FOH engineer Art Merriweather with the Allen & Heath dLive (photo: Dani Ransom)
USA - Grammy-award winning hip-hop and R&B artist CeeLo Green recently completed an eleven-city Love Train tour celebrating the release of his new album Heart Blanche.

Although past performances featured a full acoustic band, CeeLo wanted to "pull it back" for this tour and, for these audiences he performed with just a sax and flute player, a percussionist and a DJ. However, the simplicity of CeeLo's stage masked a complex production with music ranging from hip-hop to jazz and a sophisticated audio system using an Allen & Heath dLive S5000 mixer and DM48 MixRack.

Art Merriweather, CeeLo's front-of-house and monitor engineer used wireless mics for CeeLo and all three backup vocalists and connected the sax player's pedal board, the percussionist's feeds and the DJ via direct inputs to the DM48 MixRack on stage.

Merriweather mixed and grouped these sources into as many as 11 different feeds for the house sound system and on-stage monitors. He noted that CeeLo's stage level can be high. "This is hip-hop," he said, "They want it loud so they can feel it. And, nobody on the tour likes in-ear monitors, so we've got powered wedges on the stage." To minimize bleed caused by the high stage level Merriweather uses the dLive's input-channel gates on the vocal mics and the sax player's instrument mic.

CeeLo cups the mic in his hands on some songs changing its sound quality. Merriweather uses the dLive's multi-band compressor to clean up the sound on these songs and says it automatically drops off when CeeLo moves his hands back down the mic.

Merriweather praises the dLive's several vintage reverb emulators calling them "spot-on the best I've heard." He uses two different dLive reverbs on the DJ, echo plus reverb on the sax and a pitch shifter on CeeLo's hit song, "Crazy" to double the artist's voice both two octaves up and two octaves down.

Merriweather, who has 12years' experience as a front-of-house and recording engineer, says this was his first experience with the dLive on tour but he wants to use it on other runs with different artists. He appreciates the dLive's "analogue feel" which allows him to concentrate on the mix and not be distracted by the technology and says he's looking forward to using the dLive's wireless iPad control. "I love this desk," he said, "and, whatever it can do, I'm doing it."

(Jim Evans)


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