue hits the streets.