ZeroZero wrote: ↑06 Mar 2025, 14:01
Hi. I went to a rehearsal this week. It was a bit of a jam, in the room I could not hear myself when playing. Now I know that the real answer is explaining to the drummer and guitarist that pp is not something babies do in nappies, but there comes a time for every player, in the moment that they must play whilst others make a racket.
I am not too fond of in ear monitors as the fall out my ears, but I would get some if this was the best way. Are there in ear monitors that do not do this? What are my options these days, for a small pub band scenario. I had not played out for years. I also play sax and could provide backing vocals. I use a Nord Stage 4 and sometimes an SKX pro.
Equipment suggestions?
Things I've done for that:
- bring an old CPS SSv3 and earplugs to keep up with the racket (it works!)
- use a dual small mixer IEM setup
- telling everyone to turn down or I'd be departing soon
The CPS SSv3 has a stereo spread, placed sideways on an amp stand it can fill a rehearsal room and be clearly heard above the din. APs will always suck. Don't forget the foam earplugs.
A small pair of 8" PA speakers (EV, QSC, Yammie, etc.) will sound better, but not fill the space as well.
My dual small mixer setup when a PA is available:
- mixer 1 gets keys etc., sends to FOH and mixer 2
- mixer 2 gets mixer 1 and FOH, sends to IEMs, this is where I turn up my ears.
In your case, you'd send keys, sax and vox to mixer 1 and provide a combined mix to whatever PA was available, or whatever in-room amplification you're using. If you can't hear yourself over the din, turn up mixer 2, not mixer 1.
Alternatively, if you have a single mixer with aux busses (XR-18, etc) that can be used as well.
I think people spend too much on name-brand IEMs. I buy IEMs in bulk for my band (they break!) and go for the ~$50 Amazon specials with ~$20 foam tips and a ~$10 cable. The tips come in a size variety pack, one will work well for you. If you give them a while to break in, they are as good, or better, than my Westones, Shures, etc. at a fraction of the cost.
Since I'm a keyboard player and not up front, I've been using ~$100 Sennheiser open-back headphones for gigs. I look like a complete dork but they are GREAT as my ears don't sweat and I can still hear everything around me.
Finally, if people insist on playing too loud, I remind them that I'd be leaving soon if they continued, and do so while smiling, almost like I'm talking to young children.
I've only had to walk out once.