MesaGod666
Well-known member
Ok. I've been thinking about this recently as I have spent many thousands of dollars on my gear and have been doing this for 10+ years. My band REDSKY (Melo-death metal) just finished our first leg of touring and there's a common thread that we have encountered at every gig and it has to do with stage volume. We don't run monitors (because of feedback and other issues) or have IEMs (yet). We have primarily been playing clubs and bars, but we also played an auditorium and a college arena/gymnasium. For the clubs and bars some sound engineers like having a loud stage, but most engineers demand that the stage volume be kept to a min. Which brings me to my first question, what is loud is too loud for a club or bar and why?
My live rig is a Triaxis/2:Ninety set up running two 4x12 Mesa Cabs. I've barely been able to get the volume knob on the 2:Ninety past 9 o'clock before peaking the soundboard. When I run my Mark V (for smaller venues) its the same situation. I can't get past 9 o'clock on my Master volume (granted I bypass the FX loop and only run CH3). So, this brings me to my second question, when would "cranking the volume" be appropriate at a live gig? I like to have nice loud stage volume, but at the same time I like the overall mix to be nice for everyone as well. The problem we've been having is that the drums are louder than everything else on the stage and everything else is muddy and buried in the mix. I'm a mids guy so hearing myself isn't a problem as long as I am right in front of my rig. When we turn up, though, the entire mix suffers. I don't know if that's because the sound guys suck or because our tones are clashing or whatever. So what is too loud and what is too quiet.
My live rig is a Triaxis/2:Ninety set up running two 4x12 Mesa Cabs. I've barely been able to get the volume knob on the 2:Ninety past 9 o'clock before peaking the soundboard. When I run my Mark V (for smaller venues) its the same situation. I can't get past 9 o'clock on my Master volume (granted I bypass the FX loop and only run CH3). So, this brings me to my second question, when would "cranking the volume" be appropriate at a live gig? I like to have nice loud stage volume, but at the same time I like the overall mix to be nice for everyone as well. The problem we've been having is that the drums are louder than everything else on the stage and everything else is muddy and buried in the mix. I'm a mids guy so hearing myself isn't a problem as long as I am right in front of my rig. When we turn up, though, the entire mix suffers. I don't know if that's because the sound guys suck or because our tones are clashing or whatever. So what is too loud and what is too quiet.