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L-ACOUSTICS Takes The Stage At Radio City Music Hall

December 2007

ARCS® loudspeakers providing enhanced front-/side-fill coverage for legendary venue


NEW YORK CITY -- Long revered as one of the Big Apple’s most renowned live performance venues, Radio City Music Hall offers its visitors the opportunity to enjoy a wide cross section of musical extravaganzas, including the world-famous Radio City Christmas Spectacular starring The Rockettes, which this year celebrates its milestone 75th anniversary.

As one can imagine, complex productions like the Christmas Spectacular require that intelligible, uniform audio be not only delivered to the audience, of course, but to the dozens of dancers gracefully executing their choreographed moves across the Great Stage. With this in mind, Radio City Music Hall’s production crew and owner, Madison Square Garden Entertainment, chose to ultimately update the on-stage monitoring system with a dozen L-ACOUSTICS ARCS® front- and side-fill cabinets supplied by Clair Brothers Systems.

The project leaders – Tim Hassett, EVP Facilities, Madison Square Garden, Richard Claffey, SVP and General Manager, Radio City Facilities, and Tom Arrigoni, Head Audio Engineer for Radio City Music Hall – brought in Wrightson, Johnson, Haddon & Williams, Inc. (WJHW), a leading design and consulting firm, to serve as consultant of record for the project, and to specify the venue’s new house sound system.

According to Kevin Day from WJHW,The client expressed a specific need for a stage-fill speaker system, which they defined as being full-range, high power and with a tight coverage pattern.” The 12 ARCS side- and front-fill loudspeakers are mounted on either side of the stage area, between the various front curtains, to provide zone-specific coverage for on-stage performers. “The individual ARCS cabinets form an integral part of the stage setup for the renowned Christmas Spectacular at Radio City Music Hall,” Day continues.

We spent a great deal of time and resources to ensure that we assembled the most superior quality sound system possible,” Radio City Facilities’ Claffey says.Our new sound system not only enhances the customer experience for the Christmas Spectacular but will provide a uniform sound quality for any artist and event that plays Radio City Music Hall.

Head Audio Engineer Arrigoni had seen L-ACOUSTICS ARCS and KUDO™ systems during a concert at Radio City Music Hall with rock band Chicago, and expressed interest in them. Production Resource Group (PRG) provided sound reinforcement for some contemporary shows at RCMH last year, and used L-ACOUSTICS products for front-fill duty, covering the areas at the extreme front corners where the line arrays were not providing enough direct energy. According to sources at those concerts, Chicago’s FOH engineer turned up the mains and then used the L-ACOUSTICS cabinets to provide the required direct sound to the seats in the corners without creating problems for the mains’ coverage.

   

The L-ACOUSTICS ARCS - Arrayable Radial Coherent System - is a constant-curvature line source designed for medium- and long-throw distances, with a clear, precise, predictable coverage pattern. ARCS is designed for tightly-wrapped arraying in single- or double-row configurations, or for horizontal arraying of up to four enclosures. The active two-way cabinet features a single 15-inch LF driver and 1.4-inch compression driver. Specifications include a tight 22.5-degree horizontal directivity per enclosure, and asymmetrical 60-degree vertical directivity. The cabinet includes integrated rigging for assembly into semi-circular arrays.

Previously, Radio City Music Hall had used L-ACOUSTICS V-DOSC® line source array cabinets as its house system for the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, as well as utilized active three-way KUDO systems for Fashion Rocks, among other events.
 


 

     
 

Historic Alex Theater Upgrades With L-ACOUSTICS KUDO™

November 2007

GLENDALE, California -- Built in 1925, the historic Alex Theater is a landmark on Glendale’s Brand Boulevard, with its magnificent 100-foot-tall Art Deco neon column topped by a glowing starburst towering above the street. The Alex’s interior design is a marvel as well – its ‘atmospherium’ auditorium with open-air illusion and Greek and Egyptian motifs creates a unique ancient garden-like environment. Several restorations over the years have kept up the interior and exterior décor of the Alex, which is now a performing arts center. The latest addition to the theater is an L-ACOUSTICS KUDO™ line source array system, installed in July to optimize the venue for musical performances.

Originally a vaudeville theater and silent movie house, the Alex became a premier venue for big star-studded movie screenings in the 1940s, and later a public favorite for blockbuster movies due to its particularly wide screen and early surround sound system. In the early ’90s, the Glendale Redevelopment Agency acquired the Alex Theater and put it through an extensive restoration. At that point, according to Jack Allaway, the Alex’s director of theater operations, a center speaker cluster was installed to suit the musical theater that was the venue’s main business.
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Since that last installation, Allaway describes, “Over the years, it’s evolved that we’re doing more concert work, and the center cluster system just wasn’t adequate to handle that. We previewed several systems in the theater – we flew different speakers and brought in live musicians to demo them. This was about a two-year project, and we did as much homework as we could. The L-ACOUSTICS KUDO system worked best for this room sonically and aesthetically.”

Between its orchestra level and second tier, the Alex Theater seats almost 1500. It was the shape of the room – its curved side and back walls – that presented the challenges in this speaker choice and install, says Allaway. “The big advantage of the KUDO system is that they have adjustable louvers, so when
L-ACOUSTICS did the survey of the room, they determined what would be the best angle placement of the louvers in each cabinet so that we didn’t have sound bouncing off the walls and back to the ceiling. It’s a 1925 building – they didn’t build them for high SPL back then.”


Given the ornate atmospherium environment, aesthetics were especially considered in the sound system design at the Alex. Allaway appreciated the relatively compact size of the KUDO arrays. Working with Jim Kinkella and Dan Palmer at L-ACOUSTICS, Allaway spec’d two vertical arrays left and right of stage, with eight KUDO boxes per array, and each array divided into three zones for full-room coverage. After first making some reinforcements to the ceiling/roof structure and adding necessary attach points for the arrays, Allaway notes, “With the adjustable louvers, we were able to install them at a perfect distance from the wall.” 

