Inside IEM Mixes: Keys
Continuing the IEM series, today we’re talking about the keys mix. We’re departing from the two tunes we’ve used for the rest of this series since there weren’t any keys in that band.
On a given week, we submix as many as three keys sources in mono to send to the IEMs. The first source is Ivory from our Slam Grand. If the piano shell is not in the set, often times I will still run MIDI out of the primary keyboard into the Ivory system so that tone is available if we want a grand piano patch in the day. The other two inputs are our house keys – a Yamaha Motif8 and a Korg Triton. Every once in a while one of our artists might bring in their own boards but it doesn’t happen very often in a month.
I was concerned when we first installed our IEM system that the keys would need to be in stereo just like the drum kit in the ears mixes and that would present channel count issues with our desired allocation. Thankfully, I don’t think anyone has ever commented on the keys being submixed to mono rather than stereo. As a result, the only truly stereo submixes in the ears are the drum mix and the extras channels. Everything else goes to the IEMs in mono and can be panned around in each individual mix as desired.
I’ve received a few questions via email for more information about the ambience mics specifically so I am preparing more info about that to tag onto the end of this series.
With that said, check this out…
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Next time we’ll listen to the final IEM mix – lead vocal/worship leader. Thanks for reading!
read moreInside IEM Mixes: Drums
Continuing our series on IEM mixes, today we’re going to focus on the drummer’s mix. If you’ve missed the other parts of this series, go back through the last few days posts to catch up. Sorry for the data dumps in some of these posts but I’m just trying to make sure I cover things as thoroughly as possible.
When we first adapted the PQ system for our IEM mixes, I was concerned that a stereo drum mix that everyone shared might cause problems. The reality couldn’t be further from that. A stereo aux creates the submix for the drums and it is slaved to the channel pan so whatever panning is done for the house translates to the ears. I actually leave the sends to this aux set to unity in my default console setup. That way, as I soundcheck the drums, I can build my house mix with the faders near unity and it translates almost perfectly to the ears. It is RARE to need to tweak the mix for the ears – I actually can’t tell you the last time I listened to it other than preparing for these posts. It just works every time.
By now you should be sensing some trends. The ears mixes are pretty dry and really simple. If we had a separate monitor desk, I’m sure there are more things we could do to make the environment even better for the artists (things like manually riding audience levels, riding solos, adding effects if desired, etc) but this system works for our guys, as evidenced by the wide acceptance factor.
Song #1 is still “My Savior, My God”. Check it out…
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Song #2 adds the click and track. Again the click takes almost singular focus in the mix since everyone is locking to it. I can’t speak very much into what it takes to be successful with the whole click track thing from an artist perspective. Kensington has been using click’s for so long that it was just something we do by the time I got here.
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Again, if there are questions, let’s use the comments section to discuss.
Next time: keys mixes. We’ll have to use different songs then the ones we’ve been using so far since there wasn’t a keys player in this band. It will be good to change it up a bit, as well!
read moreInside IEM Mixes: Bass
Today’s IEM mix we’re going to evaluate is from our bass guitar player. Again, there’s very little processing on the mix. This one would probably benefit from listening on better speakers then those on a laptop. The experience is pretty different for me listening to these clips on my speakers vs. on some good IEMs so you’ll probably find the same thing.
Right now is a good time to stress the importance of good ear pieces in order to achieve wide acceptance. When I started at Kensington, all that we owned were some Shure E1s and NO ONE was excited to put those things on for anything. The first time we did a band with ears for a holiday, everyone but the bass player wore E1s and it was painful. Now we use Shure products exclusively (I’ve written about this before – check the archives if you’re interested in why) and have a mix of SCL3, SCL4, and SCL5′s. Since I consider us still in the early days of a transition campus-wide to IEM, only a small handful of our artists own their own ear pieces. Most use our house sets. We stock the replacement foam and change it for each set whenever a new artist is using them.
Focusing now on the mix, our artists get a stereo drum mix to their PQ mixer for their IEMs. Everyone gets the same drum mix and we find that works fine for us. The only exception is that the bass player also gets the kick channel individually in addition to the stereo mix since bass players always want more kick then the rest of the band. When you listen to the first clip from “My Savior, My God”, the first thing that jumps out is the placement of kick and bass in relation to everything else in the mix. There’s also quite a bit more of the extras channels in this mix then in the electric mix we listened to last time. One caveat though – due to the channel limitations of our system on this particular night, the bass player chose to have mono extras rather than the normal stereo. Personally the stereo part of ambience is really important to me but this particular artist isn’t reliant on ambience so its a simple trade off. I’m actually surprised in listening to his mix that he has this much extras present. Regardless…
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The second clip, like last time, adds a click and track into the mix. What is interesting is that with this mix, the click is pretty buried. In fact, once the drums kick in I don’t think it is very present at all. Again you can get a better idea of the importance of the extras channel in the mix when you hear the crowd singing along.
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Again, if there are questions, let’s use the comments section for this. I’m really not sure what else is helpful to share.
Next time: drums IEM mixes
read moreInside IEM Mixes: Electric
Today we’re continuing the series on IEM mixes. I’m in my fourth year mixing at Kensington and when I started here, every artist on stage used a wedge and those wedge mixes were created for better or for worse at FOH. The job was daunting, to say the least. Fast forward to today and all but three artists (40+) now use IEM solely when they play at our main Troy campus (the portable campuses have not begun transitioning to IEM yet but hopefully soon!). All of these things I’m sharing in this series of posts are things we’ve learned along the way in order to gain such wide acceptance from artists. This is by no means the only way to do it but it is OUR way.
The first IEM mix we’re going to evaluate is lead guitar. Most of our worship arrangements are electric driven so this is a pretty important place to start. Our mixes are generally very dry and we use the extras channels to add space when desired. I’ve worked with artists who like more processing in their ears but this setup seems to work for our artists since we don’t have a dedicated monitor engineer. There isn’t any significant processing on the mixes you’re going to listen to – they are created with a stereo PQ channel on the Venue, the on-board limiter is engaged to protect the output on the top end, and that mix then feeds the wired IEM system.
I have two samples from tunes to listen to for the electric guitar artist. This first one is from “My Savior, My God”. The instrumentation is electric, acoustic, bass, drums, lead vocal, and BGV. It sounds a little cliche, but you’ll quickly see as we go through this series that each person’s mix probably starts with a “more me” philosophy. This makes sense when you remember that I strongly encourage all of our artists to wear both ears all the time and this results in lots of isolation from the outside world in what they’re hearing. The result is a big need to hear what the artist is doing individually, and then surround that with the other instruments to provide timing, pitch, and ensemble. The band is not playing to a click in this one so you’ll see where our artist placed the drums in relation to everything else. I think it is interesting how out front his guitar really is in his mix, yet you can clearly maintain the placement of the kit, vocal, and the worship leader’s acoustic.
DISCLAIMER – this obviously isn’t the only way to build an IEM mix but hopefully it is helpful to hear what a really good musician is listening to.
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The second sample is a little different in the band is playing to a click & track. At the start of the tune, you’ll hear the count off and a really broken down intro. The electric is just doing atmosphere stuff at the beginning and really kicks in at 1:12. The interesting thing here is the difference in placement between the click and the drum kit in this one. As I listen to the mixes that most of our guys dial in, it seems when playing to a click, everyone really dials into that click and keeps it out front with the kit tucking in behind it. This might just be a preference thing but it works for our guys since everyone is so used to playing to a click. Obviously your mileage may vary.
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If you have any questions based on what you’re hearing, feel free to use the comments on this post for discussion.
Next time: IEM mixes for bass
read moreNew series…Inside IEM Mixes
One of the biggest questions and challenges I hear about from other audio guys, especially in churches, has to do with IEM mixes – what should be in them, what do good ones sound like, how do you help your artists have successful mixes, etc. etc.
