XTA
makes Sound Sense
in Matters of Life And Death
Audio
Product Stories Published: 12 January
2007
Watching the six members of Iron Maiden on stage, it’s
hard to believe that are all are swiftly approaching their 50th
birthdays (except one, who’s already passed the landmark).
But appearances bely the facts as one of the world’s most
successful heavy metal bands continues to record and perform
with the vigour of men half their age.
Late 2006 has seen Maiden promoting their latest
album A Matter Of Life And Death, culminating in a sold out
arena tour of Europe and the UK.
Alternating between galloping bombast and subtle
acoustic sections, heads-down metal and quiet reflective pieces
- all with Bruce Dickinson’s infamous ‘air raid
siren’ vocals over the top - accurately reinforcing the
band’s live sound is a major challenge for any system.
But with XTA on board, the band’s passionate fans can
fully enjoy the diverse range of Maiden’s sonic spectrum.
Supplied by ML Executives, the band is touring
with an EAW KF760/761 line array, featuring six XTA DP226s,
four GQ600 dual 30 band graphic EQs and AudioCore control software.
The PA comprises main left/right arrays with further
arrays flown outside each of the main hangs to ensure adequately
wide sound coverage. These are complemented by SB1000 subs,
KF300 infills and Turbosound TMS-3 ground rows.
FoH engineer Doug Hall has been working with Iron
Maiden since the early 1980s. “There are few venues we
haven’t played multiple times, so the rooms are all pretty
predictable in that respect,” he says. “We’ve
got one GQ600 on the main drops, another on the hard left/right
drops and a third on the TMS-3s, just for tweaks and fine tuning.”
The fourth GQ600 is running as twin mono units.
“One channel is on Bruce’s lead vocals, just to
get the gain really up there,” Doug continues. “The
other is on the KF300s, which we’re just running vocals
through. But I only ever have to make a couple of tweaks. Mike
Hackman voices the rig with AudioCore, he’s the line array
wizard!”
“One XTA DP226 covers each of the four main
PA hangs,” adds system tech Hackman. “We’re
running low mid/high on the KF760s and mid/high on the KF761s,
with separate EQ on the front end. We’ve got the same
low band running through all the boxes, which means that on
the second input channel we can EQ the 760s and 761s individually.
“Doug runs the subs on a mono aux, so that’s
run through another DP226, together with the KF300s,”
Mike continues. “While the last is on the TMS-3s, which
are only pushing the sound back 30 feet or so, just to catch
the front rows.”
Everything is controlled via a wireless PC and
Audiocore and Mike is happy to admit his enthusiasm for XTA
products, the combination of great sound and ease of use meaning
that the EQ and time alignment of the system is both fast and
intuitive.
“The combination of the EAW line array,
the Lab Gruppen amps, the DP226s and AudioCore works really
nicely,” he says. “AudioCore is the best software
to work with and the 226s are very easy to use, either from
the front panel or with the software. If you want to just turn
a pot, you can.
“The functions in AudioCore are superb,”
he continues. “When I’m setting the system up it’s
really easy to just concentrate on one part of the rig and then
copy everything over to the rest of it. That gives me a really
good starting point for the rig as a whole. It’s great,
I love the XTAs. They’re easy to work with and they sound
really transparent.”
“Anything you plug into the DP226s is going
to sound better,” adds Doug Hall. ‘And the GQ600s
work really well, the high frequency trim is a really nice feature.
They work just perfectly.”