
Posted on Oct 07 2014 12:12 PM
My band just finished a fund raiser at an outdoor venue (blueberry farm).
We are a five pieced with 6 piece gear (drummer and rhythm guitar player swap out on drums and keys and guitar)
stage was 160 square feet. five, 4x8 sheet of ply; three for the guitars up front and 2 for the drum riser.
We have a QSC 1,000 watt powered PA with powered subs. Everything goes through the mixing board (Mackie EFX 12) and everything goes out the PA. Amps on stage are tilted and aimed mostly sideways for stage monitors and to avoid exploding people's heads in the audience.
Drums: the entire kit was mic'd bass, snare, one mic for the upper toms and 1 mic for the floor tom, two overheads for the cymbals (note on overheads: the audience can hear everything you say on stage) The drum mic go through the drummer's individual board then he give me two (left and right) signals to go into the main board. I control master volume at the board, he controls individual drums gains and volumes.
it sounds complicated but it really isn't. the drums sounded sweet.
Bass: 450 watt amp/cab went behind the drummer so bass player and drummer could hear it. Bass amp DI into the board.
Rhythm Guitars; Both amps on the side of the stage mostly pointed sideway and way up so it goes right by the two rhythm guitarists heads.
My lead guitar amp: Same as above sideways and pointed at my head.
All guitar amps mic'd out front (SM57's) and sent to the board.
Two floor monitors with a main mix coming out of one of the tops. I like to hear what the audience is hearing. We have two aux sends from the board for individual monitor mixes but it adds a level of complexity we didn't have time for at this gig.
We do several vocal songs so the monitors are absolutely key. Even without vocal songs good monitors with a main mix lets you know what the audience is hearing and it sounds better on stage, more like rehearsal.
Worked great. Only issue was we only have two Eon 15G's for monitors and the drummer really needs his own. I told him he gets to use the head phones for that Keith Moon look. Or- he gets to throw down on his own monitor. Tip: A good solid state guitar amp works great as a monitor.
After all is mic'd us and pumped out, we have our trusted musician friends help us fine tune it during sound check or on the fly before they get too drunk.
We did two sets 10 songs each for 2 35 minutes sets. It went great.
RobC