Twin arrays each consisting of ten V-Dosc cabinets, eight SB218 subwoofers, seven more V-Dosc, and a tail of six dV-Dosc flank the left and right sides of the new shell with an additional centre hang of 17 dV-Dosc flown from the apex of the structure. Furthermore, three 112XT enclosures are hung from the catwalk halo to provide nearfield coverage for the seating areas directly in front of the stage, while five compact MTD108a cabinets are employed as stage lip speakers. All systems are powered by L-Acoustics LA 48a amplifiers.
Fred Vogler is the sound designer for the L.A. Philharmonic who, along with Hollywood Bowl Audio/Video department head Michael Cooper and assistant head Kevin Wapner, runs the system on a nearly nightly basis from June through September. He recalls how an all-L-Acoustics system was chosen for the venue: "Last season, prior to our renovation, many of the larger tours coming through, such as Radiohead and Björk, were carrying V-Dosc rigs and I liked what we heard. However, seeing that systems for rock shows are tuned so much differently than classical systems, we chose to perform our own listening tests with a number of different speaker brands down at Coors Amphitheater in Chula Vista. We invited Bruce Jackson and Patrick Baltzell to join us, and between the five of us, it was a consensus that the L-Acoustics system was, for our needs, simply the best choice.
"Now that our new system is in and properly tuned, I can say that V-Dosc and dV-Dosc are a quantum leap over what we had been operating with in the past. The coherency of wavefront and omission of delay speakers makes our system just so easy to operate; it's certainly the biggest hi-fi I've ever been around. And the consistency of sound throughout the entire venue is so nice, even at the back row of the bleachers, which is 450 feet out and 90 feet up from the stage. We have truly entered a new realm of stereo sound here at the Hollywood Bowl.
"To have this system at our disposal is phenomenal; it's a high-performance vehicle. Virtually all of the front-of-house engineers coming through - even those touring with the biggest-name artists - have been genuinely excited to mix on it. And they're always absolutely knocked out by it. But considering that we have 240,000 watts of punch and so many boxes, who wouldn't be? There's not another tour stop in the world that's going to throw a rig like this up in one day."
(Sarah Rushton-Read)