Chosen by monitor engineer, AJ Sutherland, and supplied by Patchwork London for the European leg, the system comprised a Dante-enabled GLD-112 mixer with an AR2412 and two AR84 remote IO racks to manage five pairs of wedges and four stereo IEMs plus the engineer's listen wedge and cue mix.
Promoting Enter Shikari's fourth studio album, the tour included 25 dates across Europe, including two nights at London's Roundhouse on a sold out UK run, and 30 dates in 23 States in America, which included two festival appearances.
"I bought a GLD-80 when it first came out and have used it on various projects over the past three years. I think it nails the midscale console market. The IO, functionality and audio quality are suited to the demands of high level productions and it's small enough to fly around the world and fit on cramped stages," comments AJ.
"It's really helped the remaining band members migrate onto in-ears, and they seem to be enjoying discovering what is possible, plus the management can't complain about the price. Being able to have the same console for each show makes my life a massive amount easier and the band's show a lot better. A&H is my first choice of console as they are so fast and easy to use which is vital on such a high energy show."
The tour production is managed holistically so that all facets of the system - backline, audio, lighting and video - are integrated. Novation controllers and keyboards are positioned around stage for any band or crew member to control the track, with timecode flowing to lighting/video, and MIDI connecting everything from drum triggers and Kemper rigs to audio consoles and whammy FX pedals.
(Jim Evans)