Today we’re going to start a little journey over the next 2 weeks to cover each major instrument – bass, electric, keys, drums, and vocals – and talk about what makes good mixes for each category. I also have actual samples that I have recorded so you can hear what real guys dialed in and we’ll analyze each one. I’ll be posting Mon-Wed-Fri this week and next to continue this little series.
To start things off, I want to refer you to a video blog I did a few months ago about our PQ system that might be helpful so you can see more about how our particular system functions for our artists, just for context.
Next, a tool that is REALLY critical to good IEM mixes is what we call our “extras channel”. A common complaint you’ll hear from artists who are first transitioning to IEM is that it can feel really disconnecting and isolating. All of a sudden, guys hear themselves in glaring detail – for good and for bad. If the tone is aweful, it’s much easier to ignore it when its just coming from an amp at your feet or a wedge. When it’s in your ear, there’s no escaping it. The biggest trick to making the ears feel real and less isolating is effective use of ambience mics. I’ve written about this before, but we have three sets of ambience mics that I use as the primary foundation of our “extras channel” – a set of shotguns on the side of the stage, a set of PCC mics on the 1/3 and 2/3 lines of our stage lip, and a set of small diaphragm condensors hanging over the crowd about half way back. These mics are mixed on a stereo aux that is fed to the IEM.
The “extras channel” allows the artist to decide how isolated they want to feel when they’re wearing their IEMs. It is really important that this mix be stereo so it will feel right. A couple of our guys choose to have mono extras just because they want to use one of their PQ channels for something else, but for the majority of artists I don’t recommend letting them go mono. Stereo is really important.
Along with the ambience mics, I also mix post fader sources for anything else the artist might need when they AREN’T playing so they can remain connected to what’s going on – speaker and greeter mics, video playback sources that might role while they’re waiting to play, and talkback from the stage manager so they can hear rehearsal requests and communicate back and forth.
Here’s a sample of what the “extras channel” sounds like when we isolate it all by itself during a worship tune. It really doesn’t sound like much on its own, but the presence that this adds to the mix has done wonders for IEM acceptance at Kensington. If you don’t have something like this in your ear mixes, you don’t know what you’re missing!
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Next time: electric guitar IEM mix
read moreGood transitions…
Today’s post is inspired by content I recently watched on Ownthemix.com (are you a member there yet??). I’ve realized this is one of those areas where there’s lots of things I just do instinctively without really thinking about them in order to ensure smooth transitions between the elements I’m mixing of a service, band set, event, etc. I’m going to try to outline some thoughts that I’m planning to share with my team the next time we’re together talking audio.
A primary responsibility of mixing audio well in a church is to do everything possible to eliminate distractions. One of the best ways to do this is by having great transitions. Transitions make a good audio guy into a great one.
- Don’t just mute and unmute inputs. Always try to fade into and out of elements. Make them smooth and seamless so they flow together. If the mic starts feeding back, you can catch it before it gets out of control. You don’t ever want to just turn on an input full volume – who knows if it will be louder then expected, crackle, or have feedback.
- Always turn on a communicator’s mic right on time. Too early and you might catch a sideways conversation with someone in the front row or clearing the throat. Too late and you miss the first few words. It’s a simple thing, but earn the trust of your communicator by having his back.
- If the communicator is going to have the audience talk with each other for a moment and then they’re going to continue speaking, you should bring their mic back a bit (maybe 5-10 dB) while the speaker isn’t “on” so they can take a drink or speak to someone without disrupting the moment. But keep your eyes closely on the communicator so you don’t miss when they are ready to proceed. Again, have the speaker’s back so the mic is transparent to them.
- The worst thing you can do is to forget to turn the speaker’s mic off when they are off stage. The music starts and you hear the speaker singing – this can be very embarrassing for said speaker.
- Slow, intentional fades are MUCH better then quick mutes and unmutes.
My name is Tim Corder. I started this blog in February 2007 because there were so few of what I considered good church audio resources available at the time for my team. Fast forward over 5 years and I'm still at it, sharing learnings about the journey towards making audio great. I go through periods where I post a lot and other times when I don't. I'm thankful for the opportunity to share it all with you. Thanks for visiting! 
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