He was
also responsible for assembling the music cues for the performances, including
work by Dave Stewart, Jimmy Cliff and Peter Gabriel. "For all of the
pre-production and on-site work the Mobile I/O performed faultlessly. I
have been very impressed with the sound resulting from our use of the MIO
and glad to report it passed with flying colours. What struck me the first
time I routed some programme material through the D/As was a wonderful
transparency. In addition, material that was in a stereo domain exhibited
a striking depth and positional realism."
The crew arrived on site two weeks before the Games began, and created a
temporary studio in one of the stadium's hospitality boxes. At this point,
all of the music composition and production had been completed, and the only
work left was some minor editing of the arrangements for placement and timing.
But that was not to be.
" Due to some radical changes to the various running orders, this turned
into heavy duty music re-mixes and some on-site rescoring to provide additional
music. All the orchestral stuff had been recorded as separate sessions, though
with the same orchestra and sound stage," Scott says. "So it was possible
for this to be achieved with the knowledge that with the MIO on board we wouldn't
be compromising the audio integrity. Delta Sound Inc. were also instrumental
in providing and managing, amongst many things, the direct links to BBC and what
can only be described as excellent PA facilities."
Co-owner of Delta Sound Paul Keating was responsible for the pre-production
sound design for the stadium system, as well as the management of the on-site
audio crew. He was also responsible, along with Scott, for working with the
production crew and broadcasters. Keating produced high-level concert sound
quality uniformly around the whole stadium.
" Another unexpected twist was an urgent request to record a short one-minute
narration just two hours before the final dress rehearsal, which was to be in
front of 38,000 spectators. As there was no time to find a facility house, we
found we could squeeze a mic and headphone cable through a tiny hole that had
been drilled between our box and a neighbouring hospitality suite. The acoustics
were what you would expect from a 10-foot glass cube, so we put the announcer
under the cloth sound desk cover, like on the back of those old-fashioned plate
cameras, set up a mix with the Mobile I/O mixer, and did the takes."
The Commonwealth Games were not the first opportunity Scott had to work with
the Mobile I/O. He had employed the interface while doing pre-production
work for Swiss Expo 2002 at the SwissCom Pavillion in Biel, Switzerland. "Two
days before press day we had to make some adjustments to part of an incredibly
complicated networked soundtrack," he explains. "There were
five hundred sound effects, music, and vocal cues routed over a fifty-channel
sound system. It was possible to access the original studio post production
mixes for the relevant sections, make the amendments required, demonstrate
them to the client, and then burn a CD to transfer to the show soundweb
-- all within a black box environment with no easily accessible power
or studio facilities."
When Alton Towers Theme Park hired Scott to score the theme music for its
new musical, "Webmaster -- An Adventure on Ice," he needed to take
advantage of the venue's multi-channel playback system. "I turned up
on site with my laptop and Mobile I/O and sat in the audience seats fine
tuning the mix for the PA. Once the numerous changes had been made, I downloaded
the tracks through the optical interfaces to the master show system."
Although Scott's involvement in these projects is all but finished, Mobile
I/O has already changed his workflow. "I don't have to worry about PCI
cards or mains; I can just pull Mobile I/O out of my bag and with one simple
cable be up and running. I bounce between my G4, iMac, and Titanium knowing
the audio will still spurt out in the same fashion with the same quality." But
he's not the only one affected by the power of Mobile I/O. "I think
the biggest change is the element of portability without sacrificing quality,
though this is a double-edged sword, as producers wring their hands in glee
as they discover how far down the schedule they can continue to change their
minds!"
More about Julian Scott's work can be found online at www.julianscott.com.
For information about Metric Halo, go to www.mhlabs.com
Source: Metric Halo
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