We had a gig on Saturday at a venue we've played before. The bass player owns the PA and digital mixer, so he's 'in charge' of live mixing. His version of 'mixing' results in everyone having so many frequencies removed that it's just a muddy mess out front. I've tried to help before, but he refuses to listen (I used to mix both of my old bands when we played live, so have some idea of what to do).
At the start of set 2, he spent 30 minutes - no exaggeration - trying to fix very loud feedback that was happening, resulting in punters leaving the pub and the drummer almost punching him, as well as the landlord getting visibly pissed off. The 'fix' was to pretty much reduce every frequency for the singer above 3k and drop her volume right down (and she isn't a very powerful singer anyway).
This then resulted in my guitar being way louder than the singer (for a change!), much to the annoyance of her husband (who decided he'd wear a 'crew' t shirt for the gig.... don't get me started). I suggested maybe as he's 'crew' he should be sorting the sound.
I've now cancelled our future gigs and 'suggested' that the band need to sort this out, as it keeps happening, and it's unprofessional, embarrassing and quite honestly bloody frustrating. I'm also refusing to do another gig unless we pay for a dedicated sound engineer to come along and sort it all out.
Feel like a bit of a diva, but as Steve Morse told me - you shouldn't put up with anything that detracts from the live performance.
Grrrrrrrrr.
Comments
You wouldn't tolerate a player who was that bad at the job so don't tolerate the amateur part time soundman either.
I’m so bored I might as well be listening to Pink Floyd
It's completely against the wisdom that thou shalt mic everything up / this is the way it ought to be done - but:
a) we don't want to fork out for a FOH engineer (if we could even find someone who wants to do it) and
b) it would be complete overkill for most of the rooms we play.
It's also way simpler / easier setup and teardown and avoids the hot mess you encountered that night? Worth a go?
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I’m so bored I might as well be listening to Pink Floyd
You mention She's not a very powerful singer. This is what we call too low a PFL level. That can be a problem that needs a lot of thought but it's not something that's generally solvable by EQ alone. First of all consider the mic, the mic technique and the placement of the speaker and foldback.
For a general mic like a 58 and a softish singer holding the mic in TV mode (below face) at a typical pub gig there is as much drums going in that mic as there is vocal. So try and get the singer to be right on the mic and get her as far from the drums as possible.
Put the FOH speakers as far forward as you can ... not level with the band and certainly not behind the level of the vocal mic.
If you have to use a wedge for the singer than move it until it's in as much of the mic's dead zone as poss. IEM's might seem an advantage here but generally once people can actually hear themselves with IEM's properly they sing quieter with doesn't help with the first issue of too little PLF level off the vocal for a small congested setup.
Then in general a highpass at 120Hz ish, a small cut with low Q around 4 to 500Hz ish and a low pass at 12K ish will generally suit most female vocals. It depends on the singer, the type of PA as well but it's a good starting point.
I've seen this kind of thing happen loads of times. Especially with people like your bass player with "all the gear but no idea" ... tempers fray, people lose heart etc but a bit of common sense and some faint praise even if it's underserved will take the sting out of telling them they need to stop doing what they are doing.
For extra details - the singer and I both use IEMs. The drummer doesn't have IEMs or a monitor, and relies on hearing the vocals through volume alone, and I have to bring a backline.... even though I run my AXE FX through the PA anyway. Don't get me started on that.... check out my old post about him almost coming to blows with a local sound engineer I know.....
The bass is not mic'd up at all, and the speakers are in front of all of us. I think the singer has an SM58, and she never moves around.
I've told the drummer more times than I can count that he needs to get a monitor sorted out, but he always comes up with some excuse.
TBH, after having stood my ground, they've all gone quiet; I expect I'll be kicked out, which feels like it might be a blessing in disguise!
Feed a signal from the mixer into that - and your drummer will hear both VOCALS and GUITAR?
That way you don't have to bring separate guitar backline either?
Done.
How's your bass player hearing the vocals and guitar if he's not using in-ears or wedge monitors?
I do actually feel sorry for the bass player - no wonder he's wrestling with on stage mixing duties if he's whacking up FOH mains to allow your drummer to hear vocals?!!? Good grief.
I'm in the middle of the start of a new band and trying to work out what kit we need, and what of that we need to buy and what we might be able to hire. But at no point is anyone trying to compromise on kit - we need to be able to hear ourselves, as do the audience!
https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/audio-feedback-trainer/id1538864563
What a tool.
I’m so bored I might as well be listening to Pink Floyd
First, choose *one* approach - either everyone has IEMs, or no IEMs and wedge/side monitors, and either everything through the PA or only the vocals through the PA. Then, either you as the designated soundman or the band collectively get whatever gear you need to do whichever approach you've chosen. Mixing and matching is not going to work when you have idiocy like the drummer refusing to have a monitor.
Personally, for small pub gigs when the unamplified kit is likely to be the loudest source I think backline and old-school monitoring still works best, with very minimal instrument reinforcement through the PA at most - more to produce better dispersion if needed than to 'mix'. At this point you have to pay attention to the physical placement and direction of the amps (especially guitar) and their EQ or you get hot spots and volume wars. You want the guitar amps raised and not pointing directly at the punters, the bass amp on the floor and preferably not pointing directly at the punters, and enough wedge monitors to cover everyone - two or three across the front and one for the drummer is usually fine. It's also usually a good idea to listen to someone you trust out front to tell you if anything is too loud/quiet or sounding bad *and be prepared to adjust if they say so*... way too many musicians won't, when they're in the worst position to be able to tell.
However, you have a problem here - the bass player is already the designated PA owner/sound engineer and is obviously clueless. So either you need to convince him to take advice (which sounds like it isn't working), relinquish that role, replace him, or leave the band if the first three are not possible.
"Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski
"Only two things are infinite - the universe, and human stupidity. And I'm not sure about the universe." - Albert Einstein
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A badly balanced system or a badly arranged stage can't be remedied by radical EQ. System design and mic/speaker choice/placement need to be dealt with first.