"It all started with a call from Atlas Group in Raleigh NC," says Stewart Sound's founder Chad Stewart. "Atlas is an event specialist and we've done several things with them since that first call. They needed a PA system for a Democrat Presidential campaign event in Greensboro. Obama was on the election trail at the time, and this was a public event for about 15,000 people.
"We put in a PA composed entirely of d&b audiotechnik Q-Series Q1 loudspeakers. After the event Atlas came to us and said it was the first time at one of these events that they hadn't heard a single complaint; not one heckler in the audience said they couldn't hear what was being said."
By the year's end Atlas had placed an order for their own Q system, and since that fateful day in Greensboro, Stewart Sound has provided d&b sound systems for a further six such events in the Carolinas.
Then, for the icing on the cake, they were contracted to provide a PA in Wilmington for an expected crowd of 75,000 people when, now President Elect Barack Obama, journeyed to Washington by train.
"I don't have to tell you, this was a real honor for us," said an understandably excited Stewart. "But this was not as straightforward as you might imagine. There were unusual requirements, uppermost they didn't want loudspeakers getting in the way of the press or TV camera shots of the President as he spoke to the crowds. But of course they wanted everyone to hear."
The venue was the Tubman Garrett Riverfront Park, which directly overlooks the Wilmington Amtrak marshalling yard where the train stopped. "I designed a distributed system using six 25ft tall lifts holding some 50 Q1s between them. The lifts kept the sightlines as clear as possible; that's one of the great advantages of the d&b Q-Series: I don't believe there is another loudspeaker in existence that is so light, so fast to rig, and sounds so good. It is as powerful as something three times the size and to me it's about the best sounding box I've ever heard." Again there were no unhappy spectators unable to hear the President's speech.
(Claire Beeson)