CHURCH SOUND
ADVICE
Traditional
or Contemporary – Stereo or Mono – Best Operating Practices
Early Audio
·
You have heard the term “Cutting a Record”; in my early
studio days we had record recorders which the stylus actually cut into the
vinyl the commercial that the disc jockey would later play on the air. The shavings looked like hair or whiskers as
they peeled off behind the stylus. – They were fun to stick in your nose to “break up”
the DJ live on the Air.
·
The process was called the “Hill and Dale” method for
monophonic recordings, with the stylus moving up and down; later when
two sources of sound presented itself, it was called “Binaural Sound” which later became
known as stereo.
·
In addition to the Hill
and Dale method of
cutting a disc, the stylus would now also move laterally left and right
to produce the second channel. – So now the magnetic phono pickup cartridge
had to accommodate the stylus moving up and down as well as left and
right.
·
After a few passes of a record being played,
scratches would appear and create high frequency noise in the sound; so the
industry created a “pre-emphasis amplifier” that would record the music
or commercial with the highs extremely increased and when the record was then
played back it went back through a special “phono pre-amp” that de-emphasized
the highs back down to normal levels.
Now when the record got scratches, those high frequency scratches were pushed
down; de-emphasized greatly and were not so noticeable. – That’s why a record
player has its own special “Phono Pre-amp”. – Later the bare needle was
replaced with a diamond tip to reduce wear and scratches.
·
Conclusion: Amplitude Modulated
Noise has always been a problem for the audio engineer. With today’s technology
moving into the Digital format, unwanted noise has not just been reduced, but
eliminated in recordings. - During pauses in passages you do not hear tape hiss
or high frequency scratches; you hear “the Sound of Silence”.
·
As a fun note: in the early years, most
Radio station owners had both an AM & FM station.
The first stereo
radio transmissions where accomplished by sending the left audio
signal to an AM
radio station and the right channel signal to an FM radio
station. Folks at home at the
advertised hour would place both AM & FM receivers on a table and then tune
in both stations to the different frequencies and would sit back in amazement
at the different sounds. – The first one I heard was “The Theme from Picnic” which has two
different, but complementing themes running throughout the selection & presented
on separate speakers.
·
The
recording medium “standard” in the 50’s became vinyl tape coated with
iron oxide. As an Audio Engineer for
Educational Radio and TV, my job was to edit audio tapes, taking out coughs,
words pronounced wrong and unwanted sounds from the outside. To do so, you had
to physically CUT THE TAPE and remove the unwanted section
and then you re-inserted Room Tone back
in its place, so that the passages would sound natural.
·
ROOM TONE was recorded for two
minutes after the recording session ended.
Everybody set silent the entire time. This room tone was then re-inserted into the tape so that you would not
notice any change in the background sound; sometime it meant inserting only 3/8
inch of tape, if it was not enough, you took it out and added another 1/4 inch
or so to it.
·
This
tedious time consuming job was not everybody’s cup of tea; you must love audio
to put up with what some would call foolishness. I call it pride, doing your work as
into the Lord.
Colossians 3:23 – The
Book – Do your work as unto the Lord
23 whatsoever ye do, work heartily, as unto the Lord; not unto men;
23 whatsoever ye do, work heartily, as unto the Lord; not unto men;
Audio Boards
·
In the early days the
audio boards
contained tubes with the power supplies remotely located in a rack to reduce
hum and was fan cooled; everything was hard wired into the
board. Every microphone or device passed
through a patch
panel bay first. The only thing that could be plugged
in was a microphone in the studio. The audio
consoles were made by GE or RCA and could do only three things. 1) Turn the mic off
and on – 2) Put the mic in audition /cue mode to hear it on a cue
speaker and lastly, 3) vary the gain
sent to the audio board with a rotary POTENTIOMETER which for short was called
a ‘POT’”,
with only one main VU meter. (To some today, a POT is something you
smoke.)
·
Today’s Audio Board inputs are not hard wired,
but have balanced audio connectors with the “XLR“ being the most popular, but
also 1/4
inch TRS jacks (Tip, Ring, Sleeve) as well as unbalanced
RCA inputs. – Some have the inputs on the top of the console instead
of the back for ease of setup and teardown. – A two conductor input is said to
be “unbalanced” and is usually high impedance; and a three conductor is
said to be “balanced” and has a low impedance. The “balanced input” reduce interference problems.
·
VU is Volume Units and is measured in DB’s
or decibels. – A db was the amount a human ear could detect a change. An increase of 3db doubled the sound
that the ear distinguished and a decrease of 3db cut the sound in half
as the ear could detect.
·
The Standard Reference
Level
was said to be “0”db which provided an adequate feed to recording devices,
amplifiers and transmitters. – Later this standard would move to +8db which was much better concerning pushing down noise
on transmissions lines such as was provided by the telephone company that
connected the studio to the transmitter site.
·
Level Matching became the challenge for
the audio engineer. If your standard
reference level is 0db and you have a recorder that has a +4db output
and another one that has a +8db output and
cart machines that have 0db output, you must PAD down every device above 0db before
they get to the audio board. - All levels should be the same at the input.
·
Modern Audio Boards do
not have rotatory POTS, they have individual strips with sliders or faders
which do the same thing, but each slider/fader is now on its own input, and
have supporting “Pots” that can PAN
the amount of signal sent into left and right stereo channels. For “SWEETENING” they also have Frequency Band Equalizers, Reverbs, Rumble
Filters, Routing Program switches, Noise Gates, as well as input attenuator TRIM
Pots or PADS to bring the levels into
your operating standard. – There is also auxiliary “Pre-fade” pots that
send a feed to the performers fold back speaker or in-ear monitor. This is independent of the house mix.
