L&S America Online   Subscribe
Advertise
Home Lighting Sound AmericaIndustry News Contacts
NewsNews
NewsNews

-Today's News

-Last 7 Days

-Theatre in Review

-Business News + Industry Support

-People News

-Product News

-Subscribe to News

-Subscribe to LSA Mag

-News Archive

-Media Kit

Wireless First/Clair Global at CMT Artists of the Year Broadcast

Host Rob Lowe with (back): Jason Aldean; Charles Kelley, Lady Antebellum; Brad Paisley; Dave Haywood, Lady Antebellum; and (front) Taylor Swift; Kenny Chesney; and Hillary Scott, Lady Antebellum. Photo: Getty Images.

The Country Music Television (CMT) Artists of the Year celebration honors five top artists with an evening of live music at Nashville's Bridgestone Arena. This year, Rob Lowe hosted the proceedings, which included performances by the five honorees: Taylor Swift, Jason Aldean, Lady Antebellum, Brad Paisley, and Kenny Chesney. As in the past, CMT hired Wireless First, a Clair Global Company, to simultaneously provide live sound reinforcement and broadcast sound (the show aired in mid-December), along with RF equipment and expertise. In addition to the Clair i3 line array system, Clair Global brought two new products: a custom-built portable RF microphone podium and the CF 1090 fractal antenna.

"It was an interesting mix of music and performances," said Monty Curry, who served as Clair Global crew chief and production A1. "There were a lot of guest musicians and a lot of creative sets. For example, Lady Antebellum gave its backing band the night off and performed an acoustic set-just the three of them." In addition to Curry, Rick Schimer was on hand to mix front-of-house music. Jason Spence was on monitors. Josh Macinerny managed the evening's RF signal space. Paul Cervanansky oversaw the construction and interconnection of Wireless First/Clair Global's infrastructure in his role as chief system engineer.

"One of the main challenges at a show like this is striking a balance between the live vibe and the broadcast quality that doesn't feel like a compromise on either end," explained Curry. "Otherwise, everything suffers. If the people in the audience don't get the volume they expect, they don't react with the same excitement that they would at a normal concert. That feeds back to the performers, who sense that lack of excitement. Even though these are the most professional musicians in the industry, they're also humans. They're bound to put on a better show when they feel the excitement of the crowd." Clair Global says that its proprietary line array system delivered significant SPL to the crowd, and, via tight pattern control, low SPL to any on-stage production mics, while simultaneously keeping a low, camera-friendly profile.

"On CMT's Artists of the Year celebration and other high-profile awards shows, stage management and logistics is a complicated affair," said Kevin Sanford, principal of Wireless First. "All the podium rigs that we had encountered were time-consuming to assemble, awkward to move around on stage, and of less than professional sound quality and reliability." Clair broadcasting's solution was to place two Schoeps condensers at the top of the stand with their cables running internally to a base that concealed battery power and a wireless transmitter. Curry used the hypercardioid microphone when only one speaker was addressing the mic-and the cardioid mic otherwise. Its sleek design and robust RF transmitter base (which is held on magnetically to allow for speedy troubleshooting or adjustments) made it easy to move it wherever it was needed on stage, the company says.

The RF component of the show involved some two dozen microphone channels, including Shure, Sennheiser, and Audio-Technica live performance mics. Macinerny gave the presenters Sennheiser 5200 Series handheld and body-pack transmitters, some outfitted with Neumann KK 105 capsules. Spence delivered his mixes to the performers using a dozen stereo Sennheiser G2 Series wireless personal monitors delivered to the receivers using a pair of Clair Global's new CF 1090 fractal antennas. "We started designing the CF 1090 many years ago and recently finished a year-and-a-half of prototyping and beta tests," said Sanford. "The goal from the beginning was to design a rock-solid, reliably consistent antenna that we could count on in high-stakes situations like the CMT show. It's gratifying to see all of that hard work pay off. The goal has definitely been achieved."

For the house PA, Clair Global brought in its i3 line array. A relatively new advance, however, is its power and processing source. The modular Clair StakRak houses three Lab.gruppen PLM Series amplifiers and a Dolby Lake signal processor. Control and audio passes on CAT5 cable (along with other standard formats), and each StakRak integrates seamlessly with other units, along with Clair's loudspeakers and subwoofers, the company says. "It's very easy to set up and use," said Curry. "Configuring our system is fast and reliable, which allows us to focus our attention on the million other things that are demanded of us."

WWWwww.clairglobal.com


(4 January 2012)

E-mail this story to a friendE-mail this story to a friend

LSA Goes Digital - Check It Out!

  Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on Facebook

LSA PLASA Focus