natedogg08
Member
Hey guys, first post Ive made on Control Booth...
I am a high school student in charge of setting up the sound system for our improv comedy group. Heres the setup:
Location: HS Commons (i.e. tiled floors, cement walls, no sound absorbtion whatsoever)
Audio: 3 Self Powered JBL speakers (1 left of stage, 1 right of stage, and 1 in back), 9 wireless Shure bodypacks (for improv performers- each wears a thin headworn style microphone), also we use 1 wireless handheld mic for the podium where we explain the games/skits. We mix on a Soundcraft Series 2 board.
Our problem is because of the floors/venue in general we struggle when it comes to making the performers audible. What is loud in front by the speakers gets muddied and incomprehensible to those who sit in the back. We have tried EQing the space, cutting out bass and mids and boosting treble, but then the performers sound awful and unnatural. How would you recommend making the room sound better so every one can hear the performers and they sound natural as well?
I am a high school student in charge of setting up the sound system for our improv comedy group. Heres the setup:
Location: HS Commons (i.e. tiled floors, cement walls, no sound absorbtion whatsoever)
Audio: 3 Self Powered JBL speakers (1 left of stage, 1 right of stage, and 1 in back), 9 wireless Shure bodypacks (for improv performers- each wears a thin headworn style microphone), also we use 1 wireless handheld mic for the podium where we explain the games/skits. We mix on a Soundcraft Series 2 board.
Our problem is because of the floors/venue in general we struggle when it comes to making the performers audible. What is loud in front by the speakers gets muddied and incomprehensible to those who sit in the back. We have tried EQing the space, cutting out bass and mids and boosting treble, but then the performers sound awful and unnatural. How would you recommend making the room sound better so every one can hear the performers and they sound natural as well?