·
A mixer used for simple remotes might have 6 channels
where a night club might have 24 channels and a concert some 96 channels; a
church might have 16 inputs which would be fine for a traditional service, but it
would be pushing it for a Contemporary Service
with a Praise Team, multiple guitars, base guitar, drums, keyboard,
piano and special effect instruments. – Some Churches have two separate services;
Traditional
and Contemporary
and two different audio board operators. – It’s just two
different sounds. -
·
The audio engineer can set all the faders to
the mid position and then adjust the input attenuator for 100 percent
modulation on the INDIVIDUAL VU METER which is a modern enhancement. – Now a
HOT input signal does not force you run the fader at the bottom of its range
and a WEAK signal does not force the fader to the top of its range.
·
NOTE: Early Pots or faders
were made of carbon and the actual audio passed through them and over time, the
Pots would become noisy as you raised and lowered the level. Today the fader can control a light with a
photo cell or control a transistors output and are operational NOISE FREE.
Noise Gates
·
Noise Gates are a preset threshold
that a signal must exceed in order for the gate to open and allow the signal to
pass. When it is closed, you hear
nothing. The term “Noise” applies to any
signal that is below the signal threshold.
Gates eliminate the background noise from “on stage” amplification
systems, when a vocalist is not singing or an instrument is not in use. Noise
gates can be “chained”
so that one gate can cause other gates to open if desired.
·
This is not a noise
rejection circuit;
if noise is present when the threshold gate is opened, the noise will also
pass. – The adjustments are Attack, Hold and Release (fade out).
– Noise gates can “chatter” (open and
close) which
is caused by spurious undesirable sound fluctuations A “Hysteresis” circuit in
the more expensive audio consoles greatly reduces this “chatter”.
Subgroup Routing
·
Specific inputs can be
mixed on a subgroup channel and then inserted into the main mix. For instance, drums in an enclosure could
have a number of microphones with individual faders that are grouped on just one fader for insertion into the final house mix. Instead of adjusting many faders for the
drums, you would just adjust just one; same for the vocals.
Meters
·
VU meters (with needles) indicate the levels for each channel; Peak Meters are often LED’s on each channel that light up different
colors so that at a glance you can tell if the signal is too HOT and
is clipping the audio.
·
Some systems use GREEN to indicate signal
presence and YELLOW
for a signal approaching clipping and RED to indicate clipping/distortion.
Cue Systems
·
Early audio boards cue
system
was selected by rotating the pot all the way down until it clicked into cue
position which then could be heard on the control room cue speaker. When the DJ opened the Control room mic, it
would trip an “ON
THE AIR” light outside the door and cut the cue speaker and send the
cue signal to his headphones. He could then
cue up records as he talked live on the air.
When he opened a studio mic; the fold back speaker would be silenced in
the studio and a “Quiet” or “On the Air” sign would light
outside the studio doors.
·
It was not unusual to see the audio board
raised up about 5 inches to accommodate mercury switches below each pot that
would turn on the appropriate turn tables. – However, the most common method
was to back cue the record 1/4 turn and then hold the “Platter” and let it “Slip” on
the turntable until you were ready and then it was just released.
·
Today’s cue system utilizes a PFL “Pre-Feed Listen”
pot also known as a “Solo” pot or just simply “Cue”. – There is also a SIP “Solo in Place”
button which literally mutes all other inputs so that you can only hear that
specific audio input and troubleshoot it; CAUTION this function would be a disaster if depressed during a live
performance.
·
Talk-Back systems utilize a
microphone at the audio console for the sound engineer to communicate with an
announcer in a announce booth or a performer on stage which may be some
distance away. Talk-Back might utilize
speaker monitors, or heard silently in headphones or an earpiece. – This can be
observed on TV newscasts where the anchors wear an earpiece with a stretchable
coil of wire located just behind their neck.
·
TEST TONE oscillators are on some
audio consoles that are used for troubleshooting and testing channels during
set up.
Mirroring
·
When mixing sound for a “Live” performance
in an auditorium and also mixing sound for broadcast, some consoles can Mirror
each other, making both consoles exact duplicates of each other. The one for broadcast or recording can then
be re-mixed as needed.
·
In the event of
hardware failure TV
networks will have Mirror Audio Consoles so the listener never knows of a
problem – Many preamps have dual amplifiers, so that if one side fails the
other continues and the audio only drops -3db which is only
half the signal. The audio engineer just
raises the fader to increase the signal level back to normal.
Headroom
·
Headroom simply stated is a term
used for how much louder a signal can get above normal before distortion sets
in. For instance a 0db audio board may
have 10db of head room which means that when a signal “over modulates” an
amplifier, it can go as much as an additional 10db before distortion or clipping
occurs.
·
Wireless microphones have limited headroom
because of the transmission “bandwidth” of the transmitter and receiver; so
some hand held mics have selectable attenuators on the mic themselves. Recording devices are also limited depending
on the medium that it is being transferred to as well as Radio and Television
Transmitters which have limited bandwidth.
·
In the early days of Radio, broadcasting was on AM Amplitude Modulated
frequencies and the owner of the station would want his station to sound louder
than the other stations in the market.
The higher the signal pumped into the transmitter the more the Transmitter
stayed at maximum power. The results
were the DJ would always have the audio pumping in the RED;
- blowing it through.
·
The FCC Federal Communications
Commission didn’t agree with that
and would issues costly citations to the station for “Over Modulation”. – A television station’s construction permit PAPER
would be worth one million dollars before anything had ever been purchased. -
Fragrant “Over Modulation”
violations could result in the loss of the station’s license to broadcast; so
over modulation is a big deal.
