LewTheKeysGuy wrote:A sound engineer moaning about doing more work is nothing new, but saddening, because it's a craft and that's what a sound engineer is there to do, mix, enhance and get a decent sound to the P.A and recording systems, otherwise, why bother.
The sound engineer’s job is to make the whole band sound great out front.
If the keyboard guy or a guitar guy with a pedal board doesn’t have his levels under control, then his job is going to be made that much harder/impossible, because he’s got two vocalists and a horn section to balance, and if a singer gets out front to work with the audience, then any blaring synth hit that’s 6 dB too loud is just going to get the keyboard turned down until it’s no longer annoying.
Either that, or the keyboard is just going to get slammed into a limiter, which means that rather than sounds being at the RIGHT level, they’re all going to be at the SAME level, which is absolutely not what you want.
In addition, if you’re working with layers or splits, and the piano is just right, but the horn part takes a quarter inch off everyone’s scalp, there is no way a sound engineer can fix it.
Getting your levels straight is part of the keyboard player's job. If he fails, the sound engineer can save him a bit some of the time — but only if he has the time.
(FWIW, first major cover band job I had, it took me about two weeks to get the sounds down. About six months to get the levels straight — constant working with the FoH guys, who’d often be nice enough to make a note when something stuck out or they had to fix the mix.)