Adlib were "extremely proud" to be working with the band again for the hugely successful tour which played three weeks around the UK and Ireland, including an acclaimed sell out show at the new 8000 capacity Hydro Arena in their hometown of Glasgow.
Adlib's FOH engineer Dave Kay also mixed the last gigs they did back in 2002, and in the meantime he's stayed in touch with lead singer / bassist Justin Currie and worked on several of his solo projects. Kay was absolutely delighted to be asked back, "Great people, great music and it's been a lot of fun, " he comments.
The tour encompassed a wide mix of venues - starting in a pub in Ireland, it went through several arts theatres before settling into a run of concert halls and the Hydro Arena - so everyone on the production team had to be flexible in their approaches.
They toured one of Adlib's Coda PA systems, and also hooked their control into the house racks-and-stacks when this was the best and most practical option, which included all the venues with Adlib installations - Leeds and Bournemouth Academies and Cambridge Corn Exchange.
The Coda touring system comprised 12 x Coda LA12 speakers per side with eight Coda SCP subs a side ground stacked, together with Coda ViRay cabinets used for balconies, in and out-fills.
Kay chose the Coda system because of the hi-fidelity sound of the band, the complexity of their mix and the system's real adaptability. "They are great players and I wanted a fully transparent sounding system with good dynamic range," he explains.
For the FOH set up however he decided to go retro and analogue with a Midas H3000 console plus a big rack of outboards.
"This worked very well the last time I worked with Del Amitri, so I decided to adopt the 'if it 'ain't broken don't fix it' philosophy ... and went analogue."
Kay loved mixing analogue, "If you don't actually need digital snapshots and scenesthen it is an exceedingly quick and very reactive way to operate, you can literally feel the sound, and with a great sounding desk like the H3000, create a lovely, warm, rich mix".
The 40 input console was filled to capacity, and he used the stereo returns for his effects. The usual Adlib Lake processing rack at FOH handled all the system EQ and time alignment.
The outboards included three Yamaha SPX2000s, two TC D2 delays, four dbx 160 compressors, four BSS 402 and one BSS 404 compressors, eight Drawmer 201 gates ... and a BSS DPR 901 multi-band compressor for Justin's vocal.
Pressure pads were linked to the backing vocal mics which switched them on and off to reduce guitar spill and other sounds coming off the stage.
Sam Proctor was Adlib's FOH tech and all the shows were recorded using a DN9650 network bridge, part of the Midas PRO2 set up used by monitor engineer Marc Peers.
Peers has also worked for Del Amitri before for about four years at the end of the nineties and early noughties. "I actually can't believe it was 12 years ago," he remarks, adding that it felt just like yesterday the first time he walked into rehearsals.
Like Dave Kay he was also really pleased to be back, and the fact that they are all accomplished musicians made it "Like slipping on a pair of comfy shoes!"
The band use a mix of wedges and IEMs, so Adlib supplied eight of their low profile MP4 wedges, together with two L-Acoustics ARCs and an SB28 sub per side for side-fills plus a Sennheiser G3 system for the three band members on IEMs - Justin Currie, lead guitarist Iain Harvie and drummer Ashley Soan.
"Technology has moved on exponentially since the last touring work, so the IEMs provided the main monitoring and the wedges were there for 'additional weight' and back-up," says Peers, who,