·
This resulted in the
invention
of “Peak
Controllers” that would limit or push down the loudest audio signals
to prevent over modulation. This just
gave the AM radio stations the license
to SIN;
so they increased the audio levels even more making the Peak Controller work even harder.
It would suck up the
lowest levels and then compress down
the highest levels causing “Pumping” or “Sucking” of the audio.
·
To the audio fanatic, which I am; being raised
as a child on classical music in the 40’s and 50’s, this was JUST AWFUL because it destroyed the “Dynamic Range”; this is the range
between soft passages and loud passages, THEY
ARE JUST LOST.
– Today audio pumping as well as distortion is used as special effects in
music.
·
Since the introduction of
FM radio,
the frequency is Modulated, not the Amplitude Modulated. Therefore there is no need to SLAM the
audio. Today Radio and Television
stations use an ALC
Automatic Level Control at the studio that gently raises or lowers
the base platform of the average signal plus or minus 10db. The low passages of an old western movie
would be gently and slowly raised as it was needed to the standard level. Then at the transmitter site a “Peak Controller”
or limiter would attack the high levels spikes of audio.
·
Many stations use a five band loudness controller and limiter before the program audio is sent by the microwave
STL (Studio Transmitter Link) to the Transmitter site. This separates the audio into five discreet
bands and attacks them individually leaving the other frequencies unaffected.
– Sweet -
Microphones
·
Microphones come in a
variety of configurations, but the most common is the Omni-directional which picks up 360
degrees around the mic and the others are directional.
Some you see at football games pointing backward into a parabolic dish with
filters that only pass the mid frequency range of the human voice. It rejects or greatly reduces all the other sounds
that are picked up “off axis” to what the operator is pointing
at. That’s how you can hear the calls of
the players. (Today law enforcement can
bounce a laser beam off your window pane and hear what is being said in the
room, via the vibrations on the glass pane.)
·
Phantom
Power is
power that is supplied to a condenser or capacitor microphone. The mic cable is plugged into the power
supply first then to the audio console.
A DC voltage is sent via the audio cable to the microphone to power it
and the audio returns on the same cable.
Caution:
this must be a dedicated line to that specific microphone.
·
The one that is most used
in churches would be the microphone
that produces a cardioid
pattern in one direction. This greatly
reduces the sounds originating on each side of the mic; it is a must for the
audio operator whether it be a vocal or a violin. – Note; every microphone MUST be
in phase with each other. – (see phasing)
·
Microphones are additive; every time you add
another mic you are increasing the sound that other microphones are also picking
up, only at a reduced level, but additive none the less. So the goal of the audio engineer is to make
each mic invisible or dead to the other mics. – This is done through placement
or proximity. – A vocalist who holds the microphone near their mouth aids in
making their mic invisible to the vocalist beside them.
·
The caveat is that the
vocalist
needs to know how to “Work the Mic”. – Every singer has a frequency range in which they are effective, and anything higher or
lower than their range, their volume level falls off. – So the mic is moved in closer at the end of
their range and further away in the middle of it. – Just a movement of an inch
or two WILL have a profound effect at
the audio board. – When the vocalist BELTS
IT OUT, the microphone should be “worked” a good distance away. – This is a
SECOND NATURE ART that must be learned
and felt that only time can teach. – The audio operator will either
smile or cringe.
·
A base vocalist uses lots of air to
produce a low note and is sung very soft otherwise he will run out of air; the
results is that he needs to almost swallow the mic. – They CUP their hand from mouth to their ear just to hear
themselves. – They may also be seen moving the mic rapidly in and out close to
his mouth creating a vibrato sound. A
guitarist will do the same thing as he shakes his guitar on certain notes.
Presence
·
Frequency
Range is
dependent upon the vocalist as well as the type of instrument being played; a
tuba has a lower range than that of a flute and obviously vocalist by their
very own nature find themselves singing as a soprano, alto, tenor or base;
their voice ranges are just different.
·
Presence is a term that is used to
indicate that something is displaying additional quality of sound. - The Loudness Control on
your stereo system ENHANCES THE LOWS while playing it a low
volume levels. It does not make the
overall sound louder, it just makes the frequency response “Fuller”.
– When a microphone is used close to the performer’s mouth, the lower
frequencies are enhanced; they have a better “Presence”. Lower frequencies are vocalized softer and
require more AIR to get the sound waves moving.
·
Wind screens are used inside as well as
out in order to prevent the explosive sounds that occur when a burst of air
comes from the vocalist on certain sounds, particularly the “P” which emits a burst of air.
Wireless Microphones
·
Wireless Microphones in their infancy were a
joke. You would be listening to the Pastor
using his wireless mic and out of nowhere you would hear “10-4 Rubber Ducky… I’ll catch you on the Flip
Flop”. - A wireless mic might
only have a 1/4 watt transmitter and a Public Service Vehicle or an Armature
Radio operator might have a 35 watt transmitter which is no match for the wireless
receiver.
·
Today wireless mics have their own FM
frequency spectrum with squelches, filters and dual receiving antennas. – Sometimes a pastor wanders out in front of
the speakers causing “Feedback”. - Technology today allows pastors to wear
an invisible tube that conducts the sound to the pickup coil behind his ear. -
The extreme proximity
of the mic to the mouth allows the audio operator to lower the gain on his mic
making it almost invisible to the auditorium speakers. This can be a big deal concerning FEED BACK when the pastor moves around the stage area or even
into the isles.
·
Wireless
receivers come
equipped with a squelch
that kicks in and shuts off the audio if the signal is too weak; otherwise it
would blow white NOISE at a high level into the sound board. – This is
noticed as the user’s audio cuts in and out; or it could be DEMONS; maybe.
·
Antenna
placement can
be troublesome in some rooms. It is best
to extend the antenna to the middle of the room in the ceiling or even under
the podium so that when the user moves, he is always moving toward the antenna,
not further from it.
·
I had to mic an Actor coming onto shore in a
boat and then running down a beach for 400 feet, so I buried a 400 foot wire in
the sand all the way to the antenna on my receiver. As she talked to the camera in the boat she was
always moving closer to the antenna and then she ran on top of the wire; I
never lost her signal once.
·
Distortion is often noticed with
wireless mics. Let’s talk technically
for a minute; the quiescent point of a transistor allows the amplifier to
amplify the audio signal positive and negative equally at the same
level. When the batteries get low in the
mic transmitter, the quiescent point moves down, now the Positive swings are
just fine, but the negative swings are clipped, squared off and we hear it as
distortion. It’s not the mic, it’s the
batteries and it’s the audio engineers fault. - You must be aware of the time on the
batteries and when to change them.
When in doubt start fresh. - It’s not the batteries fault; it’s your fault.
Phasing
·
Phasing is very important in microphones as well as
speakers. If one microphone is wired
differently that the others, it would be said to be 180 degrees “Out of Phase”
and therefore would “Cancel Out” the same sounds that the
other microphones picked up. – It is referred to as “Frequency Discrimination”. – This
also occurs with MULTIPLE SPEAKERS.
·
SPEAKERS A
sound engineer would walk across the back of an auditorium and listen to the
speakers; if the sound diminished or produced what is called “Dead Spots”
on his walk, he knew he had a speaker or two that were “out of phase” and
needed to be re-wired. – Speakers are color coded at the factory for “Plus &
Minus” or Positive & Negative”.
There is actually no polarity in an “AC” circuit, but just denotes the polarity for speaker phasing.
·
NOTE: If the polarity of a
speaker is not marked, you can take a 1 ½ volt battery with two clip leads and
place on the two terminals of the speaker.
If the speaker pushes outward the terminal with the positive lead on it
would be positive, if not, reverse the wires to get the outward movement for
positive and then mark it.
·
MICROPHONES A sound engineer doing
microphone checks before a live concert would set all the mic’s at their
mid-level on the sound board, then place his favorite microphone on a stand and
began to speak into it. As he spoke, he
would bring in a second microphone alongside of it and speak into both of them,
his assistant in the back of the auditorium would give a thumbs up if the sound
“Increased”
and a thumb down if the sound “Decreased”. If the
sound decreased, it would mean that the second microphone was wired backward;
it was “Out of Phase”
and needed to be rewired or a “Phasor” that reverses the wires be placed into the
line to get it back “In Phase”. – This process would continue until
all the Microphones were deemed “In Phase”.
– In a 3 pin XLR connector, pin 1 is ALWAYS ground, pin 2 is red
and pin 3 is black. Pin 2 and Pin
3 may vary depending on the manufacturer.
Just make sure they are all wired the same. - (In the resistance color code, Red is always 2.)
·
In the 50’s I worked as a sound
engineer for Educational Radio and TV. -
When running audio for baseball games, the crowd sounds were so loud that we
could barely hear the announcer sitting in the announce booth speaking into a DESK
mic.
·
My first attempt to correct the problem, was
to put a smaller lavalier microphone on a coat hanger around his neck sticking
up about an inch from his mouth. Changing the
proximity of the microphone
allowed me to turn his volume down which essentially turned down the volume on
the crowd noise.- My second attempt was to place a second microphone on the same coat
hanger facing the opposite direction toward the crowd. It was wired “Out of Phase” then reintroduced
and mixed back into the sound board with just enough audio to “phase out”
the “Crowd
Noise”. – Today we see announcers with headsets with microphones that
almost touch their lips that have integrated voice canceling phasing technology
built in.
·
Far out note: in the early days of
stereo RECORDS; two microphones were set up to present separate left and
right instrumental channels and the vocalist would be placed equally
on both the left and right channel. – With that said, an audio engineer
could take the phono preamp and reverse the wiring on the second channel,
which when re-introduced into the sound board, would “Phase out” the vocalist; - GONE, leaving only the music be heard.
·
Conclusion; the reason you have a
boat moving with two paddles synchronized “in phase” is so that you don’t wind up going
in circles. -
PHASING IS A BIG DEAL –
Speakers
·
Just a word about speakers, we have already talked
about phasing, so next to discuss is their power and impedance rating… Speakers
should have an impedance rating that matches the amplifier’s output impedance
and have a power rating that matches or exceeds the amplifier’s power rating
for each channel. - Often there is a desire to build your own speaker system
and money becomes a big part of the decision on what you purchase.
·
Example; You have a 100 watt
stereo amplifier with 8 ohm outputs; that’s 50 watts of power for each
channel, so each speaker must be able to handle 50 watts of power at 8 ohms
to obtain maximum transfer of power without frequency discrimination. –
You have found an awesome deal on some 8 ohm speakers with a FULL RANGE of 20 to 20,000 cycle’s frequency response, but
they are only 12 watts each.
·
So you figure you can connect four of
these speakers for EACH channel; 12 watts times 4 speakers would handle 48
watts; a pretty good match for 50 watts per channel. – But the problem comes in,
how do you wire the speakers, Parallel or Series?
·
If you wire all 4
in parallel;
the power is additive; you have 48w, but the impedance reduces; 8 ohms divided
by 4 speakers, (8/4=2), the load would be just 2 ohms which would burn up
the 8 ohm amplifier at maximum power.
·
If you wire all 4
in series; the power is additive; you still have 48w.
BUT the impedance adds (8+8+8+8=32) you
would get 32 ohms and it would work, but you would not get the maximum transfer
of power, plus you would get frequency discrimination.
·
Solution; Wire TWO SETS of two
speakers in parallel (8 ohms divided by 2 speakers) that would give you a 4
ohm load for each set of two speakers. - Then wire the TWO SETS of parallel speakers in
SERIES (4+4= 8 ohms) and
now you get an 8 ohm load for each channel.
You now have a total of 8 speakers for both channels that can handle 96
watts of power.
·
Constant
voltage speaker systems are utilized when there are a number of speakers
in a distribution system that are needed to send sound to church nurseries,
overflow areas and hallways.
·
There are 25, 50, 70 and
100 volt system.
- I prefer the 70 volt system. Each
speaker has a 70 volt transformer with TAPS that can select the wattage the
speaker uses. The higher input voltage
helps with signal loss on long runs as well as matches the impedance of the
loaded speakers to the output of the amplifier for maximum signal transfer and
optimum frequency response. – Since all lines are connected in parallel,
the installation is made quite simple. - If an amplifier does not have a 70
volt output, an external
step-up transformer can be purchased
and connected to the 8 ohm output of an auxiliary amplifier. You might be surprised, but typically a
hallway speaker only uses ½ watt of power each.
·
A 50 watt amplifier can handle 100 speakers connected at ½ watt each, or 50 speakers at 1 watt each, or 2 speakers at 10 watts each (20), 5 at 2 watts each (10), 15 at 1 watt each (15) and
10
at ½ watt each (5). 20 + 10 + 15 + 5 = 50 watts - GET IT; its mix and match.
Speaker Placement
·
Stereo or
Mono speakers for
a church sanctuary? – Depends on who you ask, there are argument on both sides
of the fence. – The question becomes what is desired and what is
required. - Mono cost less and gives a naturally better intelligibility
system. – Stereo cost more, but most think it gives a better experience in the
worship service. – But the wider the sanctuary, that experience is lost unless
you duplicate the stereo speaker on each side and that introduces phasing problems
throughout.
·
Low Frequencies are not
directional
so they radiate out all sides of a speaker, therefore smaller churches have one
MONO base speaker mounted in front, high and centered
on staged area with the main Left and Right stereo speakers located angled down
to the opposite corners of the auditorium.
·
Half space loading occurs when a speaker is
close to or touches a hard surface causing it to boost the low frequency
energy. - Placing a speaker against the wall, the low frequencies are increased
6db and when placed in a corner it can be as much as 12db gain; so these two
placements should be avoided for the flattest frequency response in the
room.
·
Sound originating at the
speaker
and arriving at the listener can be reduced or even cancelled out because of
signals bouncing off the walls and arriving out of phase
at the listener’s ear; likewise the signals can also be reinforced
making specific sounds louder.
·
Ideally the speakers are focused
on the congregation avoiding the walls; a laser can be placed on the center top
of a speaker to adjust the angle just as it hits the back row.
·
In large auditoriums more rows of speakers may
be required and since sound travels faster in wires than in the air, the extra
rows of speaker will need a delay system to make sure the listener hears the
sound from the main and secondary speakers in phase, otherwise it can dampen
the intelligibility
of the sound. Some sound board mixers have a sub-group output delay just
for this purpose; if not, a separate “add-on” processor can be purchased.
·
Where balconies or extra
rooms with a low ceiling exist, additional speakers must be added above and
below these areas to prevent dead spaces and complaints. Most will also need to be phased, delayed as
well as have their own independent amplifier feed, so that the level can be
adjusted.
Sound with a Twist
·
Donald Leslie invented a device that
would twist and flange “the sound of music”. He sold the rights to CBS who then sold it to
the Hammond Organ Company.
·
The Hammond organ’s “Rotating Leslie” was a high frequency
horn and a base speaker that rotated in a full circle, controlled with a motor
at two different speeds to produce a vibrato much like a singer does when they
sustain a note for a period of time. – If not overdone by the vocalist, it
is just more pleasant to listen to.
·
The rotation made the sound waves
twist and arrive at the ear going in and out of phase much like a vibrato,
also mimicking the sound of a pipe organ. The slow speed was known as choral
and the fast speed tremolo. – The Rotating Leslie could be purchased
separately as an “add on”. Today
there are electronic versions on the market that do the same thing.
·
It’s also fun
to know that
the Allen Organ Company was the first ELECTRIC
ORGAN
Company to introduce an “air escape” sound when you pressed a key that
mimicked the momentary sound that is first produced on an actual pipe organ as
the large tubes filled with air. The
Allen sounded like a real pipes.
·
In the early
days of tape recording, on a Reel to Reel recorder, there was a distance of about an
inch between the record head and the playback head. The audio engineer could give a delayed echo
to the original sound by injecting the sound picked up by the playback head
during a live recording into the audio board.
Running the tape deck at a speed of 7 1/2 inches per second gave a slow
reverb and at 15 inches per second would give a faster reverb. Today electronic
reverbs are used not only on vocals, but instruments such as guitars.
Impedance
·
Impedance is resistance to the flow of electrons. For something to have maximum signal transfer
of power, the impedance is said to be “matched”. – For instance, if an audio
amplifier has a speaker output of 8 ohms impedance then it is looking for a
speaker that also has an 8 ohm impedance, this allow for the maximum
transfer of power to be obtained
as well as prevent frequency discrimination.
