blank
blank blank blank
blank
Home | Current Issue | Reviews | Archives | Mix Forums | Subscribe Now | Online Extras











blank


AES New Products Guide
NAB Audio Products
Education Directory


TEC Awards
Studio Showcase


Headline News
Site Index
About Mix
Contact Us
Advertising Information
Subscribe Now
Customer Service


Radio
Broadcast Engineering
Broadway Sound Master Class
Electronic Musician
Entertainment Design
Lighting Dimensions
Millimeter
Mix
Onstage
Remix
Sound & Video Contractor
Staging Rental Operations
Video Systems
Primedia Business

blank

All Access: Switchfoot

 By Steve Jennings

Mix, May 1, 2004

Print-friendly format E-mail this information

Mix caught Switchfoot at their sold-out Fillmore Auditorium show in San Francisco, while they were out supporting their still-growing The Beautiful Letdown CD. The band has played a few different legs in the U.S. and Canada, and made quick trips to Hawaii, Australia and New Zealand. We spoke with production manager/front-of-house engineer Ryan Nichols and band/stage tech Todd Cooper about the tour.

“We only carry band gear, a small supplemental light rig and merchandise,” says Ryan Nichols, Switchfoot's production manager and sound engineer. “This is definitely the toughest obstacle for me to overcome: having different gear every night. Most of the venues we play in have sufficient P.A.s. Sometimes we have to supplement the monitors, but that's where advancing comes into play. We're trying to keep things as simple as possible, but I see the band touring with full production in the very near future.

“All three vocalists are on Shure SM58s. Tim [Foreman, bassist and vocals] and Jerome [Fontamillas, guitarist, keyboards and vocals] are on cabled mics for backing vocals, and Jon [Foreman, lead singer/guitarist] is using the Shure ULX handheld version. We started carrying our own mics a long time back. The reason I chose the 58s is because they sound very smooth on any P.A. out there and they are beyond durable. There are challenges involved, like drum and cymbal bleed, but, hey, this is live rock 'n' roll. As for monitor systems, the band tried in-ears a while ago and did not like the isolated, sterile world it created inside each musician's head. We've been using wedges, while Jon uses an in-ear in his right ear with just his vocal in it.

“Technically, I feel the most important aspect of the show is the vocals. Jon's lyrics have a true positive message, so making the vocals clear is important for the crowd to understand every word.

“[For outboard gear] I use an instrument reverb, a vocal reverb, a slight vocal chorus and a delay. I'll use a Yamaha 90II, 900, 990 and Rev 7, TC Electronic M1 and D2, and Roland 1000 delay. I compress the kick, snare, bass, acoustic and vocals, and gate the second snare, rack and floor. Typical units there are Drawmer and dbx.

“We're currently in the middle of an extremely intense tour: 50 shows in 60 days. I really feel this is an amazing band with great songs. Everyone on tour believes wholeheartedly about what we are doing. It makes for a truly wonderful tour.”.

Gear up onstage comprises guitarist Jon Foreman playing through a Vox AC-30; Fontamillas is playing an Orange OR 120 head through a Marshall 4×12 cab; and Tim Foreman's bass runs through a Tech21 SansAmp for the house and uses a Gallien-Krueger 2001 head through two 4×10 GK ported cabs for his stage sound.

“My station is pretty simple,” says Todd Cooper, band and stage tech. “I run the guitars through a Boss stage tuner, then through a Peterson VS II digital strobe tuner. I also run a line from there to a small Rock It belt clip amp that I use to hear the guitars to check the tuning audibly. I'm in charge of around 15 guitars now.”.

“Since we don't have a monitor engineer with us, Tim works with the house monitor engineer while each member puts together his mix,” Nichols says. “I'm doing FOH at the same time. This lets each person have a solid mix, including being able to hear tones with or without the house P.A. on, and it doesn't overload the house monitor mixer.”.



© 2008, Primedia Business Magazines and Media, a PRIMEDIA company. All rights reserved. This article is protected by United States copyright and other intellectual property laws and may not be reproduced, rewritten, distributed, redisseminated, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast, directly or indirectly, in any medium without the prior written permission of PRIMEDIA Business Corp.

Get Copyright Clearance Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines & Media Inc.

Print-friendly format E-mail this information
SITE SEARCH
blank
blank
blank


MixLine E-newsletter
MixLine Live
Sign Up Now
MixLine Archive
MixLine Live Archive

blank





blank
blank