Next I'd like to see how your sound guy mixes them through the system. We just plug them straight in and mix from the drum, but some sound guys go to town with hi/low cuts, compression, and effects.
That’s a good question, I just send him stereo outs and I give him a good mix from my TD27 but there’s not much he can do from the board only having stereo outs?
@ there is a fair bit that can be done. I’ve seen people with digital mixers that split the sounds in multiple channels and then isolate the sounds. Then you can mix them individually. But the td27 has all the features it needs in itself really. You can also use L as cymbals, snare, and the first couple of toms, and then put the floor Tom or last two Toms and the kick into L. Then you can send most of the bass from L mostly or entirely to the subs, and will get less vibrations and resonating sounds in the main tweeter and mid boxes. This does depend on what sort of system you run and whether you have subs/W-bins, or just full range speakers.
Next I'd like to see how your sound guy mixes them through the system. We just plug them straight in and mix from the drum, but some sound guys go to town with hi/low cuts, compression, and effects.
That’s a good question, I just send him stereo outs and I give him a good mix from my TD27 but there’s not much he can do from the board only having stereo outs?
@ there is a fair bit that can be done. I’ve seen people with digital mixers that split the sounds in multiple channels and then isolate the sounds. Then you can mix them individually. But the td27 has all the features it needs in itself really.
You can also use L as cymbals, snare, and the first couple of toms, and then put the floor Tom or last two Toms and the kick into L. Then you can send most of the bass from L mostly or entirely to the subs, and will get less vibrations and resonating sounds in the main tweeter and mid boxes.
This does depend on what sort of system you run and whether you have subs/W-bins, or just full range speakers.