The terrible truth is that no matter how well you've balanced everything, every PA and every room will sound different. So that beautiful Grand that you've adjusted to blend perfectly with the other programs in your set is going to really BITE people in the face on that gig in the hotel lobby with the shitty Bose sound system and the reflective glass paneling surrounding the stage.monsterjazzlicks wrote:In my experience, if you set your levels using just your ears through headphones, the end results will be miles off! Even playing the synth through a mixer or Cubase (in your bedroom) produces undesirable conclusions.
The only way to prepare for this is to try and play back extremely familiar productions before sound check to get a feel for what the PA and room will do to your sound. (Which, of course, is what you hear travelling FoH engineers do before every gig.)
That's ideal and should give you a pretty good idea of how your sounds work in context! Excellent!90% of my playing is in small or medium sized bars, or else in cafes (so there is no house-mixer or PA system). On circa 10/15% is there an actual sound engineer; and with not wishing to sound disrespectful, I would say that many of the engineers are not trainedas such. Funnily enough, a trio performance in December was recorded through the house-mixer and I'm waiting for the guy to Drop-box it to me . . .
For one project, the initial prep relied on the band supplying complete recordings of a gig, with the entire band on one track, and the keyboard stem a separate track.Do you yourself use your second method where you have your performances recorded (minus-one)?
Stuff that I've added over time since then has been eyeballing levels and lots of communication with FoH.
For another project, I do most of the programming and adjusting during rehearsals, so it's already done within the context of the band. (This, incidentally, is the greatest thing about the Stage: I can usually whip up something that everybody is happy with within two minutes or so DURING REHEARSAL. No other (digital) keyboard has ever allowed me to do that! Even a band I work with that regards "imitations" with absolute scorn has approvingly accepted the Stage 3 as a "real" instrument in its own right. I suppose the fact that I know my way around it and freely blend and morph synths, organs, pianos, clavichords and integrate effects helps a lot.
This makes sense from a "sound reinforcement" standpoint.One thing I have never understood with (some) sound engineers is that they seem to insist on mic-ing everything up (inc. drums!) in a room which only holds (say) 45 people! I inform them I carry two Yamaha DXR powered speakers, AND that I am naturally a 'loud' player. And so, half way through the first song everything starts feeding-back!
The idea of FoH in small rooms is to balance the sound. So while the drums may be loud enough in their entirety, the kick may not carry across the room. Or the aforementioned glass paneling may mean that the cymbals overpower everything. So having the ability to gently add toms, kick, and snare back into the mix to balance the drums is important.