Allaway opted not to replace the Alex’s existing subwoofer enclosures due to the fact that the new KUDO arrays are now very capably providing full-frequency sound coverage from first row of the orchestra section to the back of the second tier. “The system performs so well that for the type of music we do here, we really didn’t need subs,” he shares. “But when we tuned the system, we rented L-ACOUSTICS subs and we recommend that, if there’s a need, people rent them; the system’s been EQ’d for them.”

Since installing the L-ACOUSTICS system in August, the Alex Theater has hosted just a few shows, but its busy season is fast approaching. “We’re anticipating a lot of dance performances with orchestra, several world music events, and more musical theater,” says Allaway. Upcoming shows include the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, The Nutcracker performed by the Los Angeles Ballet with orchestra, and presentations by the Alex Theater’s resident companies, including the Alex Film Society, Glendale Symphony Orchestra and Musical Theater Guild.

For more information on the Alex Theater, visit www.alextheater.org.
Photos : Arden Ash

 


 

     
 
Sound On Stage Deploys L-ACOUSTICS To Reinforce The Bridge
November 2007

V-DOSC rig flown at 2007 Bridge School Benefit concerts featuring ‘unplugged’
performances from Metallica, Neil Young, Jerry Lee Lewis, Tom Waits and others


MOUNTAIN VIEW, California -- Hosted by Neil Young, the annual Bridge School Benefit concerts, now in their 21st year, are unique in one important respect: no backline amplifiers are allowed on stage. As in previous years, organizers of this ultimate unplugged concert series held at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California, again turned to Hayward-based Sound On Stage for an ultra-precision
L-ACOUSTICS loudspeaker system to reinforce the acoustic sets of an extremely eclectic lineup of artists including Metallica, Jerry Lee Lewis, Tom Waits fronting Kronos Quartet, John Mayer, My Morning Jacket, Tegan & Sara, Regina Spektor and, of course, Neil Young, himself.

Sound On Stage has provided PA systems and engineers for nearly every production of the event over the decades, and has for the past several years specified L-ACOUSTICS products as the PA of choice. “We are a huge fan of L-ACOUSTICS line source array, side-fill and stage monitoring systems,” says SOS General Manager George Edwards, who acted as FOH second engineer during the acoustic concerts. “We flew ten V-DOSC and four dV-SUB cabinets per side, with an additional four SB218 subwoofers ground-stacked and four ARCS cabinets flown per side as side-fills.” Four more ARCS cabinets were provided per side, arrayed horizontally on the stage floor, as in/outside fills. “We also used ten 115XT HiQ bi-amplified coaxial stage monitors,” Edwards adds.

Sound On Stage’s GM cites five reasons why he’s such a huge fan of L-ACOUSTICS’ designs. “First,” he says, “the V-DOSC and ARCS systems offer outstanding intelligibility; I can rely upon them to provide exceptional fidelity throughout the performance space. Second, they are also very coherent, producing even sound coverage across a wide area; third, they are steerable and focused, allowing us to put sound only where we need to; and, fourth, they are very powerful, capable of throwing sound to the far audience sections. Finally, they are flexible; we can use our L-ACOUSTICS rigs on everything from jazz to hard rock. These systems aren’t pigeonholed; they handle a lot of gigs for us. We were very pleased with the results at the recent Bridge School Benefit concerts. Neil [Young] congratulated us on the sound performance, and told us that it went flawlessly.”

SOS Chief Engineer Dennis Deem concurs with Edwards’ assessment, adding that the company regularly supplies sound systems to Shoreline Amphitheatre, which seats up to 25,000 patrons. “With a lot of open mics on-stage during the recent Bridge School Benefit, we needed an uncluttered PA that was very directional. The ARCS cabinets we arrayed on the side were particularly appropriate, because of their tight coverage patterns. Despite the fact that the rehearsals and soundchecks took place in an empty amphitheater – and one that features a lot of reverberant concrete and plastic seating – the event went very well.”

“L-ACOUSTICS line source arrays are the most widely accepted box for touring sound engineers,” Deem considers. “They always sound very nice. These systems are also extremely flexible and work for all of our needs. We can run them wide open – they get very loud – but without ear fatigue; even at 110 dB [sound pressure] levels at the mix position, the V-DOSC array sounds extremely clean.”

“Our L-ACOUSTICS rigs are so popular that we cannot keep them in the building,” Edwards concludes. “We started back in 1999 with 24 cabinets and now we have well over 200 units; I’m often on the phone [to the manufacturer] buying something new!”

For the 2007 Bridge School Benefit, Sound On Stage ran more than 150 lines from the stage to three separate FOH consoles, and 45 lines back to the three stage consoles for monitoring. Young’s recording truck parked backstage also recorded the concert for archiving and Apple iTunes downloads via another console and Pro Tools setup.

Proceeds from the concert each year benefit the Bridge School, an educational program dedicated to ensuring that children with severe speech and physical impairments achieve full participation in their communities through the use of augmentative and alternative means of communication (AAC) and assistive technology (AT) applications. More information on the program and annual concert can be found at www.bridgeschool.org, while Sound On Stage can be visited online at www.soundonstage.com.

 


 

     
 
L-ACOUSTICS Earns Its Wings With Red Bull
October 2007

High-end aerobatic planes weren't the only things that took to the skies at downtown San Diego's Big Bay for the second-to-last stop of the 2007 Red Bull Air Race World Series. Numerous L-ACOUSTICS line source array elements were also flying in precise formation at five different locations along the north and south peninsulas