Held on a 108-hectare (266-acre) island on the Danube in north Budapest, Sziget Festival broke all attendance records on an expanded site, designed to hold a paying audience of 90,000, and at one point numbered 100,000, including production crew, artists and guests.
For production company Capital Sound, now in their tenth year at the week-long event, the challenges were immense. Tasked with providing world class sound reinforcement for world famous headliners such as Robbie Williams, Kings of Leon, Florence & The Machine and many more, they were working in fierce heat and dusty conditions.
But Capital was eager to showcase MLA, having already successfully fielded it for the Sziget Organisation's other front line festivals, Balaton Sound in Zamárdi and Volt in Sopron. Capital's Paul Timmins explains: "The event itself has grown from humble beginnings 22 years ago. By the time we got involved in 2006 it was already a good sized festival, and the biggest change since has been in the quality of the production.
"We wanted to demonstrate the uniqueness of MLA, in terms of control, but really showcase its performance and so this year we made sure the system was designed to give sufficient headroom. We had existing data and graphs but adjusted this to take account of the fact that the stage positioning had moved slightly.
"Although many of the sound engineers had experienced MLA some had not used a system of that size, or where there were no offsite restrictions. Here they could run at full throttle, setting the level where they wanted."
Of the high calibre sound engineers and system techs who accompanied their artists, two who relished the opportunity to be mixing through MLA once again were Paul Ramsay (Kasabian) and Nigel Pepper (The Foals).
In terms of durability MLA met the challenging weather conditions but also running full tilt as Timmins explains, "with sound checks, the system was running hard from 8am-11pm for each of the seven nights."
The performance and durability of the main MLA hangs was only matched by the role played by the delay towers.
Why were the four delay masts, set 80m back from the stage, so crucial? Paul Timmins explains that in the heat of the day, many of the audience sought protection back in the woodland of this nature park, where all the lower branches had been removed to increase capacity, while still offering protection from the heat. "Therefore, it was critical that we extended coverage into the woodland," he said. "People said the delay sound was amazing, although it was weird looking at an empty area in front of the stage [during the daytime acts], with so many sitting way back in the shaded woods."
Supervised by PA tech Joseph Pearce at FOH and Hungarian MLA tech, Marci Mezi, the main PA - comprising two 17-element drops and an MLD Downfill at the base - was supported by two side hangs of nine MLA and an MLD Downfill.
Summing up, Paul Timmins admits that this year's Sziget had been the most demanding festival he had been involved with, but he could scarcely have been happier with the result; more importantly he reports that the final day debrief with the local production team revealed the same level of satisfaction. "Having made some great improvements to the stage position, they were blown away with the sound, and going forward we are already talking about a longer-term relationship as a result."
(Jim Evans)