I've been listening to Luke Vaught since he was singing with the "Band Table". He is a gem of a talent and I'm glad he found the Inspirations. This new young group has brought new life back to southern gospel music.
@@lbrentevans The only reason I asked about that is because they do alot of changing places on stage and have to be mindful not to step on each other's mic cable.
@SGNbuff I sing lead for the Hallmark quartet and what I've Been Told from the manager of my group is most of the time with the Wireless mics, they have a certain frequency on each mic. Sometimes cellphones and interfere with the microphones and make them cut out.
@@stevenkouns6757 Your manager is apparently misinformed. I’m a career audio engineer. Most modern wireless mics and and in ears (and certainly anything considered “pro” level are frequency agile (meaning frequencies can be changed) and many are now digital carrier and FHSS (frequency hopping spread spectrum) and decidedly do not operate on the same frequencies as cell phones. In fact, operating wireless mics in the cellular bands is quite illegal. There are some which operate in the WiFi bands but no professional users would purchase those. Choosing wired over wireless is often about cost (good wireless is expensive, good mic cables aren’t) and quality (even the best wireless on the market, such as Shure Axient, involve either an analog to digital conversion and/or compression encoding or analog companding, either of which modifies the sound slightly. Newer digital systems are very, very good, and are coming down in price, but wired mics with the same capsule are always less expensive and more reliable even if there is no perceptible sound quality difference. In the case of the Inspirations, I suspect that not going wireless is, as I said, simply a factor of either cost, or perhaps something about reliability also. To travel with wireless you have to be somewhat adept at frequency coordination with the houses you play in. Not having to deal with that is a time saver. Additionally, the Inspirations are far more willing to play through house systems and use house pianos than other SG groups because their sound does not heavily rely on production. Their more old fashioned style sounds the same (and some would argue even better) on a low fidelity small church sound system as it does on the stage at the NQC.
I've been listening to Luke Vaught since he was singing with the "Band Table". He is a gem of a talent and I'm glad he found the Inspirations. This new young group has brought new life back to southern gospel music.
Awesome song and awesome group of guys singing it. Doesn't get any better than that. Great job!!
Good Song
Beautiful song!!!!❤ This song should be #1 on the charts.
I saw this one live. Great group.
Finally we got a video of it!!!!! Been waiting for it!!!
Is there a specific reason The Inspirations don't use wireless mics?
Likely the same reasons they still use an analog console…. Presumably all gear that Archie already had.
@@lbrentevans The only reason I asked about that is because they do alot of changing places on stage and have to be mindful not to step on each other's mic cable.
@SGNbuff I sing lead for the Hallmark quartet and what I've Been Told from the manager of my group is most of the time with the Wireless mics, they have a certain frequency on each mic. Sometimes cellphones and interfere with the microphones and make them cut out.
@@stevenkouns6757 Your manager is apparently misinformed. I’m a career audio engineer. Most modern wireless mics and and in ears (and certainly anything considered “pro” level are frequency agile (meaning frequencies can be changed) and many are now digital carrier and FHSS (frequency hopping spread spectrum) and decidedly do not operate on the same frequencies as cell phones. In fact, operating wireless mics in the cellular bands is quite illegal. There are some which operate in the WiFi bands but no professional users would purchase those. Choosing wired over wireless is often about cost (good wireless is expensive, good mic cables aren’t) and quality (even the best wireless on the market, such as Shure Axient, involve either an analog to digital conversion and/or compression encoding or analog companding, either of which modifies the sound slightly. Newer digital systems are very, very good, and are coming down in price, but wired mics with the same capsule are always less expensive and more reliable even if there is no perceptible sound quality difference.
In the case of the Inspirations, I suspect that not going wireless is, as I said, simply a factor of either cost, or perhaps something about reliability also. To travel with wireless you have to be somewhat adept at frequency coordination with the houses you play in. Not having to deal with that is a time saver. Additionally, the Inspirations are far more willing to play through house systems and use house pianos than other SG groups because their sound does not heavily rely on production. Their more old fashioned style sounds the same (and some would argue even better) on a low fidelity small church sound system as it does on the stage at the NQC.
@@SGNbuff It would be a convenience but also comes with some downsides (explained in another reply).