Love to hear the updates as well.
Emily, as a caller I prefer the headset.
I'd rather be handsfree. It's cumbersome to hold the mic, and it's physically
uncomfortable for me to hold it all evening. The advantage of the hand held is the
freedom to talk or cough or breath without putting it over the hall. I typically move or
cover the mic on the headset, or simply turn the mute on where there is a mute. Someone
with sound experience needs to talk about the differences in that aspect.
There's a good bit of difference in headset models in terms of comfort and fit and
sound interference. Also consider a mute button and the cords and the transmitter you need
to hook onto something.
I'm also in the market to purchase so I'm sending thanks in advance to current
comments and to Will's survey. The communities I call with have their own systems but
I need to borrow a system for weddings and festivals, and not all communities have
wireless mics.
Laurie
West MI
--- On Wed, 5/23/12, Emily Addison <eaddison(a)trentu.ca> wrote:
From: Emily Addison <eaddison(a)trentu.ca>
Subject: [Callers] wireless mics - headsets or handhelds?
To: callers(a)sharedweight.net
Date: Wednesday, May 23, 2012, 1:01 PM
Hi Folks!
I have a microphone question for this awesome community that
I'm hoping you can help us out with. Our contra dance
committee (Ottawa) would like to purchase a wireless mic to
use for introductory lessons as well as family dances.
However, we don't have major sound expertise on our
committee and were wondering a few things.
(1) do callers prefer a handheld or headset (thinking of
family dances as part of this as we want to add 3-4 a year
to our regular contra schedule)???
(2) suggestion for particular models of handhelds and
headsets???
I know that microphones have been discussed previously on
the list (I pulled some of the discussion from previous
years and put it below). However, more people may now
have more experience, maybe there are more current models...
...
Will (L) - did you ever do your microphone survey that your
mentioned back a few years ago?
For those who have headsets, why did you go that way and do
you like your model?
For those who have handhels, similar questions! :)
Help would be most appreciated as we would like to invest in
something that will be great for various callers to use.
Much thanks!
Emily from Ottawa
___________________________________________
From holt.e at
comcast.net Tue Jul 31 16:27:23
2007
From: holt.e at
comcast.net (Rickey)
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 16:27:23 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
Message-ID: <000001c7d3b1$3712a770$020fa8c0@maxx>
Hi All,
We are shopping for sound equipment. We hold dances in
a small extremely
live hall. We get from 30 to 50 dancers. We also
do gigs in other halls
for up to 100. We are a community band: good musicians with,
sometimes
several sit-ins (also good): We are 2 Fiddles, 1
recorder/clarinet/saxophone
(i.e. one person, who switches between these instruments), 1
Silver flute, 1
Irish (wooden) flute, 1 guitar (with pick-up soon I hope), 1
keyboard, 1
Bodhran, sometimes 1 added Bodhran, rarely another guitar, a
stand up
Acoustic Bass, and an Acoustic Piano (in place of
keyboards). With Caller at
most we need 12 inputs. Below is a list of the
equipment we are
considering. We are relatively new to equipment of
this caliber. Ease of
use is an issue. We are choosing from among the following.
Do you have
experience with these? Do you have preferences?
MIXERS:
1. Allen & Heath PA20 - 16 mono inputs
plus 2 stereo inputs, and a
built-in equalizer
OR
2. Soundcraft MPM12/2 - 12 mono inputs
plus 2 stereo inputs. Would
require an added equalizer, possibly the dbx 231
31-Band Graphic Equalizer,
from Sweetwater
Speakers
We are thinking of using 10" powered speakers, 2 for the
room, and 2 for
monitors. The two we are choosing between are:
1. Mackie SRM 350
OR
2. RCF ART 310A
To this we would add a caller's monitor TC-Helicon VoiceSolo
VSM-200
MICROPHONES
1. Dynamic Vocal Mikes - Either
Shure SM 58, OR Shure Beta 58
2. And for General Purpose
Mikes: Shure SM 57
What has you experience with this equipment been.
Thanks for you help,
Rickey Holt.
