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#381023 - 01/09/14 01:29 PM
Re: Tyros 5 v. Tyros 4
[Re: musicforyourday]
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Rosetree, much of this will depend upon your sound system. With conventional speakers, even those mounted on poles, the falloff is significant, therefore, the natural effects of the venue may not be as evident as they would with a vertical array system where the falloff is often less than 10 percent. If the falloff is less, then the natural effects will be significantly greater. When I worked with a band, the sound was always very loud, therefore, there was always a fair degree of natural effects generated. When I went to work as an OMB entertainer, I played at much lower volumes, therefore, I had to add more effects to obtain the desired level of overall sound quality I wanted to hear. A lot of the venues I performed had fully carpeted floors, full length draperies and suspended acoustical ceilings. That really sucked up a lot of sound and diminished any chance of natural effects. If you clapped your hand in one of those rooms and it was empty, you would not hear any echo, reverb, delay - nadda. Clap your hands in a gymnasium and wow! Neat how all this stuff works, at least I think it's neat. Gary
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PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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#381116 - 01/10/14 01:10 PM
Re: Tyros 5 v. Tyros 4
[Re: musicforyourday]
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14266
Loc: NW Florida
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It's definitely a two edged sword... set the instrument up so it sounds good to YOU, directly on top of the monitors, and those out in the room will suffer. Set it up for THEM, and you suffer!
There's no real way around this problem There's no way to add more reverb to the arranger at the mixer's monitor send on most boards, and even this will only muddy things up a hair, as the bass end gets reverb'd along with everything else.
But the bottom line is, are you playing to THEM, or to yourself? As a pro player, your goal should be to do whatever is best for them, and if that makes you less than comfortable, well, that's the price you pay!
You have probably heard me rail many times against user demos (and some factory stuff too, if the truth be told) that have the played part too loud, as players choose to listen to the part THEY are playing at more than it truly needs, and end up swamping the backing. To get a fully balanced mix out to your audience, there really is no way around getting used to things not being what WE want, but being what THEY want if you truly want to have your audience hear you at your very best.
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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