CongaTick wrote:I've invested in my own mics (one for each drum) and a small Tapco mixer which gives the sound guy a single output to his PA....If you DO bring your own gear (at least mics and mixer) it's a question of whther you've got enough balls to insist on a proper level to compete.
pavloconga wrote:There were 5 bands on the night and a pretty powerful sound system, big stacks of Marshall amps, body shaking bass volume like you wouldn't believe – yet the sound guy did not want to even mike up my percussion setup!
He said, "I don't usually mic up the bongos (!) … and look… the drummers drum kit toms are not miked up." To which I replied, "Yeah but mate, I'm playing these with my hands not sticks. And I'm standing in front of a massive bass amp"
niallgregory wrote:This is a subject that i have brought up in the past . its actually a relief that someone else has experienced the same problemAfter hundreds of gigs over the last few years i have lots of good and lots of bad experiences with sound engineers ! Depending on the genre of music being played , i.e a latin or afro beat or something thats traditionaly percussive music with congas etc its been fine . Its the more pop style gigs the present larger problems for me tbh . This problem also exists on lots of different levels , ive toured all over the world , all over Ireland and the Uk and the same ignorance is still there with sound engineers . The best approach for me was to try and educate the guy about the situation , and if that dosent work punch him in the head
congamyk wrote:These clueless dolts will set up 8 mics for the drums and spend a minimum of 10 MINUTES tweaking the bass drum volume.
niallgregory wrote:great salsa gig last night with a sound engineer who was excellent , he micd up me first and had a great monitor and front of house sound .Credit were its due
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