From peter at
amidonmusic.com Tue Jul 31 17:19:02
2007
From: peter at
amidonmusic.com (Peter Amidon)
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 17:19:02 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
In-Reply-To: <000001c7d3b1$3712a770$020fa8c0@maxx>
References: <000001c7d3b1$3712a770$020fa8c0@maxx>
Message-ID: <p0623090dc2d5571b2a99(a)[192.168.1.100]>
Hi,
I am adding to the request.
I need advice on what self-powered speaker with
at least an XLR and a quarter inch input in the
back. I would love a speaker big enough for
dancing with groups of children; right now I use
my amplifier with an EV X300 (I'm spoiled).
I would be using it with my wireless headset
system (the XLR connection) and my iPod
(I have an adaptor into a quarter inch input).
Of course I would love it if it were not too heavy.
It needs to be able to go on a stand.
Any suggestions?
Many thanks.
Peter Amidon
peter at
amidonmusic.com
802-257-1006
cell 917-922-5462
From richgoss at
comcast.net Tue Jul 31 17:31:49
2007
From: richgoss at
comcast.net (richgoss at
comcast.net)
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 21:31:49 +0000
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
Message-ID:
<073120072131.11306.46AFAA45000C022300002C2A22007601809C9C0109080C079D(a)comcast.net>
Hi,
I've been giving serious consideration to a Roland
AC-90. Peter, you described it exactly. It's
light weight, has both XLR and 1/4" input. Also has
Aux inputs in the back for an iPod (RCA and 1/4". the
cool thing about it is that it has a recepticle to mount it
on a speaker stand built in. Here is a link:
http://www.roland.com/products/en/AC-90/index.html Download
the owner's manual for a complete description.
From richard.a.green at
hotmail.com Tue Jul 31
21:14:48 2007
From: richard.a.green at
hotmail.com (Richard Green)
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 21:14:48 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
In-Reply-To: <p0623090dc2d5571b2a99(a)[192.168.1.100]>
References: <000001c7d3b1$3712a770$020fa8c0@maxx>
<p0623090dc2d5571b2a99(a)[192.168.1.100]>
Message-ID: <BAY118-DAV10ACFCAE2B122E0E522CB5B2E80(a)phx.gbl>
We recently purchased a complete sound system, and ended up
using FBT Jolly
8ba for the stage speakers and 8ra for the monitors.
Both are powered, and
the ba has a more powerful amp. They weigh about 18
lbs. We have used them
for contradances in grange halls and they have plenty of
sound. You can get
them from full compass.
Richard
From gtwood at
worldpath.net Tue Jul 31 22:14:27
2007
From: gtwood at
worldpath.net (Gale Wood)
Date: Tue, 31 Jul 2007 22:14:27 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
References: <000001c7d3b1$3712a770$020fa8c0@maxx>
<p0623090dc2d5571b2a99(a)[192.168.1.100]>
Message-ID:
<002701c7d3e1$b21ebe10$abe48c40@robbinsd490985>
Hi Peter
Check places Like Daddys Junky music (is there one near
you?) They stock
some very good small 'amps' (5 watt)powered by small 9v
batteries ( strange
but it does work)
Look at the fenders, Roland Micro cubes are not cheap but
sound good (and a
choice of colors!)
happy hunting
Gale
From jn32157 at
hotmail.com Wed Aug 1
07:51:09 2007
From: jn32157 at
hotmail.com (John Nance)
Date: Wed, 01 Aug 2007 07:51:09 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Opinions on Sound Equipment Needed
In-Reply-To:
<002701c7d3e1$b21ebe10$abe48c40@robbinsd490985>
Message-ID: <BAY140-F38A5E014A18F8C6ECB490FF9E80(a)phx.gbl>
Weogo Reed runs an email forum much like this one
specifically for sound
technicians who work contra dances. This is the URL to
that page:
http://www.harvestmoonfolk.org/sound.htm
Be aware that the discussion can get pretty technical at
times.
From chiph at
rumney.org Wed Aug 1 13:59:36
2007
From: chiph at
rumney.org (Chip Hedler)
Date: Wed, 1 Aug 2007 13:59:36 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: [Callers] sound equipment [Callers Digest, Vol 36,
Issue 1]
In-Reply-To: <mailman.1.1185984002.2260.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
References: <mailman.1.1185984002.2260.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Message-ID: <49371.216.114.172.209.1185991176.squirrel(a)earthcovenant.org>
Hi all--
Been providing sound equipment for about half the dances I
do, many of
them private gigs in all sorts of indoor and outdoor
locations. In really
live setting, like old mostly-concrete school gymnasiums,
the most
valuable tool in my rack is the 31-band equalizer, which
I've learned to
use moderately well to identify and suppress the sound
frequencies that
echo loudest and cause feedback. The process ("ringing out")
is tedious
and I'm wondering if anyone's been using a digital
"feedback-destroyer"
sort of appliance to automate the task.
