Two of the band have resisted in-ears for ages, but have recently started to use smaller mic stand mounted monitors in an effort to keep stage volume down - they are getting on with these pretty well, so it should now be simple to add more P16s and let them mix their own. I have the CAT5 feed to it, but then have left and right returns that go to my in-ear transmitter - three cables is a bit of a pain, but liveable with. The only annoyance isn't really it's fault, but how I'm using it. The other handy feature few people seem to mention is that each input to the P16 can be panned left and right - so me and my bass are on the left in my ears and everyone else on the right. If, as happens, somebody gets quieter or louder, I can tweak it so quickly. No drums and no guitar! The others need the sound guy to sort their monitors, one at a time, and with the P16, I can dial up what I want so quickly. A little of the other voices is all I want. For me - I want my voice, my bass and the keys. In ears for me and the drummer are real life savers - mainly so we can shut out the things that put us off. We all play and we all sing, and because of the harmonies we all want very different things in our mixes. It's not that complicated a device - and in my band (A Beach Boy Tribute band) our main monitoring issues is the fact that we have to be able to cope with festival and theatre stages that allow decent separation between us, and other venues who have ridiculously small performance areas forcing us to be far too close to each other. I've had this over a year now, so can repot on how it has faired being trucked about the country, and been pretty poorly treated.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |