YAMAHA DM2000 AND PM1D ARE MORE THAN STUFF
Digital Consoles Hit the Road With UltraSound and The Dave
Matthews Band
BUENA PARK, CA (October 18, 2002)As one of
the world's top-grossing touring acts, the Dave
Matthews Band has had both the luxury and the foresight to
invest in the latest in concert sound technologya move which
has paid off for both band members and technical staff.
Spring and Summer 2002 were no exception, as the perennial touring
favorite took to the road in support of Busted
Stuff, with longtime sound reinforcement support from
Pro Media/UltraSound,
a company who also enjoyed the benefits of another band who was
not afraid to push the musical or technological envelope, the
Grateful Dead. For this tour, UltraSound's newest technological
dividends included two Yamaha DM2000
digital production consoles.
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| DMB monitor
engineer Ian Kuhn with the Yamaha PM1D digital mixing system.
(Photo Credit: Rudy Arias) |
"I started using the DM2000s on this leg,"
explains UltraSound crew chief and monitor system tech Lonnie
Quinn. As second engineer, Quinn handles in-ear monitor mixes
for violinist Boyd Tinsley. "They've been holding up
very well. It's very efficient, and Boyd is happy, which
is important."
Quinn saw the benefits of a digital mixing console
when DMB monitor engineer Ian Kuhn began using a Yamaha PM1D
to create in-ear monitor mixes for the remainder of the band.
"We originally went with the PM1D for the number
of inputs and outputs," he explains. "We're running
around 30 mixes. Each band member gets a stereo mix, the backline
techs each have mixes, and we also send mixes to the front of
house lighting area, the video truck, even guests. There are no
wedges onstage, unless a playing guest requests them. We also
have an internal communications system.
"The PM1D really simplified things for Ian;
I particularly liked the way that he was able to save settings.
If we played a place that looked similar to another venue, the
saved settings were a good starting point, and better than dialing
in. Plus, having internal effects and compressors on each individual
channel eliminated a rack of effects, and the processors that
were patched into the in-ears. The only other external pieces
left at the monitor rig are a bank of mic preamps that are used
on certain instruments, and the transmitter racks for the in-ears.
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| UltraSound
crew chief and DMB monitor system tech Lonnie Quinn with the
Yamaha DM2000 digital production consoles. Quinn handles in-ear
monitor mixes for violinist Boyd Tinsley. (Photo Credit:
Rudy Arias) |
"The PM1D engines, I/O cards, and power supplys
travel in a large grey 'refrigerator' which is air cooled.
Since we're usually doing multiple shows, we keep things
completely powered up all night long, and never had any problems
with overheating," Quinn adds. "There was a situation
where a connection worked loose, the system switched to Engine
B, and we never even noticed. That was a 'bench test'
we didn't want, but it was unnoticeable."
Ultrasound's Derek Featherstone introduced
Quinn to the Yamaha DM2000 for the 2002 Busted Stuff tour.
"For my applications," Quinn explains, "the fader
banks on the PM1D worked great, but as far as 'flipping'
this and that, I could never have a set of faders for Boyd, so
I'd use a combination of a PM1D and a Gamble EX56. This year,
UltraSound had re-assigned those boards to other tours, and Derek
asked if I'd be willing to try another console, so I took
the DM2000 to the first date. It was very user-friendly; the mic
pre's and the internal effects blew me awaythey sound
absolutely great."
He continues, "Right now, we're running
around 45 inputs. With the band going to in-ears, we needed more
outputs, so rather than purchase a bank of external mic pre's,
it was more cost-effective to buy a second DM2000. Using two boards
also allows me to have a straight one-to-one match with front
of house.
"Digital mixers are an idea whose time has
come," he concludes. "We're more than happy to
be on the forefront."
For more information on the DM2000 and PM1D, write
Yamaha Corporation of America, Commercial Audio Systems Division,
P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90622; telephone (714) 522-9011;
e-mail infostation@yamaha.com;
or visit www.yamaha.com/proaudio.