The trickiest part of setting up has been adjusting monitor
placement and
levels for the musicians. They usually ask me to make
adjustments after
the dance is in progress. Give them too much, and the mics
start picking
it up, sometimes creating a shower-stall reverb effect or
feedback. My
dream: inconspicuous wireless monitor headsets with volume
controls for
musicians.
Besides that, I've seen enough other people's rigs to
realize that usually
you get what you pay for, quality-wise. I started out with
cheapo mics and
found that replacing them with Shures made a huge
difference. My first
speaker stands were very affordable, but the knurled knobs
to clamp the
poles in place gradually stripped their threads so they're
now history.
Haven't gone to a wireless mic yet, but someday!
Whenever I can, I do small gigs with no equipment at all,
perhaps like the
era when this genre of music and dance was more or less
contemporary...
Chip Hedler
From wpollans at
gmail.com Mon Oct 1
16:23:56 2007
From: wpollans at
gmail.com (Warren Pollans)
Date: Mon, 01 Oct 2007 16:23:56 -0400
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
Message-ID: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
Hi Folks,
I'm finally getting ready to consider buying a wireless
microphone -
handheld, not a headset. What are the minimum
requirements I should
consider? What should I expect to pay for such a mic
(with receiver)?
Any/all advice is appreciated. Feel free to point me
elsewhere.
Thanks,
Warren
From markrdjones at
gmail.com Mon Oct 1
16:37:38 2007
From: markrdjones at
gmail.com (Mark R Dobyns Jones)
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2007 16:37:38 -0400
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
In-Reply-To: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
References: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
Message-ID: <2e45c3c90710011337r29fac9c9i7494b3cc7932f268(a)mail.gmail.com>
Without halting people's comments here,
You may wish to check in with a sound-forum list, and report
back on
the advice you get.
Take a llook at Contra Sound Forum
http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/contrasf/
I subscribe to it.
Mark Jones
From ebay at
hands4.com Mon Oct 1 17:06:38
2007
From: ebay at
hands4.com (Beth Parkes)
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2007 17:06:38 -0400
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
In-Reply-To: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
References: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
Message-ID:
<38D498EA8D964BF4BB1E05B7FBFFAA3D@BethLaptop>
As a caller, I consider my mic my instrument. The musicians
you are working
with have paid thousands of dollars for an instrument that
helps them sound
good. We get off cheap, imho. Depending on whatever the hall
happens to have
limits how you sound. The mic is often the weak link in the
sound chain. All
of this is to say "Congratulations" on deciding to make this
investment.
Tony and I have been very happy with our SM58s. They are
affordable
workhorses. I just got a new one. They come in several
grades. Do not get
the cheapest, it will not choose a frequency for you. Before
buying, be
absolutely sure to visit the Shure web site and get the list
of frequencies
for use in your area. The transmitter/receivers use the same
frequencies as
TV stations and shure will get you a set that are less
likely to be in
conflict. The midrange PGX24 has a street price around
$400.
HTH,
Beth Parkes
From jeffrey.petrovitch at
verizon.net Mon
Oct 1 18:30:14 2007
From: jeffrey.petrovitch at
verizon.net (Jeffrey
Petrovitch)
Date: Mon, 01 Oct 2007 18:30:14 -0400
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
In-Reply-To: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
References: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
Message-ID: <470174F6.4050404(a)verizon.net>
I currently use a wireless Shure SM58 with a PXG24
transmitter (like
Beth). I was able to pick the system up for about
$400.00 and all and
all it has served me well. I also use a Beringer
pre-amp/digital voice
processor in combination that allows me to control the
frequencies,
gains, highs, lows, expander, compressor, de-esser,
etc. It really
allows me to have my voice sound exactly how I want my voice
to sound...
