Applications: Art Exhibitions | Cinema | Corporate A/V | Cruise Ships | Live Performance Venues | Live Sound
  Restaurants/Bars/Clubs | Retail | Sports Venues | Theatre | Worship | Other Installs  

  

The Dead Come Alive with Meyer Sound

Deutsch  
Share:
  
IMAGES
Derek Featherstone, FOH engineer

"The Meyer Sound system provided us with a consistent, clean, and powerful image across a wide range of venues. Even with more than 90 open microphones on the stage, we had very little leakage back onto the PA system."

- Derek Featherstone
FOH Engineer, The Dead

More than 45 years after their first concert, The Dead (previously the Grateful Dead) continued to set the highest sonic standards on their 22-show, 17-city tour, the band's first tour in more than five years. Known for their unyielding requirement for low-distortion sound, The Dead's new tour was again supported by a Meyer Sound MILO line array loudspeaker system supplied by Bay Area associates Pro Media/UltraSound.

The system, designed to provide up to 360-degree coverage for the tour's multiple arena dates, included main left and right arrays of 16 MILO and two MILO 120 line array loudspeakers each. Left and right side arrays of ten MILO and two MILO 120 loudspeakers each were augmented by identical arrays covering far left and far right areas, for a total of 72 MILO and 12 MILO 120 loudspeakers in all.

The rear areas were served by left and right arrays of 12 MICA line array loudspeakers each. Low frequencies were ably handled by 16 700-HP subwoofers, with eight each flown below the main MILO arrays. An additional nine M3D-Sub directional subwoofers were groundstacked at the stage. Left and right frontfills of three CQ-1 loudspeakers each and a pair of UPJ-1P VariO loudspeakers for centerfill completed the setup.

"The Meyer Sound system provided us with a consistent, clean, and powerful image across a wide range of venues," remarked FOH Engineer Derek Featherstone, who used a pair of HD-1 audio monitors at the mix position. "Even with more than 90 open microphones on the stage, we had very little leakage back onto the PA system."

Few bands have played a larger role in the evolution of today's concert sound than The Dead. The band was among the first users of Meyer Sound systems, and Meyer Sound founder John Meyer credits the group's high standards with inspiring his ongoing quest for audio excellence.

June, 2009

FEATURED PRODUCTS

MILO

MILO 120

MICA

M3D-Sub

CQ-1

700-HP

UPJ-1P

HD-1

AUDIO


An interview with Howard Danchik, co-founder of Ultra Sound (now Pro Media/UltraSound), on his company's first association with Meyer Sound



Footer


homepage homepage products sound lab news company careers support sales/rentals contact request information contact copyright trademarks facebook share digg share twitter share John Pellowe Bio