"Duncan Wood" <newsto@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
news:op.t3jsvwulyuobwl@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 17:18:04 -0000, <ns7c@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>>> "M.C.Gordon Jr" wrote ...
>>
>>> Watch out over in a.a.p.l-s it can be a rough and crude
>>> neighborhood. Many of us have completely given up on
>>> that newsgroup because it has such a poor signal-to-noise
>>> ratio.
>>
>> Ah yes, that wretched hive of s*** and villainy, I did cross post
>> there as well and didn't receive much attention. Maybe that's a good
>> thing.....
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestions here! I hesitated asking about EQ, I know
>> ever situation is different. I guess what I really wanted to know is
>> if folks found that a lot of EQ was needed to get them to sound
>> natural. The room/stage I am working with is well tuned and for most
>> applications very little EQ is needed.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Scott
>
>
> Playing with the positioning & watching out for people singing into
other
> peoples mics makes the most difference. Personally I nearly always find
> less is more.
>
My feeling is that it isn't so bad if everyone can project to the 10th row
completely on their own. then you only need a tiny bit of reinforcement
to get them to the back of the hall.
The biggest problem is when some people are projecting and others
can't even be heard from the first row. It makes doing decent sound
almost imposible.
David


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