Change font size   Print view

A little D8B on tour story

Discussion board for Mackie's d8b Digital Console users.

A little D8B on tour story

Postby FrankH » Wed Mar 01, 2023 11:37 am

A long time friend of mine, Peter (Ski) Schwartz toured as the musical director for David Bowie and the Pet Shop Boys in the late '90s. Here's what he had to say in a MacProVideo interview:

“I’ve been involved in two world tours, one as musical director for David Bowie on the 'Outside' tour and also as musical director for the Pet Shop Boys 'Nightlife' tour. Both of those tours involved MIDI rigs to play backing tracks that the bands played on top of. The Pet Shop Boys tour was particularly intensive MIDI-wise because we had a rig of about 20 synths. They recognized the difference between having backing tracks being played from tape or having those sounds played live from synths, because it's never the same twice. So we had this huge rig - two refrigerator sized racks filled with Nords and Roland JV's and all kinds of other stuff. There were also some samplers too, Akai S1000's and 1100’s.”

“I was running upwards of 16 tracks of audio on Logic from a Mac PowerBook and driving a whole bunch of MIDI stuff at the same time. I was the first one to ever use a Mackie D8B on the road. The reason I specified that for the rig were because there were so many synthesizers and the levels from one song to another were going to be all over the place, so rather than programming MIDI volume commands for each synth, I thought it'd be a lot easier to be able to move a physical fader to control the level of the synth outputs for each song. So I had the playback for all these synths and the D8B to mix the song and I would save the mix in a snapshot.” 

“On top of playing back all the synth and sampler parts I was also sending program changes to the D8B - it had motorized faders so - from song to song it would switch the mix. And having an actual mixer to control levels made it really easy to make level adjustments during rehearsals and sound checks. It was a pretty extensive rig!”
User avatar
FrankH
Premium Member
Premium Member
 
Posts: 374
Joined: Wed Nov 26, 2008 7:21 pm

Re: A little D8B on tour story

Postby captainamerica » Wed Mar 01, 2023 3:16 pm

great story Frank...summarizes the arguments for Mixing In The Box vs On A Console
DAW: Genelec 8341,MacStudio, QuantumTB, Faderport16, DP, LogicProX, ProTools.BackupDAW:d8B, MacPro 2008 2xQuad-Core, MOTU (2408)LegacyDAW: A2000, Picasso II, Blizzard 68060@50 MHz|3xAD516 SunRize cards|HydraNexus Amiganet Ethernet.
User avatar
captainamerica
Premium Member
Premium Member
 
Posts: 338
Joined: Thu Nov 27, 2008 5:45 pm
Location: Boston, MA (org. from Montreal, Canada)

Re: A little D8B on tour story

Postby magicbuss » Thu Mar 09, 2023 5:51 pm

Absolutely! I'm curious how it held up on the road?
magicbuss
Registered user
 
Posts: 15
Joined: Wed Mar 16, 2011 3:59 pm

Re: A little D8B on tour story

Postby FrankH » Tue Mar 14, 2023 2:27 am

According to Peter, it worked through the tours without breaking down. When he finished, he brought it home, used it for a while, sold it and replaced it with a Soundcraft analog mixer for his home studio.
User avatar
FrankH
Premium Member
Premium Member
 
Posts: 374
Joined: Wed Nov 26, 2008 7:21 pm


Return to d8b Forum

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 25 guests

cron