My first recommendation would be try, try, try different
wireless
microphones if possible. Everyone is going to sound
different in the
same microphone and you want to find the microphone that
makes you sound
the way you want to sound. You are not going to be
able to do this by
reading about different frequency ranges of different
microphones. I
have also used a BETA58 and a BETA87A, which I can both
recommend. The
BETA87A (one of the top of the line microphones by Shure) is
my favorite
and I think it makes me sound like I want to sound, but I
have also
heard other people use the BETA87A and sound horrible, this
just means
spending more money is not always the best way of picking
out a microphone.
My other recommendation would be is a wireless mic for
you? It seems
like there are a lot of advantages to having a wireless mic,
I use one,
and a lot of people use them, but it is important that it
once again
works for you! I would recommend calling with a
wireless microphone,
calling with a wire microphone, and calling with a
microphone and see
what works best. I would argue that this could be a
huge psychology
piece and you may find you just call better with a
microphone on a
stand. We could talk about proper technique on holding
microphones, the
frequency ranges of microphones, etc. all day long, but when
it all
comes out in the end, you need be comfortable with what you
are using
and you need to love how it makes you sound. I think
it is 90% psych
and 10% equipment IMHO.
Respectfully Submitted,
j_petro
From contradancerdave at
yahoo.com Mon Oct 1
18:34:07 2007
From: contradancerdave at
yahoo.com (Dave Colestock)
Date: Mon, 1 Oct 2007 15:34:07 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
In-Reply-To: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
Message-ID: <523554.5940.qm(a)web52601.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
I like the Shure BG3.1 handheld. I got mine on ebay,
but they are generally found in the 200-300 price range
new.
Dave Colestock
Warren Pollans <wpollans at gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Folks,
I'm finally getting ready to consider buying a wireless
microphone -
handheld, not a headset. What are the minimum requirements I
should
consider? What should I expect to pay for such a mic (with
receiver)?
Any/all advice is appreciated. Feel free to point me
elsewhere.
Thanks,
Warren
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers at
sharedweight.net
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers
From rich at
harts.mv.com Tue Oct 2 09:37:04
2007
From: rich at
harts.mv.com (Richard Hart)
Date: Tue, 02 Oct 2007 09:37:04 -0400
Subject: [Callers] wireless mic recommendations
In-Reply-To:
<38D498EA8D964BF4BB1E05B7FBFFAA3D@BethLaptop>
References: <4701575C.6020303(a)gmail.com>
<38D498EA8D964BF4BB1E05B7FBFFAA3D@BethLaptop>
Message-ID: <47024980.8000900(a)harts.mv.com>
From sharedweight.99.kyoto at
spamgourmet.com Tue
Oct 2 14:59:28 2007
From: sharedweight.99.kyoto at
spamgourmet.com
(sharedweight.99.kyoto at
spamgourmet.com)
Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2007 11:59:28 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [Callers] Japan dance and self intro/update
In-Reply-To: <mailman.1.1191340801.17312.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Message-ID: <74363.4139.qm(a)web38705.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
[n.b. this has been 'cross posted' to the yahoo traditional
callers list, in case anyone is on
both lists...]
This post from a llooonnnngg time dancer and first time
caller who is
requesting some advice for an unusual situation...but as it
is my
first post, I will explain a little about myself, and along
the way
that will explain the unusual situation and help guide and
refine any
replies.
My name is david crespo, a name some of you no doubt fear --
I mean
recognize -- or would (recognize, that is) (if you saw my
ugly
mug) (well, maybe fear...) from my 20 odd (quite odd) years
of
dancing and involvement in the dance community in New
England, mostly
Vermont (Etna, Norwich, Thetford, to Northern Spy etc.) and
Maine
(SMFA (Yarmouth), Falmouth, Bates, Bowdoinham...). As some
of you
thus know, about 3 years ago, at a Wake the Neighbors Bates
dance I
was met by a cute and not very frightening Japanese exchange
student,
Yukie, who with a very little gentle nudging at Deffa a week
later,
eventually (rapidly, that is) was able to parlay that
happenstance
circumstance into what is now a beautiful and happy
marriage. She
returned to Japan shortly after we completed our courtship
and about
a year later I followed. We're living in Kyoto.