·
Mismatch - At maximum power; loading
a 4 ohm speaker on an amplifier with an 8 ohm output could burn up the
amplifier. It is said to be “Loaded Down”. However on the other hand, putting an 8 ohm
speaker on an amplifier with a 4 ohm output works just fine, it said to be “Bridging”
because the load of the impedance or resistance is higher than the
amplifier. In all cases the Load must
be matched or be higher than the audio source.
·
Audio lines come basically in two
configurations, the first is composed of ONE
WIRE inside
a flexible shield said to be “high impedance” and used in economically low level
devices such as microphones; the second is TWO
WIRES that
are also shielded and said to be low impedance and used with low level devices
such as microphones as well as all high level devices.
·
Belden Cable was the first to
introduce audio cables that had aluminum “Z” foil folded around the wires which
further reduced unwanted induced signals. – Multi Audio cable could be
purchased with eight color coded audio lines in once cable. The sound engineer would then make a 50-100
foot SNAKE
with a box of EIGHT connectors on one end and
EIGHT XLR plugs on the other.
·
Loss &
Noise; normally
we have no concern for loss or noise until the audio lines start exceeding 100
feet in length. Audio is Amplitude
Modulated and so is noise as well as the common 60 cycle hum
that is produced by electrical devices. – The longer the cable run the
more loss of audio you have and the more chance of Hum and “Snap, Crackle and
Pop” due to electrical devices being turned off and on radiating into the
cables. – Sometimes pre-amps are
used to raise the audio source levels before it travels down the cables.
·
This not only gives a hotter signal, but it pushes any
external noise generated down to where it is not noticed. – It also allows the microphone lines to be split so
as to provide a feed to the live auditorium board as well as a separate feed to
recording devices which in the best sense needs a separate audio board for
separate results. – Recording devices and Live speaker presentations
are just two different ducks. – The larger churches will have two audio sound
consoles.
·
Have you ever noticed a
POP
when a projection screen is lowered or raised?
The switch radiates electrical energy when it “makes” and “breaks”
- It needs a non-polarized capacitor across the “End of Travel” limit switches
to absorb the arc.
Foldback
·
Foldback is a term used for sound which
is currently being processed by the audio board and is sending it back into the
studio or the stage area. It is used as
monitors on the stage for the performers, so they can hear themselves singing
or playing their instruments. The
foldback speaker mix is different from the House speaker mix and can give the
audio operator headaches as it also becomes part of the overall sound level
in the auditorium or sanctuary. The sound engineer’s job is to make sure the
performers are HAPPY; so set them up first
before optimizing the main mix. – Don’t be surprised that they want more “feed”
once the room is running at its optimum level. Caveat; this can
contribute to FEEDBACK.
·
Many performers
have their own Foldback systems and are a MUST for their individual performance. LOVE THEM and make sure they are happy before you start your house mix,
because their foldback sound levels are additive to what is heard in the
auditorium. Caveat; a instrumentalist
may hear their music just fine and NOT be heard at all in the overall mix. It
is the Audio operators responsibility to WORK THE BOARD and
bring them forward, it’s not SET AND
FORGET
Feedback
·
Audio Frequencies all
travel at the same speed at the same temperature. When traveling through Air at 68 degrees,
they travel at 1,125 feet per second, but the wavelength of the frequencies
vary. The length of a 1,000 cycle note is approximately 13 inches. The “A” string on an instrument is 440
cycles/Hertz and the wave length is
approximately 2 1/2 feet; 100 Hz is
11.25 feet and 50 Hz is
a whopping 22 1/2 feet.
·
The reason this matters is because the surfaces
or materials the frequencies encounter either reflect or absorb the sound. Many
churches have the seats padded so that they will all reflect or absorb the same
whether they are “occupied” or not.
·
Example:
The 100 Hz bounces off a wall traveling right back along the same path bouncing
off the other wall. A 100 Hz note will become excited if it encounters
something else that is 11.25 feet or a multiple of that, reinforcing or adding to the sound.
– Notch filters help greatly with this… (See Resonant
Frequencies)
·
Automatic Feedback
Suppression
is accomplished by “Frequency Shifting”, “Adaptive Filtering”, “Automatic Notch
Filtering” and “Delay”. – Most devices are invasive and
noticeably COLOR the sound except for the Auto Notch technique which is
the most popular method.
·
Suicide Speakers are those located behind
the stage presentation area limiting the amount of gain that can be
utilized on a microphone before feedback starts to occur.
·
Church auditoriums are
rectangular
and many have the stage area constructed in one corner forming a “V”; thus reducing the reflection of
sound off adjacent walls and complementing the sound distribution like a
megaphone
Resonant Frequencies
·
A Resonant Frequency is the frequency of which
a speaker or a room becomes sympathetic.
As a teenager, I would sit in a room at church with a bunch of other
kids and I would hum and at a certain frequency and the room would become sympathetic
and would join in and the sound would reverberate and you could not tell where the
sound was coming from. I thought I was
pretty funny until the teacher made me sit up front.
·
Much though and
engineering
goes into the design of auditoriums and
theaters, with angled walls and ceiling panels that reduce reflection and other
panels to absorb sound, but rarely is a church sanctuary designed for sound; it
is designed for the aesthetic appeal rather than acoustics.
·
Church Auditoriums have a resonant
frequency; most of the time two or three of them. - When music is displayed, the room enhances
the sound at certain frequencies. For
the sound man this can be a nightmare of feedback. – NOTE: A
resonant frequency of 400 cycles has a sympathetic vibration at 800 cycles even
though its reproduction sound level is greatly reduced and then again at 1600
cycles, etc. – So killing the 400 cycle demon is the best solution.
