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Mix Back User Guide
4
WHY?
Better Control of Your Mix
In-ear monitors (IEM) and personal monitor mixing provide several benefits above conventional
monitoring:
• No feedback – now you can EQ the vocal mic
• Greatly reduced or eliminated stage volume (
yea!
)
• Virtual elimination of room acoustic coloration on stage (
ever played in a gymnasium?
)
• Elimination of sign language between stage and sound engineer (
no more semaphores!
)
• Most importantly, you get to Control Your Mix
®
Mix Back and Hear Back Make It Easy
With some monitor systems, it is possible for the talent to create his or her own mix. However,
there are two drawbacks of a musician mixing all of the individual mixes:
a. They don’t know what they sound like in the audience because their ears are plugged up
with in-ear monitors.
Do you care what you sound like to the audience?
b. Players need to be playing, not mixing
With Hear Back, it’s as simple as turning up the "perfect mix" (front of house, recording studio
two mix, etc.) and adjusting your "more me" input(s). Simply turn the knobs and smile.
EXAMPLE:
Your star vocalist should not waste time mastering an extensive system of
switches, dials, displays and cables resembling the cockpit of a 747. They just need the
"perfect mix" (channels 1 & 2) and their "more me" input. Now time and energy is where it
should be – performing!
We recommend you connect the “perfect mix” from the FOH console or studio “two mix” to the
Mix Back stereo aux input
.
When using in-ear monitors the talent looses their psycho-acoustic space because stage
reflections are lost. To cure this, create a stereo mix (as perceived on stage) to help restore the
natural feel. When performing live, the “perfect mix” lets you hear what the audience hears.
Connect an ambient microphone to a Mix Back input (located near the band front line) so
the talent can hear the audience. Locating the mic far away adds an unnatural delay. Sound
travels at roughly one foot per millisecond, so a mic placed 100 feet into the audience has a 100
mSec delay. It is often necessary to add a limiter to the ambient mic channel to prevent excessive
ambient signal into the monitor mix.
INTRODUCTION TO
PERSONAL MONITOR MIXING
™
TIP
TIP
Forget
everything
you’ve ever learned about
monitor mixing!
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