The iconic 18,000-seat Hollywood Bowl may have been named Pollstar's best major outdoor concert venue for an unprecedented tenth consecutive year in early 2014, but the team behind its audio technology is not content to rest on its laurels. According to Paul Geller, production director at the Hollywood Bowl for more than three decades, the PA system sounded great at 48 kHz. "But when you hear it at 96k, there are certain subtle differences that you pick up, such as the dynamic range of the highs and lows. It also produces a very natural acoustic sound. It's a great marriage between the DiGiCo console and the L-ACOUSTICS loudspeaker system."
The Hollywood Bowl's core audio team includes Fred Vogler, principal sound designer and mixer for the Los Angeles Philharmonic, which, along with the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, makes its summer home at the venue; Michael 'Shep' Sheppard, head of audio/video; and Kevin Wapner, assistant audio/video and monitor mixer.
Vogler reports that the DiGiCo desks can comfortably handle even the largest productions. "We're at 96k with 160-something inputs and it still sounds as pristine as with two channels. I think that a big part of the resolution we're getting is the front end of that console. It's got a lot of high quality mic pres, signal paths and processing. It's wonderful to have that kind of front end and feed it out of an L-ACOUSTICS speaker system on the back end."
Vogler addresses the zoned speaker system via the SD7's matrix outputs, separately feeding the main left/right hangs, including flown subwoofers, down fill and front fill speakers, subs and mid-high boxes on the deck, plus various audience fill speakers. On the input side, says Vogler, he typically creates groups. "I'll have a string group, woodwinds, percussion, horns or brass, lead vocals or solo instrument group, a band group and an effects group. I like the conductor or the notes on the page to do the balancing. It doesn't mean that my mix is static, but I don't get too heavy-handed with moving things up or down."
The two SD7s are on a single Optocore loop, with all of the DiGiCo DSP located on stage. "If I can't see a conductor well and I need specific cues, I put the conductor cam on the console's meterbridge screen. If I'm really bored I'll put the monitor mixer on there," says Vogler.
The venue's summer series is non-stop, featuring almost daily concerts by the LA Phil, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, numerous guest performers and lease events - that is, concerts organized by third party promoters. "Because we're doing one-offs we get one rehearsal, so there's not a lot of time to fool around," says Vogler. "We have several console templates that Shep has organized: orchestra, orchestra loud, jazz and rock. We have the basic EQs and onboard as well as external processing figured out for each particular type of presentation or program. Mike puts those together, labels the boards and organizes the session templates."
(Jim Evans)