The Console Switch

By EXW Staff,
June 13, 2011

Read more from EXW Staff
 

from Analog to Digital by Michael J. Faber

I recently had the opportunity to make the switch from an analog to a digital console. I guess I am one of the old school guys who had to be dragged kicking and screaming into the digital world. I still love the sound of analog; I still love two inch tape machines, old microphones, and tube amplifiers. There is warmness available with the old equipment that just isn't available in today's digital equipment.

However, on a recent monitor gig I had to learn a new trick: I had to mix seven in ear mixes on a Yamaha PM5D. I had just one week to learn the console in the shop, then go and do four days of rehearsals. Let me just say this was a real eye opener. First off, the console had a very small footprint compared to the analog desks with several stereo sends used for mixing IEM's. Secondly, the ease of learning a basic mix, weather it is for house or monitors, was fairly short. Admittedly, the internal patching concepts may take a little longer, but if you are at all familiar with today's DAW's, this shouldn't be much of a problem either.

Making the change to digital from analog in your church setting shouldn't be a difficult one either. Since most of the digital consoles have effects and DSP built in, the space savings is enormous. You can lose your rack(s) with gates, compressors, equalizers, and reverbs and delays. It is all there. There is an EQ on every output, both parametric and graphic. The reverbs sound amazing, because most of the console manufacturers have either a sister company in their arsenal that they can tap to provide the algorithms, or have made a business arrangement with one.

The advantages to having a digital console in a worship setting are many. The consistency in the day to day audio quality will dramatically increase. To a new trainee on your volunteer staff it may be less intimidating than an analog one. There are quite a few less knobs. There is total recall on the consoles so that all a new user/trainee need do if the staff person has programmed the console, the trainee will recall the console settings and have his or her starting point immediately. This is especially true for monitors. The monitor engineer takes more time than the house engineer to get the mixes up for each Sunday Service, or at least that is how it is in my church. The ability to recall many stage setups and have a starting point is unbelievably time-saving.

Page  1  |  2  |  Next











blog comments powered by Disqus



Music Director TX Other
Media Designer NY Wesleyan
Gold Star Listing Worship and Arts Pastor SC Baptist - SBC
Director of Youth and Young Adult Ministries WI United Methodist
Worship pastor MO United Methodist
Praise and Worship Leader MD Non-Denominational
Executive Pastor KY Non-Denominational
Director Grow Ministries GA United Methodist
Pastor of Children's Ministry NC Non-Denominational
Organist MD Presbyterian - PCUSA





       



Experiencing Worship, The Study
Used by churches all over the world to help teach worship, the Experiencing Worship study can help your worship team too. Your team will learn why we worship and gain a better understanding of how to worship. One user said..."Your 5 week study course has made a tremendous impact on my life in the study of worship... I would like to express my thanks for a well written study course that leads into a higher realm of praise and worship."

Order the study today!