USA - Macy's Parade is one of the most enduring Thanksgiving Day traditions in America. Millions have seen the parade on television since it was first broadcast by NBC in 1948, and in recent years the biggest crowds along the route have heard the sound of the parade through Meyer Sound loudspeakers.

For the past fifteen years, audio consultant Randy Hansen of ADI Group has served as sound designer for the parade, and for the last ten parades he has relied on New York-based Sound Associates to provide audio equipment and system engineering. "I generally prefer to use Meyer Sound loudspeakers whenever I can," says Hansen. "We've been doing this parade so long with Sound Associates that I guess I just take the Meyer speakers for granted. Perhaps that's because we haven't had any problems with them, they've always performed flawlessly."

This year's parade, started out on Central Park West at 77th Street, and proceeded down Broadway concluding in front of Macy's flagship store on 34th Street. The Macy's parade producers charged Hansen with creating extensive reinforcement systems at opposite ends of the route: the uptown system and the downtown system. Systems integration and on-site supervision were assigned to Domonic Sack and his Sound Associates crew. The uptown system covered the entire parade line-up and starting area, extending along Central Park West from 72nd Street up to 81st Street, and also circling around an adjacent large city block occupied by the Museum of Natural History. "That system had a number of different uses," notes Sack. "It handled announcements and music tracks on Wednesday night when over a million people came to see the inflation of the balloons. Early Thursday morning it was used by the parade captain to line up the parade and get it launched on schedule, which meant communicating clearly to over ten thousand people. During the parade it carried the broadcast feed to the people on the streets. Finally, since the police wanted it available as an emergency paging system, there was zero tolerance for any failures."

The uptown system was split into three subsystems, each with distinct coverage assignments. One subsystem of 32 UM-1 UltraMonitors covered the Museum block, with each speaker mounted on a six-foot pole - dubbed a "lollipop" - strapped to the museum fence. Along Central Park West, 10 UPA-1C loudspeakers on 10-foot "lollipops" covered the long rows of bleacher seats, while a trio of self-powered MSL-4 horn-loaded long-throw loudspeakers projected down along the streets from the starting intersection at 77th Street. Because no wires could cross the streets, each remote subsystem was connected to the audio booth by Sennheiser wireless link. A fourth MSL-4 was mounted on a dolly (complete with its own small mixer) that rolled alongside floats whenever on-board artists needed to perform to track in front of the NBC camera positions.

The downtown system. on 34th Street had to the meet the significantly different challenges imposed by surrounding building surfaces and an extremely tight deployment schedule. "We needed a system that could go in ultra-fast and work right off the bat," Sack reports. "We couldn't even load in until 6:15am that morning, so we had no time to fool around. We used a forklift to put three MSL-4s and a CQ-1 up on each of the three Macy's marquee platforms over the street. We had a year-round power drop on each, so we simply pulled up the audio line and we were ready to go."

Summing up the annual parade experience, Hansen concludes, "It's a day that's about children and families having a lot of fun. You want to make sure your sound is clean, intelligible, and never too loud or too in-your-face. That's one of the reasons I chose to go with an all-Meyer system, and I very rarely make a departure from that preference."

(Sarah Rushton-Read)


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