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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Minimal PA for my Surf band?

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I'm seeking input regarding what others here use for a PA? While I currently have a full PA (8 ch. powered mixer, mains, 2 monitors, mics, stands, etc.), I'm now looking for a new rig that suits our needs yet is as bare minimum as possible. No vocal songs with this line-up at present.

So here's what we need amplified beyond our guitars:

  • 1 mic for public address and the occasional hoots, hollers, yells.
  • Percussion effects via our drummer's sample pad.
  • Audio samples via the same sample pad.
  • Digi-Synth (I may get a keyboard amp for this?)
  • MP3 player for music in-between sets.

I'm wondering if one powered main on a stand with a 4 channel mixer would suffice. I'm looking to haul as little equipment as needed but still get the job done.

What do you use or what do you recommend?

Thanks

METEOR IV on reverbnation

Fender Pro Junior and a Shure 55SH reissue mic.
It works surprisingly well, actually sounds good.
Our only need is for announce though, no special effects, samples etc.

http://www.facebook.com/CrazyAcesMusic
http://www.youtube.com/user/crazyacesrock
http://www.reverbnation.com/crazyacesmusic

One important question would be how large room are you going to play or are you going to play outside? Because your drummer are soon going to feel the need to mic up the bass drum. To get a good bass drum sound you need speaker with some size, 15" would be nice.

You could solve this by having a single 15" bass speaker cabinet/sub , the human ear can not tell in what direction the bass sound comes from so that works OK. You also need a electronic crossover for the sub. One the positive side you drummer could ally with the bass player, so the bass player could run directly in to the PA.

Regarding powered mixers, my impression is that those usually have weak power amps. A separate mixer with a separate quality amplifier, is probably going to sound better but take up a little more space.

Last edited: Jul 22, 2013 17:36:02

The Penetrators used a bull horn.........not much simpler than that.

Early on the X-rays used two Fender Acoustisonic Jr's for two mics, one over the drums and one FOH. Put them out front tilted back, they did a good job.

The Surge! has hauled around a '60's Kustom PA with black rolled and pleated columns. That is pretty quick easy and period correct. Last year I added a set of 2-15 plus horn Berringer PA cabs to supersede The Kustom gear. We can actually do the whole band with those. I have a small mixer and 350 watt stereo amp. That rig goes up and down quickly and sounds surprisingly good.

Far cry from the big rig we toted around in the '70's and '80s.

ed

Traditional........speak softly and play through a big blonde amp. Did I mention that I still like big blonde amps?

Forgot to add I'm more or less looking to cover the bases for small-medium sized rooms (which is most of our gigs.)
Normally when we play larger gigs or big outdoor events the PA is provided.

  • Eddie, I have considered the "bull horn" as well. Big Grin

We do need something for the audio / percussion samples though. Not looking to mic the drums and all that. To be honest I want to get what I have to transport down to as little as possible. We did quiite a few gigs last year and I normally provided and hauled around most of the PA equipment as well as my rig. Getting old and lazy I guess? Sigh

METEOR IV on reverbnation

I know that there's those speakers with the mixer/amp built in, would be pretty easy with just a couple cables. Or get a keyboard amp, they usually have a few channels with mic inputs and are loud enough for small stuff.

I forget the name but there's a new PA that has the pole stand built in, it folds into the speaker. Less is more.

A QSC K series powered speaker would be perfect for the job. It's got one line in, one mic in, and RCA in for your MP3 player... if one speaker isn't enough, they are easily expandable.

I own a music store and am a QSC dealer, do a little research, call me for questions, and I'll hook you up!

Ferndale Music Co: 707-786-7030

Surf On!

Paul

+1 on the K-series. My K-10's will cut any gig I'm likely to do, plus they sound fantastic. And I'm not just saying so because my brother Pat is the Q in QSC. Yes

I have a Fender Passport, the one with the upgraded Bose speakers, that we use for announcements and the occasional guest vocalist. It can be carried in one hand, and in the other hand you can carry the PA and mic stands. Works fine for small to medium venues.

Thanks for the input and suggestions.

I am looking at the Passport unit and Peavey's version. Something like that might be better than 1 powered main and a mixer.

