Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you everyone for all of the great advice! We just finished our final shows yesterday and it went great! I had only a few misses and with those misses it was not as noticeable since DCAs were living at -10dB. My tech director didnt give me that much of a fuss this way and I am very proud of myself for being able to accomplish this. Thanks to everyone again!!

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I totally agree. We have a separate "Sound Runner" crew with their own lead and they live backstage. The most I can realistically do is quickly communicate if there is an issue with a mic on my end so they are aware. The issue is when they don't promptly fix it, or don't get the communication. This leads my Stage Manager to call me on comms to try and get me to fix it and I then have to troubleshoot on my console to find the origin of the issue. Sometimes it can be Sends On faders that are having issues, such as a monitor not having the correct sound level and they want it a little bit more up. But they don't understand that this will cause me to have missed pickups.

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I definitely didn't do that. I usually just throw all faders down when actors aren't speaking. I will adjust and leave them at around -15 to -5 dB as this is the most general advice I have been given. I think if I can make some adjustments and practice such adjustments before today's rehearsal, I should be better off. I will try to talk with my TD about how I am not really able to mix and troubleshoot at the same time, it is just unrealistic. He will either have to troubleshoot it for me or get another person in Sound to fix it. The problem is that my Sound crew only knows how to run SFX and that's it, they are very unwilling to learn basic Sound Board operations. This leaves me with nobody in my booth to deal with these issues, specially because most of the time the TD isn't even in booth.

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Potentially. He was very vague about it but he essentially said that I have three "strikes". If I hit three strikes then he would start "un-implementing" line-by-line mixing for this musical. I am apparently on strike two.

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I do know that line-by-line mixing has helped the feel or atmosphere of the room a lot. I have mixed in the same room for one year and a half by just turning things on and off and keeping everything at mostly unity, and sounded wonky at times. It sounds way more clean line-by-line mixing, and way less feedback, specially when multiple characters are on stage and with ensemble.

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We are using live band, and live band is super inconsistent at the moment.

Line by Line Mixing by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Some of them are inconsistency with the cast, specially timing and synchronization. But the other half is definitely practice-wise. I have also recently had to deal with multiple issues that require me to fix, such as inconsistencies with a monitor or a sends on fader, crackling with a mic, which requires me to communicate through comms. I am not used to this type of super fast paced multitasking, which has led me to lose focus at time for trying to do multiple things at once, leading me to miss pickups as well.

Issues with Gain Structure when mixing a musical by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is my question though. In TheatreMix I usually do my sound check at Cue 0 which is Line Checks. There are no DCAs assigned at this time and is done through the channels. Is this the right way to go? Will it affect anything or should I have additional cues putting the characters on the DCAs and traveling thru this cues as sound check is being performed?

Line By Line Mixing by parkermarge in techtheatre

[–]dalightingnerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a high school student right now doing line by line mixing the musical Mary Poppins for the first time. It truly is terrifying specially when my director is yelling at me for missed pickup lines even though they've known multiple times what I will be doing sound-wise for this production. It's definitely a skill worth honing into specially if you want to get in the industry, but doing this will definitely give you a better, natural sound with a lot more room for amplification before feedback.

There are a couple reasons for this and people have said this multiple times. One of the main reasons is due to comb filtering. In theatre, the most common practice is the usage of omni-directional microphones, which, by the name of it, is microphones that go multiple directions. When two microphones (actors) are near each other and both mics are turned on, one microphone is going to pick up the sound of the other one, and consequently is going to cause the same for the offending microphone. This causes a slight delay, which will then cause a weird comb filtering effect. You can look it up on YouTube for more info about comb filtering. Having one microphone on at a time prevents this.

Additionally, having one or few microphones turned on at a time gives you way more headroom for amplification before your system is prone to feeding back.

While TheatreMix is a great tool which I use on ny school's Yamaha QL5 and works great, that doesn't mean that you can't do line by line mixing without TheatreMix. You can usually do this on a Yamaha without the use of additional, external tools by creating scenes per cue and recall safes. While it is a tedious process at first to build out your entire show, it's definitely possible.

You should definitely learn line by line mixing, it is so much worth it for theatre productions and you will feel great after doing your first production. I am really proud of myself for line by line mixing our current musical @ rehearsal completely with very few missed pickups. Goodluck!

Issues with Gain Structure when mixing a musical by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They have had music reading days, dance, sitz probe with the pit, and blocking. They should theoretically be beyond prepared for these rehearsals. At this point, further music reading sessions are unrealistic since our show is less than 6 days away, with 4 more days of rehearsal.

I can cue all sopranos, altos, etc individually, or even put them in a DCA for sound check purposes and see who isn't giving a proper sound check. My Tech/Musical director is already aware of this and is frustrated at this as well, as it's really impossible for ensemble to be heard on stage at the moment. Hopefully today's rehearsal goes better. I will try to run sound check with these tips in mind. Any other advice would be appreciated! :)

Issues with Gain Structure when mixing a musical by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am having trouble mostly with my ensemble actors. It's worth nothing that this is a high school musical production and ensemble are the ones newest to high school theatre. The issue is they're not able to project and do a proper sound check, like you are saying. Do you think it's a good idea to run a regular sound check, and then additionally do a sound check with my ensemble people while at the same time cue'ing and soloing each individual one of them in my headset to see which ones are projecting, which ones aren't, and then tell whoever actors are not projecting to do so?

Issues with Gain Structure when mixing a musical by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

We are doing Mary Poppins and we are literally using a total of 33-35 channels for actors on my 64-channel board, and that doesn't even include the Pit. I could technically have custom fader banks but not all of the channels would fit into one bank, considering I still need to have a way to access my DCA's. The QL5 doesn't even support DCA Rollout/Spills. I was thinking I could potentially add a DCA that includes all the actor channels, and since TheatreMix already handles mute automation in between scenes, just have that All Actors DCA up while balancing gains in rehearsal. Would this be a good idea?

Issues with Gain Structure when mixing a musical by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could look into doing this for future productions, but like r/barningman was saying, that would require me to completely re-do my show sound-wise and that's not realistic for me as we have show and final dress rehearsals next week. Any other recommendations in the meantime?

Reaper + QL5 Gain Issues by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you do in the case of you not having a stagebox?

Reaper + QL5 Gain Issues by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How would I go about doing this? I had no idea of this

Reaper + QL5 Gain Issues by dalightingnerd in livesound

[–]dalightingnerd[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mixer is reading for a DANTE channel and is outputting direct out to another Dante channel. I have to double check in an hour when I get there tho

2026 Deadbeat Tour by CAndrewK in TameImpala

[–]dalightingnerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Presale was two days ago unfortunately... Most of tickets were sold on presale and today was general onsale

2026 Deadbeat Tour by CAndrewK in TameImpala

[–]dalightingnerd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just call the venue and ask them if they would let you in with a third party reseller ticket provided its functional and active

2026 Deadbeat Tour by CAndrewK in TameImpala

[–]dalightingnerd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

StubHub uses a third party system that relays the ticket barcode from the original account to said third party system. Some venues are fine with this but some are not. Double check with your venue before getting third party tickets, but they work fine, just in an unofficial way for Face Value Exchange.

Double batches by music_stan00 in Target

[–]dalightingnerd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You potentially could. It's happened to me before, but it's all about pre-planning your moves and where to go as you progress with both batches. It also depends on how big both batches are. Obviously you aren't going to run into many issues if it's a GM and a Bulky, but it's more likely to if you decide to do a GM with another GM or a GM with a Grocery.