The Author:
Alexander Nemes works for tpc
international as
an audio engineer.
He mostly
handles large
productions on
the company’s
flagship Ü2.

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tpc international
With their big Ü2 O.B. Truck tpc international are acknowledged
experts for complex location projects with excellent CANTUS sound.
The live broadcast of the Knoff- Hoff TV-Show clearly demonstrated
that the CANTUS potential extends way beyond broadcasting. It proved its prowess
in both TV audio and sound reinforcement.
Know-How for Knoff-Hoff
TV audio and location sound reinforcement
make uneasy bedfellows. Fading up
the in-house PA to create a good liveatmosphere
adversely affects the TV
sound. If levels are reduced to create a
clean and uncoloured sound for broadcasting
then speech intelligibility for the
live audience is compromised. In any
case, without considerable expertise and
close co-operation between the P.A. and
TV-sound engineers, this classic audio
challenge, so typical of TV shows with an
audience, becomes an exercise in squaring
the circle.
Slaves to the Hall
Bavaria Film and TV Studios, (producer of
the Knoff-Hoff-Show), contacted us and
commissioned us to undertake both the
TV-audio production and the live sound
reinforcement for a remake of the show.
We immediately realised this unusual
extra task posed a big challenge if we
were going to get a good live sound. During
the planning meeting at the location,
we decided to use the outstandingly highquality
audio equipment of the Ü2 Truck for
sound reinforcement as well as the broadcast
mix. A CANTUS slave console, which
is part of the OB Truck’s inventory and normally
used in a secondary sound control
room for the Truck, would become our public-address board. This idea
had two
implicit advantages, a transparent FOH
sound and thus excellent speech intelligibility
even at low levels, and — obviously
—
close co-operation between the soundreinforcement
and TV-audio crews.
The Technical Approach
Our Ü2 Truck is equipped with a NEXUS
audio network and a CANTUS broadcasting
console. At production sites, the
NEXUS network is normally extended to
the spot where it’s needed — in this case
to the stage and the control gallery —
using portable base devices. This is very
handy, as we do not need to lay multi-core
cables. The NEXUS system only requires
thin and flexible fibre-optic cables. In addition, the Truck carries
a small CANTUS slave console capable of accessing the same resources
as the main internal console. Both consoles share the
available processing capacity. So, when
starting a project where both consoles are
involved, the total number of available
channels is distributed between them.
After this, it is possible to operate the two
consoles in a largely independent manner.

For this production, the slave console was
configured to access all sources connected
to the NEXUS audio network. Thus, the
NEXUS acted as a splitter because every microphone signal was available
both in
the O.B. Truck and at the FOH console.
However, signals from replay devices such
as MD or CD players, or video hard-disk
players, were mixed in the Truck and were
only then transferred, post fader via a
direct output, to the slave console. This
enabled the same fades to happen at both
desks, which was important for the flow
of the show.
The Knoff-Hoff-Show
The Knoff-Hoff-Show used to be a
very popular show on German TV
where the presenters demonstrated
the basic rules of physics in a
comprehensive “hands-on” manner.
When the decision was made to revive
the show, the producer awarded
the commission for the audio production
to tpc international. Configured
to fit
We were able to book Mario Obermeit,
one of the sound-reinforcements experts
of the SALZBRENNER STAGETEC MEDIAGROUP,
to do the FOH mix. He was
responsible not only for operating the
CANTUS slave console, but also for setting
up the entire P.A. system.
Since the actual sound-reinforcement
requirements had only been roughly
defined at the planning meeting, Mario
Obermeit initially set up 14 separate PA
areas. These areas allowed different signals
to be routed to the various audience
loudspeakers, the backstage speakers,
the monitor wedges for the band miming
to playback, the stage monitors, the
producers desk, and so on. This large
number of areas was reduced during
rehearsals, once it became clear which
areas could be fed with the same signals.
The audio was routed to the individual
areas using the aux paths of the CANTUS
slave console. This demonstrated some of
the advantages this console offers:
Firstly, it is possible to set up as many aux
buses as necessary, which means it has
the flexibility to adapt to virtually any requirement
—
assuming there is sufficient
DSP power.
Another benefit is that the arrangement
of the output paths can be very flexibly
configured to exactly suit the specific
task. For example, this might include
notch filters, delay or compressors.
The third advantage of the console is the
clear overview of the 16 bus settings,
provided by the central control module.
The engineer can see at a glance the level
at which each signal is sent to the bus.
Finally, every signal path of the CANTUS
can be freely labelled: “Aux 14” can be
displayed as “band”, etc. This is a very
convenient feature, especially with so
many buses configured. Digital
Superiority
Time was an issue when completing the
Knoff-Hoff-Show set-up, so the settings
had to be made very quickly. Rehearsals
started on the same day that the technical
equipment was installed; wirelessmicrophone
support and monitoring were
required from the very beginning. Therefore,
equalisation of the P.A. system and
filtering of the wireless microphones was
carried out at night, when the official
rehearsals were over. Here, another
advantage of the CANTUS became apparent:
Wherever practical, channel settings
were made and stored only once and
could then be copied from one channel to
one or many others.
Full Load
In total, there were almost 40 sources
connected to the sound-reinforcement
console. However, as this console is normally
used for smaller jobs, it features
only 24 faders. This is sufficient for the
usual duties of a secondary O.B. Truck control
surface.
Therefore, we used another CANTUS feature
which enables up to ten different easily
toggled control layers to be defined.
Layer A contained all 22 wireless microphones,
so it was almost fully assigned.
All the aux-master sends were allocated
to the faders of layer B, controlling the PA
area levels. Layer C carried the signals
coming from the O.B. Truck — the Knoff-Hoff
band, video feeds, etc. — plus direct outputs from the live musician
and the
sound-effects man. This set-up resulted in
a console that was still simple and fast to
operate despite having relatively few
faders. Services during the
Rehearsal
Reliability is always a concern when doing
a live job. When recording a show with an
audience, console failure could stop the
entire production. This is also true for
other CANTUS applications, for example,
in theatres, or when doing live recording
in the O.B. Truck or broadcasting costly performances
of popular artists. Therefore,
the console features a highly sophisticated
reliability pack with a multitude of
internal functionality checks, ranging from
the constant monitoring of module boards
and fibre-optic lines to the implementation
of redundant power supplies. Moreover,
as the mixing console is merely a
remote control for the DSP rack, it can
even be switched off during the performance
without affecting the audio.
This functionality proved itself during the
set-up. While searching for a cabling error
during a rehearsal, we cut the power of
the public-address console. The two presenters
microphones and the aux buses
to the FOH speakers were — and remained
—
enabled, so we could unhurriedly search
for the problem. A Multitude of
Features
It was interesting for me as a long-time
CANTUS user to see how quickly a soundreinforcement
professional becomes acquainted
with the console. Before this
show, Mario Obermeit and his assistant
Heiko Hannig had only been familiar with
analogue desks. However, it wasn’t very
long before Mario started talking to us
about the optimum console configuration
for the job, a notch filter here or a direct
out there, and how he would have loved
to do all the configuration work himself.
Next time — who knows? — we might be
able to enable him to do this thanks to the
NEXUS. We might integrate his laptop into
the NEXUS network, so he could use
the audio router to distribute and route to
the PA areas himself and, for example, to
enter delay times for the various areas. If
the NEXUS is equipped with the appropriate
DSP board, he could even use it for
equalising the PA areas. This way, the
slave console would merely be required
for dynamic level settings and for equalising
microphones. |