METEOR IV on reverbnation

Have a look at the Bose L1 Compact system. It's REALLY good!

The Hicadoolas

If you are looking for used speakers take a look at Ramsa also. Here in Europe they used to be a de facto standard for lightweight quality speakers a while back. They also have/had a sub with a 12" that sounded very good.

PA? Isn't this a forum of instro-surf-guitar-into-reverb-into-coolamplifier?

Lorenzo "Surfer Joe" Valdambrini
(www.surfmusic.net)

Plus 2 on the QSC K10 and K Sub. They are awesome not too heavy, sub with a pole on casters roll right in. Cross over in the 10 inch top speaker. The subs are critical in my opinion for the bass the kick and the toms.

Not cheap.

I use a Mackie cfx12 unpowered mixer. for instro with two or three guitars it is really nice to:

a) be able to mix everyone just so (you can then angle the amps sideways for use as stage monitors without stage bleed and get the drums eq'd and pumpin'.

b) lets you "place" the guitars wherever you want. we do a lot of ping pong type guitar work and it sounds cool when it is coming from one side of the stage then the other.

I am thinking of throwing down on the QSC 8's for stage monitors or side fill monitors.

  1. Unless you're playing dance music, forget the subs.

  2. Plus 3 on the QSC K series - believe it or not a 10 would be plenty!!! Those things are very well-designed. That and a small 4 channel passive mixer would be fine.

  3. One other option would be to use something like a Keyboard Amp. Many of those have multiple inputs and are full-range, so you could do all your samples/mp3/hoots/announce through it. Find an old 4 input Roland or Peavey and you're good to go. Won't sound as crisp as a K series, but it's a one piece solution if you only need 4 ins and can probably find some used.

  4. You also might want to consider putting the speaker "in the band" since it's going to be a lot of drum sounds and it won't matter (aside from feedback issues) for the vocalizations and announcements. If you guys are playing drums acoustically, and guitars and bass through amps and have the ambient sound balanced, I'd put the keyboard amp or a K series cabinet "within the ensemble" just like another guitar amp, rather than on a pole out front - that will make it sound a little more "disparate" or "separate" (and that's the reason people with P.A. on sticks want to mic drums and such becuase it won't sound "blended" if some things are coming from on stage and others through the P.A.).

I mean, if you're going to keep it simple, keep it simple!

Steve

Last edited: Jul 23, 2013 01:21:49

Great input stevel!

We're def on the same page.

METEOR IV on reverbnation

I agree with stevel. A keyboard amp or a e-drum amp as part of the backline would work well and no monitor required.

Keep it Drippy Brothers and Sisters!

A few thoughts........

Yamaha Stagepas is similar to Fender Passport, easy to carry and set up. Price and featurs are about the same.

One JBL Eon powered speaker

Check your local Craigslist. Sound gear looses value faster than a new Buick leaving the dealership.

Check GC used gear...you can purchase a warrenty for a little peace of mind in case your system dies within weeks of taking it home.

Although you are looking for minimal today, you might look for more flexiblity and expandability down the road. The JBL powered speaker can be paired with another and with the addition of a small board you have a better system as your gigs improve to larger venues that do not provide sound.

Good luck

Happy Sunsets!

When I need to use a PA (usually at stand-alone gigs where we are outside and there is no 'house PA'), I use a line level desk and Wharfedale powered cabinets, and when more definition is required I hook up a slave amp and floor wedges for a wall of sound. The little wharfies can be good for practices where the band are learning new songs too (as you can plug your laptop or mp3 player straight in to one).

He who dies with the most tubes... wins

Surf Daddies

tahitijack wrote:

A few thoughts........

Yamaha Stagepas is similar to Fender Passport, easy to carry and set up. Price and featurs are about the same.

One JBL Eon powered speaker

Check your local Craigslist. Sound gear looses value faster than a new Buick leaving the dealership.

Check GC used gear...you can purchase a warrenty for a little peace of mind in case your system dies within weeks of taking it home.

Although you are looking for minimal today, you might look for more flexiblity and expandability down the road. The JBL powered speaker can be paired with another and with the addition of a small board you have a better system as your gigs improve to larger venues that do not provide sound.

Good luck

Thanks for the input but I already have a full PA.

METEOR IV on reverbnation

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