Clark Wright mixing monitors for Noah Kahan and his band on a DiGiCo Quantum7

USA - When fans of Noah Kahan come to see one of the shows on his We'll All Be Here Forever North America Tour - assuming they can get tickets to this largely sold-out trek visiting stadiums, arenas, and amphitheatres across North America between 26 March and 19 July - they’ll see six musicians on stage. What they’ll hear, though, in addition to Kahan’s folky-pop melodies and piercing lyrics, are literally dozens of instruments.

“Everyone plays like 15 instruments each,” says tour monitor engineer Clark Wright, being only slightly hyperbolic. “One person plays a fiddle, 12-string guitar, mandolin, and banjo, and everyone is just constantly swapping instruments. Aside from drums, I think the minimum that someone plays is three instruments and the most is seven or eight. This really is a band of multi-instrumentalists.”

Managing that matrix of musicians and instruments would be a major challenge under any circumstances, especially on a tour whose stops include large venues like Boston’s Fenway Park, the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles, and Madison Square Garden in New York. But Wright has it fully under control, thanks to the control capabilities and routing flexibilities of the DiGiCo Quantum7 console, supplied for the tour by Clair Nashville.

“That aspect of the Quantum processing has been huge,” says Wright. “I’m very big on automating and offloading anything, and my whole show’s fully time coded, so that when showtime comes, I’m just listening to and watching my artists. I’ve got a hundred-plus snapshots going, and MIDI controllers for each of our backline techs, so they can solo their own instruments or tune or talk directly to band members.

“The Quantum architecture gives me everything that I can use, like macros and MIDI and snapshots, to take managing things off my plate as far as actual button presses during a show. I’ve also got GPIO going for a couple of things too. Quantum been hugely helpful because it’s so flexible.”

As if all those instruments played by band members weren’t enough to keep track of, Kahan also likes to team up with other artists; he’s recorded collaborations with the likes of Post Malone, Lizzy McAlpine, Joy Oladokun, Julia Michaels, and Wesley Schulz of The Lumineers. Not surprisingly, some of those artists will turn up as guests on a live show. Thanks to Quantum, Wright is ready for them.

“Noah has constant guests, and I’ve got a huge virtual playback set up and have everything heavily snapshotted for that,” he says. “Sometimes we’ll get a sound check; a lot of times we won’t, but they’ll say, ‘oh, by the way, there’ll be two vocals on this song that we’ve never had guests on before.’ So it’s been nice to know that the guest mix is set up for this, and I’ve got this vocal spread around to all the band and crew.”

A special management arrangement he’s come up with is how to deal with digital tuners onstage when everyone is playing multiple instruments. “We made this system where instead of having eight tuners at their feet, I just routed an aux of all their instruments to a single tuner through the console. I then used GPIO and built a little foot switch so that they can hit that and then hard pan it to the left and it’ll make it so that only they’re listening to their instrument,” he explains.

“So, one tuner and one footswitch accomplishes the same goal for six instruments. We really had fun figuring that out, and you realize that there’s eight different ways I can do anything on this desk, and we can pick which is the most efficient and effective.”

Wright has also been digging deeply into Quantum capabilities, including Spice Rack and Mustard processing, and he’s found a new world in there. “I think the big one that initially got me was the Nodal Processing,” he says. “We've got a very discerning band that'll say, ‘can you slow down the release on that compressor?’ And Nodal actually lets me do it! So everyone can get a very customized, personalized experience onstage.

“The Mustard processing is also a big help. I don't want a ton of outboard or plugin servers, and Quantum has helped to take all that off my plate, so I don’t have 50 more things to check. Everything’s onboard, everything’s integrated. I have a couple of Rupert Neve Designs 5045 Primary Source Enhancers and a couple of outboard reverbs, but other than that, everything is in the box.”


Latest Issue. . .

Save
Cookies user preferences
We use cookies to ensure you to get the best experience on our website. If you decline the use of cookies, this website may not function as expected.
Accept all
Decline all
Analytics
Tools used to analyze the data to measure the effectiveness of a website and to understand how it works.
Google Analytics
Accept
Decline
Advertisement
If you accept, the ads on the page will be adapted to your preferences.
Google Ad
Accept
Decline