·
Solution:
Have a
licensed and insured system integrator audio professional come out and “optimize”
the auditorium. – This is accomplished with a 32 or 64 set of notch filters. – White noise or Pink noise is injected to the sound system through any
input, filling the room with a noise level much higher than normal. A specially designed microphone is connected
to a spectrum
analyzer and it breaks down the
white noise into 32 or 64 discrete frequencies and displays their levels on a
display screen. Note; Today you can get a spectrum analyzer application for your
cell phone; some are free.
·
By adjust the filters you can bring down the band
of frequencies till they are all virtually at the same level, this is said to
be a “Flat
Response”. – Usually no more than eight filters would have to be
purchased to optimize the house. – This compensates for the Audio Board,
the Speakers as well as the Room imperfections. - Resonant
frequencies would be vastly minimalized
and the room would not “boom”; feedback tendencies would be greatly reduced
making the Board operations much easier.
·
Speakers have their own
resonant frequency – Try to get one that is below what the human ear can detect
which is 20 to 20,000 cycles. – So if the resonant frequency is 60 cycles, you
have just bought a speaker that is sympathetic to the frequency of all AC powered
devices which operate on 60 cycles… The not so technical term is called HUM….
Grooving
·
Performer’s body motions in a church setting can
be deemed EXCESSIVE AND SHOWY. Point out to those that would complain, that
performers feel their music and their emotions are transmitted to
their body and that’s a good thing.
They are in “their zone” praising God which is the ultimate end
for which man was created. - SELAH
-
·
A Praise and Worship Leader once told me that in the
Psalms, the word SELAH is often used by the chief musician, indicating that when the
foregoing passive is somber in thought, that you should in reverence “PONDER IT”, but when it’s joyful you should just Cut Loose and Do Your Thing. –
It’s in the
Book
Psalm 30:12 – Our ultimate end is to offer praise
to God
12 To the end that my glory may sing praise to You and not be silent. O LORD my God, I will give thanks to You forever.
12 To the end that my glory may sing praise to You and not be silent. O LORD my God, I will give thanks to You forever.
(NKJV)
Blending Vocals & Instruments
·
The Blend you desire on vocals and
instruments has a number of factors that enters into the equation. As with the audio board you either have to RAISE all the low level vocals or instruments to 0db or LOWER the high level devices to 0db.
·
The acoustical drums would probably rate as
the highest level instrument, already being too loud when they are just first unpacked.
Don’t be surprised if the drummer wants a mic on the “high hat” to add in those high
frequency sounds. The mic should be positioned
extremely close so that the input can be turned way down reducing the other drum
sounds.
·
The real solution is to put the drums in a glass
enclosure to reduce their sound and then mic them independently. IF NOT you must increase the
levels of all the other instruments on stage to match the drum set. – Some considerate
drummers put a pillow inside the base drum, others stick a little rubber mastic
on the symbols and snare drums to help reduce some of the sound, while still
others chunk the real drums and get electronic drums which introduce an
irritating SMACK of the sticks on each device.
·
Noise Gates can be used on drums with
great success by reducing the “bleeding” between drum mics; making them
almost invisible to each other. – (See Noise Gates)
Best Operating Practices
·
There is a total
“LOUDNESS” level
of the room that varies depending on the operator, so sometime it is advisable
to obtain a loudness
meter so that a deacon or elder does
not MESS WITH YOU about how loud it is. A ship has only ONE
CAPTAIN;
find out who that captain is and that’s the one you please, hopefully it’s a
performer who has wisdom as well as knowledge.
·
Color coding should be used on all
microphones on the stage. Color
Electrical Tape can be purchased at Lowe’s or Home Depot in the Electrical
Department; place a strip of color on each microphone as well as a matching
strip on the audio board. It’s also a
good practice on foldback speakers as well.
·
In case of a microphone
failure;
a spare color coded microphone, corded or wireless must be located in plain
view as a “Stand
by Mic”– It’s the operator’s job to confirm its operational status
as well as educate those on stage of its physical location.
·
Wires should be dressed with
PRIDE on all stands as well as along the floor to prevent accidents. – To avoid
HUM, power cords should NOT be dressed parallel to audio lines although they
can be crossed without a problem.
·
Seasoned operators can be seen using masking tape across the bottom of the audio console writing what’s
on each channel. Anybody can come in
behind them and easily pick up the operation.
If your audio console does not have INPUT attenuators on
each channel, then masking tape is recommended to place arrows for where the
normal position of the fader should be – You can then easily return to your “default value”
setting when desired.
·
Microphones that are not in use,
should be left turned off so that if they are accidently bumped it will not be
heard on the sound system. – Ease the sound up and down in making
corrections. When only one microphone is
in use the majority of the time, all the others should be off. – My personal
preference is to run the fader pots to the bottom so I can SNEAK them ON when I need them, not slam them on; then everybody knows you
were late.
·
When “hunting” a
microphone
don’t in frustration slam your fader or pot to the top of their range and then
start turning on mics; you will blow out the audience when you find it. With the attenuators set at their “default value”;
then open the mics, find it, then adjust.
·
Baby Grand Pianos can be a task to
mic. I find a pair of Omni-directional
microphones placed 24 inches apart and about 10 inches above the strings and
about 6 inches behind the hammers does an excellent job. It is sent and mixed as a mono signal to the audio board. If you get too close to the hammers you will
hear the “attack” as the hammers hit the strings.
