The Who at Indigo2, London - Dec 08
The Who have just performed three
exclusive gigs at the Indigo2 at the O2 Arena (14th, 15th, and the
17th Dec 08). With a capacity of 2300, the “fan club members only”
performances were a comparatively intimate 2 hours of classics
including “Who are you?”, “Baba O'Riley”, “My Generation”, “Pinball
Wizard”, and various other tracks from “Tommy”. Playing with original
band members Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend, were Simon Townshend
(guitar), Zak Starkey (Drums), Pino Paladino (Bass) and John "Rabbit"
Bundrick (keyboards).
Paul
Ramsay has been The Who’s FOH engineer for nearly five years, and in
that time he has mixed the band all over the world in small 1500 seater
venues through to stadiums relying primarily on the Digico D5 and from
July this year Digico SD7. He was also responsible for recording the
live shows on The Who’s recent world tour. “I recorded 70 channels on
every show to Nuendo and also sub mixed 8 stems to create a 5.1 mix for
the DVD of everyshow” explained Paul. “They would then do a final mix,
which went to picture and the whole thing was ready for sale within a
week (of which all proceeds went to charity)”. Every show is also
recorded so that Paul can use the tracks for “virtual soundchecking” as
the band do not sound-check.
Paul Ramsay FOH The Who
The SD7’s inputs allow a very high
channel count (up to 224 via MADI), which is perfect for Paul’s
configuration. 70 channels come from 2 Digico stage racks which are
then fed to the SD7 and 2
RME HDSPe MADI cards
on their Steinberg Nuendo based ADK PC, which uses a trilobite raid
system for capture. This is all routed via an RME MADI Bridge which
Paul uses as a switcher for bussing the MADI to and from stage. Paul
said of the system “We have used the
RME MADI cards and
MADI Bridge
for a while now, including on the recent American, Canadian and
Japanese dates and they have been rock solid and sound superb.”
Paul is about to try the new RME MADIFace with Annie Lennox.
What is the RME MADI Bridge?
Developed as the optimal missing link between MADI devices of any manufacturer, RMEs MADI Bridge
is patchbay, distributor, signal buffer and input selector, all at the
same time - and thus mandatory for every MADI user. Up to 16 devices
can be freely connected with each other by 6 coaxial (BNC) and 2
optical in- and output pairs. Thanks to an intuitive and easy to
navigate user interface, the device is easy to understand and to
operate. The MADI Bridge adds to RMEs MADI series as a comfortable, even MIDI controlled device management solution.
The Who's RME MADI Bridge
All input signals are routed unaltered to the desired outputs. Like this, the
MADI Bridge supports
any format,
no matter if it is 56 or 64 channels or includes special invisible
control commands, any sample rates and even out-of-spec data rates or
violations of the MADI protocol. Thanks to a special
equalizing and
highly sensitive input stages, coaxial cable lengths of 100 m can be used - even between several devices. Some application examples:
- 8 x 8 MADI matrix
- Dual MADI coaxial/optical and vice versa converter and distributor
- MADI distributor, patchbay, router
The MADI Converter is an ideal companion to
RME's MADI Bridge,
converting the Bridge's six coaxial inputs and outputs to optical. The
optical format is advantageous in live and installed setups, and for
longer cable lengths. The
MADI Bridge
can be placed above the MADI Converter ideally; the coaxial in- and
outputs of the two devices will be right next to each other vertically,
and can be connected with short patch cables easily.
Find out more about the RME MADI Bridge