
Treeline
New member
I am a de facto sound guy for a small parochial school that does a Christmas concert in a large church. It's an audio nightmare; 145 or so elementary size kids up front, 400 or so parents, uncles & aunts in the back, room for 600, and nobody can hear or see anything.
I thought it can't get any worse than that, so at the last minute (December)I tried to set up some kind of sound, and it worked. Just that I don't think it worked well! This time I'm looking for some input.
The church has a new and rather nice P.A. system (professionally installed about 1996), four EV dynamic mics, a few wireless mics, XLR mic inputs all over the place up front, and six commercial grade overhead mounted speakers. The workings of the system are absolutely hands off, so I turn it on and play with mics. The system works well for speech and OK with one or two instruments. Sound is OK; biased a little towards the treble.
Last year we had three overhead choir mics (mounted on a nylon string web, but how that happened is another wobbly stepladder story), each pointed towards the center of the altar and about five feet ahead and over the front third of the choir), and three dynamic mics mounted on stands for individuals to use. About 150 kids.
Each mic went into its own channel on a basic Peavey mixing board (8 ch), everything panned left, and one mono left out into a house system mic input. It was a bit of a duct tape exercise, but all the transformers stayed put, I set up a snake for the mic lines, nobody tripped over the wires, and everything worked. I was a hero, meaning I'll have to do it again this year.
Feedback was a problem, although not as bad when the church was full of people. Just could not get much gain before all hell broke loose, so to speak. I had control of all but one mic, which was hooked directly to the system from the pulpit. Two of the overhead speakers were in back of part of the chorus, meaning that they were mounted (as were the others) each to one of six structural pillars in the vault of the church. So I was getting a direct signal to the mics from the two front speakers. I tried to deflect them (placed shields on each of the two), but can't tell if it really helped.
I'm thinking of reversing the direction of the overhead mics, and using reflector boards for each one. I don't know what else to do, other than haul in five hundred pounds of speakers. Do I simply have too much going on to work? The room is acoustically about as reflective as you can imagine; stucco, oak pews, large vaults, sixty feet wide, a hundred long, and so forth.
Anybody have some ideas that don't involve running away? Thanks!
I thought it can't get any worse than that, so at the last minute (December)I tried to set up some kind of sound, and it worked. Just that I don't think it worked well! This time I'm looking for some input.
The church has a new and rather nice P.A. system (professionally installed about 1996), four EV dynamic mics, a few wireless mics, XLR mic inputs all over the place up front, and six commercial grade overhead mounted speakers. The workings of the system are absolutely hands off, so I turn it on and play with mics. The system works well for speech and OK with one or two instruments. Sound is OK; biased a little towards the treble.
Last year we had three overhead choir mics (mounted on a nylon string web, but how that happened is another wobbly stepladder story), each pointed towards the center of the altar and about five feet ahead and over the front third of the choir), and three dynamic mics mounted on stands for individuals to use. About 150 kids.
Each mic went into its own channel on a basic Peavey mixing board (8 ch), everything panned left, and one mono left out into a house system mic input. It was a bit of a duct tape exercise, but all the transformers stayed put, I set up a snake for the mic lines, nobody tripped over the wires, and everything worked. I was a hero, meaning I'll have to do it again this year.
Feedback was a problem, although not as bad when the church was full of people. Just could not get much gain before all hell broke loose, so to speak. I had control of all but one mic, which was hooked directly to the system from the pulpit. Two of the overhead speakers were in back of part of the chorus, meaning that they were mounted (as were the others) each to one of six structural pillars in the vault of the church. So I was getting a direct signal to the mics from the two front speakers. I tried to deflect them (placed shields on each of the two), but can't tell if it really helped.
I'm thinking of reversing the direction of the overhead mics, and using reflector boards for each one. I don't know what else to do, other than haul in five hundred pounds of speakers. Do I simply have too much going on to work? The room is acoustically about as reflective as you can imagine; stucco, oak pews, large vaults, sixty feet wide, a hundred long, and so forth.
Anybody have some ideas that don't involve running away? Thanks!