·
As a compromise, one mic on a piano can
also be utilized; since the low frequencies do not need as much help; place the
mic on the floor near the right leg pointing up at the high frequency strings
of the piano. – Caveat;
you may hear the foot petals being depressed. –
·
There are Piano mic systems
(PianoMic) that use a compression
pole to suspend two microphones above the strings that is designed to eliminate
the ” Proximity”
effect, allowing all the strings to sound equal. - Don’t get frustrated, there
is no single STANDARD for mic placement on a piano.
·
Drums believe it or not, do need
a mic on instruments that are used such as bongo drums, tambourines, cowbells,
shakers, etc. The audio operator’s job
is easier if they are physically located away from the main drum set, and for
balance, the single mic is placed further from the stronger instrument and
closest to the weaker.
·
An Announce mic is occasionally used on
stage and sometimes you are surprised when it comes into use. As a best practice
it would normally be turned off.
A mic with a switch on it should be provided. - When it’s off, it adds nothing to the overall
sound and when it is switched on and the fader is set at the default value,
your job has already been done for you, the level is perfect and nobody is
embarrassed. – “In
line” switches that plug into the mic are also available as an “add on”.
·
As a rule, Orchestras and large
Choirs utilize a pair of directional microphones generally placed 13 feet up
and 13 feet out and placed 13 feet apart. – In a church setting, the microphones
are placed much closer to the smaller choir and have no orchestras.
·
NOISE Caveat; Live microphones on
stands transmit the sounds of walking on the floor as well as hands touching
the stand. – Lavalier microphones on lanyards, rustle on clothes when they
move. - When clothes move on top of the microphone the sound becomes muffled. -
If a lapel is chosen for a microphone, it should be placed on the side which is
most likely to be turned to. - Ideally the mic on the host that is most
preferred for minimum sound level changes, is located on a tie or in the center
of their apparel.
·
Interesting Note; in “on stage
performances”, four or more directional “SHOTGUN” mics are laid on the
floor on foam rubber at the stage edge. Some
principal actors will wear wireless microphone with almost invisible clear tubes
in their hair just above their forehead to provide “presence” to their presentation.
- Stage actors PROJECT their voice anyway.
·
It is your
responsibility to
tell your pastor, that his wireless mic must be considered HOT all the time, wherever he is,
including the restroom. – Notice that
the president does not wear a cordless mic.
·
If someone else can assist with the video
presentations and audio recordings, you can do your job much more
proficiently.
·
One Omni directional
microphone suspended in the rear center
of the auditorium is great for adding in the overall sound produced as well as
congregational or audience participation.
Some orchestra leaders want the feed in an ear piece to know which
sections to get louder or softer.
·
Hard of hearing church members can use wireless
receivers and ear pieces to enjoy
the sermon better. It is the audio operator’s
responsibility to check the levels being sent as well as the batteries; there
is no “Do Over”
to provide an Exceptional Worship Experience. Remember low or weak battery
voltage causes distortion in the ear piece.
·
Taped Recordings are already limited by
their band width, so ALC’s and peak controllers are recommended and if you do
your job on the audio console, they are a SET
AND FORGET operation.
Silent
Servant
·
Trying to balance vocals with the other
instruments usually gets unsolicited HELP from those who think they know how to
do your job, but won’t. Be patient and LOVE them anyway; “Speak in Tongues” so they won’t know that you are frustrated.
·
A seasoned operator knows that as soon as the
sanctuary or auditorium fills up, the clothing changes the acoustics, requiring
many adjustments as the program proceeds.
That means the sound board is NOT
PLUG AND PLAY, it
requires continuously “Working the Board” to get the blend that the
PERFORMERS DESERVE.
·
In a studio or
professional stage environment the audio engineer does this job every day and is
super proficient. But in a Church
environment, audio is run by anybody who is willing to do it. Some just “step in” at the last minute and have
“enough going” to turn it Off & On.
·
Those who commit to running the board for
long periods of time, give up one night during the week to practice, then give
up Adult classes on Sunday morning to practice and then operate the board for
the live service. Some churches have two
and three services. – This person is a SILENT SERVANT serving in the background. - It’s quite a commitment.
·
Andrew was one of the twelve
Disciples,
the only thing you know about him, was that he served God in the BACKGROUND, bringing people to meet Jesus. He brought his bother Peter and 3,000 more people got
saved. – The unnoticed Audio person makes
a difference in lives.
·
It’s the Holy Spirit’s job to plant the seed; the Audio, Praise
and Worship Team’s job is to water the seed, and it’s God’s job to harvest the seed.
– We are only responsible for watering. - Worship lets you get in on what God
is doing. We “water”
with our talents.
You
are an Andrew; a Silent Servant
1 Corinthians 13:1 – Love them anyway and
just speak in tongues
1 If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not LOVE, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. (ESV)
1 If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not LOVE, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal. (ESV)
John 1:40-41 – Andrew
brings Peter to Jesus
40 Andrew, Simon Peter's brother, was
one of the two who heard what John had said and who had followed Jesus.
41 The first thing Andrew
did was to find his brother Simon and tell him, NIV
John 6:8-9 – Andrew
brings the boy with two sardines to Jesus
8 Another of his
disciples, Andrew,
Simon Peter's brother, spoke up, 9 "Here is a boy with five small
barley loaves and two small fish, but how far will they go among so
many?" NIV
John 12:20-22 – Philip brings people to Andrew to take to
Jesus
21 They came to Philip,
who was from Bethsaida
in Galilee , with a request. "Sir,"
they said, "we would like to see Jesus." NIV
22 Philip went to tell Andrew;
Andrew
and Philip in turn told Jesus.
NOBODY WILL
NOTICE WHEN YOU DO YOUR JOB RIGHT.
But just mess up one time
and EVERYBODY will notice
it.
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