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Music At The Manor concerts resonate with TT+ GTX

When Yes Events’ Tom Chennells became the first customer for the TT+ AUDIO GTX line array back in the Spring, it was precisely with shows such as the Waddesdon Manor Summer Concerts that he had in mind.

The Victorian venue — a French Renaissance-style château in Buckinghamshire — provided the perfect backdrop for four nights of concerts featuring various tribute acts. Yes Events provided premium sound and the complete technical infrastructure, including lighting, video all rigging and staging, barriers etc as well as booking the acts, in what was a total turnkey operation.

TT+ AUDIO is from the home of Italian loudspeaker manufacturer RCF, with whom Chennells has enjoyed a long relationship. When GTX, the flagship of the new brand, was demoed earlier in the year he recognised that the smaller GTX 10 would be the perfect replacement for his long-serving RCF TTL33-A.

“[The system] was coming to the end of its natural life and we needed something that was a touring standard in a medium format. The efficiency of GTX is pretty phenomenal, completely appropriate for the kind of work we do and much louder than other premium systems in the medium format class,” he noted. “When you have a double 10” with large 4” compression driver — which is designed and engineered from the ground up — it’s going to outperform pretty much everything else medium format.”

He also sensed the natural sound of GTX and the fact that it required little in the way of correction or DSP. “When you plug it in it’s already 99 per cent of the way there, which saves a lot of time.”

Yes Events’ initial investment enables them to rig an event with 12 boxes per side, with 10 of the matched GTS29 (two 19”) subwoofers. But Chennells is already planning to expand this inventory in the future.

Of the subs, he said, “Although the box isn’t any bigger than a double 18 enclosure, it outperforms our previous [RCF] TTS 56s,containing double 21s. We get loads of SPL from it, and it has tons of attack because it’s not such a big driver.”

Chennells was first exposed to GTX under demo in Italy — with just six GTX10s per side and four subs arranged centrally. “It completely refocused how much kit Is required for certain shows, an event that would historically have needed 16 TTL33-A I could now comfortably be covered with 12 GTX10 with more headroom too. This all impacts on costs, particularly transport.”

And so to Waddesdon Manor, where audiences of several thousand enjoyed acts ranging from the ABBA Tribute Concert and Take That Experience to the Bootleg Beatles.

With the stage set up right in front of an important historical building, Yes Events were mindful to run the two sub stacks (three per side) in cardioid for rear rejection purposes. They supplemented this from their RCF inventory, providing six active HDL26 for lipfills — with the main PA run on the new XPS 16K 4-channel DSP amplifiers, complete with purpose designed touring racks. The deployment was completed with 12 TT25-CXA for artist monitoring and TT52 as shout speakers between FOH and monitor world.

According to Chennells, the system’s rigging is much improved: “A lot of thought has obviously been put into this — the angles are able to be pre-set straight off the dollies. The flybars have also been really well thought through… all the things that make it much easier to deploy.”

At Waddesdon, because of the directivity of the system and excellent cardioid rear rejection, Yes were able to achieve a good level right across the audience staying well within licensable levels offsite. Bands’ engineers were also happy at the FOH position. “With such an extremely capable system there was always lots of dynamic headroom,” Chennells concluded, “and guest engineers had nothing but good comments.”