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radio-mic use in amateur theatre and schools

Tue, 17 Oct 2006, 10:16 pm
David Ashton14 posts in thread
I frequently deliver a load of radio mics to a theatre group or school and the director is relieved that all his[her] problems are over.We just clip on the mics and the weakest voice will come thundering out, in tune, over the band next to the stage.Oh dear.Radio mics are complex devices,mine have 700 channels but that does not mean you can use anything like that number because they interact with each other and other radio sources in unpredictable ways, so you have to select the dozen or so frequencies that will work in the venue and set these on the transmitters and receivers.Each transmitter also has a gain control which needs to be set correctly.You then have to plug in the actual lavalier mic into the transmitter and fit it to the actor in such a way that they don't rip it out during the dance routine.Then you can fit fully charged batteries and you can start to plug them into the P.A.Now working a 16 channel mixer is difficult at the best of times but with actors entering and exiting the stage at rapid intervals keeping track of which channels need to be live and more importantly which ones need to be off can be a nightmare even more so if actors are changing mics to save hiring more.Just to make life more interesting the omni-directional mics usually used on beltpacks will pick up all the sound in their location, so a weak voice next to a band will only be amplified relative to the band.So who's your sound operator? well Fred missed out on a part in this show so we thought he could do it.Oh dear.I know I'll be out every night, the problems will be ,mic ripped out,flat battery,lost antenna,channel changed on belt pack,etc.Now you are wondering why this rant.The point is please don't use radio mics unless you absolutely have to,a good voice teacher would probably be better value.If you really must use them prepare to spend a lot of time getting them right and rehearse with them a lot.Finally your sound operator must be good and keen and will probably need an assistant to keep tabs on which mics are 'live'.Finally be prepared for something to go wrong, you are using a highly complex system and the scope for things stuffing up is significant, always have a spare.Sorry to be so complex but it was hard to explain any other way.

Venues

Sun, 10 Dec 2006, 09:43 pm
Walter Plinge
As a member of a school who untertakes alot (167 this year) productions run by directors who can't control their actors, want everything to just work and arn't patient enough to teah their students anything, i know how mics get chuked in at the last moe. I had a director once who goes to me half an hour before the show: "Do you have that head set?" "what head set" "Oh, i forgot to tell you i wanted a radio mic for ------- for this performance." Then as i proceed to try and eq over pfl, she tells me she wants to hear it. putting through the system the actor suddenly falls over his own foot (literally) hits the mic and guess wat, feed back. The director proceeds to scream at us for this "noise" then says... "well you can't get this working so then don't do it! Afterall, i'm not important! Why should you worry about the sound on MY show?" Walking out of the venue slaming doors as she goes, and she never returns again... Lesson... don't give last minute warning about sound!

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