Alas, there is one tragic note attending this otherwise
joyous and
perfect scenario. Japan, you see, is a land thouroughly
devoid of one
essential nutrient: contradancing. You can imagine my
dismay, tears,
and lamentations. Sadly, then, since my arrival, I have been
quietly
(well not so quietly) teaching english while secretly
incubating evil
plans to conquer Japan, then Asia, then the world in 64
(drastic)
measures (hmmm--- good name for a dance). This month, my
long patient
agony of waiting has begun to pay off. I have been given
the
opportunity to indoctrinate a few trusting and innocent
souls into
the sublime mysteries of la dance du contra and create an
army of
swiftfooted robots, ready and willing to do my bidding at
every call.
SOON I WILL CONQUER THE WORLD!!!
ahem.
please excuse me while my medicine kicks in. Ah, yes, thank
you. OK,
where was I? The fact is, my wife and I have been invited to
lead a
contradance workshop at a local festival on October 20. When
we found
out, we began doing as much research as we could on calling
and so
on. We found a few basic dances, like Baby Rose and Diane's
Visit and
Atonement Reel that we like and figured would be suitable
and we have
been practicing calling them. But I really welcome any
suggestions...
Actually, above and beyond some decades of doing things
proper and
improper, I took a caller workshop or two from Rick Mohr
(thanks
Rick) so I have a rough idea of what's involved. And I've
learned a
bit from practicing calling and writing a few ad hoc dances
on my
own. For example, I learned that being a dancer has
habituated me to
act ON the beat, but as a caller I need to act BEFORE the
beat,
eh....this flustered me at first. Are there any other
typical first
caller pointers we should be on the lookout for?
In addition, there are a few other associated circumstances
in this
project that create the aforementioned unique situation. In
brief
(HA! fooled you), since I've rattled on too long, here is
what I mean:
I don't speak more than the rudiments of Japanese. My wife
is still a
beginner dancer, to wit, she isn't a strong enough one to
call on her
own. Between us we are trying to teach each other what the
other
lacks and hopefully make one good caller out of the two of
us. One
question that has come up is is it better to keep the
standard names
for the figures, or to Japanify them. (We are leaning to
the
former...Japanese has a very high percentage of english loan
words,
and they learn english (poooooorly) in school.) Still, has
anyone
ever tried to call across a language barrier?
Japanese are touch sensitve. They don't touch, they don't
give eye
contact. They don't give weight. (They give wait). They
don't hug.
They don't even say I love you. They are very shy. For
example, I am
told that this is to the point that standing in a line of
men facing
a line of women is likely be uncomfortable, even for the
younger
generation, so Yukie feels we should use mixed couples with
armbands
to distinguish "gender"--I mean position. As we build a
community of
experienced dancers, it would be expected that some of this
inhibition might wear off...). You can see why they need to
dance. On
the other hand, they are good followers. Any advice for
working with
a shy crowd?
Some or many of the attendees at this workshop, we just
found out,
are likely to be children. Depending on the percentage, it
may be
necessary to do a kids dance, or at least a dance kids could
enjoy. I
am good at working with kids in general, but I would love
any advice
for doing a dance with young people. I don't know or haven't
been
able to find any children's dances, though I assume the
Family Dance
in Yarmouth is still up and I plan to contact Jeff Raymond
about it,
because I can't remember the caller's name (Nancy....)
(though we
have danced and chatted about dancing and calling several
times at
the May Day Festival...gads! say hi if you're listening..).
So, children's dances are one thing I am looking for.
We are working in a small space...maybe two lines of six
couples
each. Advice for small spaces???
We are doing three workshops. If the same people return, we
may do
more advanced things, or we may just repeat teh
workshop...but I
would like to try different dances each time, for my
practice.
The room will be full of beginners, so no experienced
dancers to rely
on. Ballroom dancing had a certain following here (and in
Kyoto there
is a small set dancing group that we visited...small 14 or
so... and
a square dancing group that we plan to visit. ) but not
enough to be
helpful, in the sense that there are few cultural supports
for
learning (i.e. in the US most everyone knows (even if they
don't
admit it) how to at least fake a waltz or ballroom
position...not
here.) Think martian territory...
I should add that we are seriously working towards starting
a regular
dance here (we've found an available and very suitable
space, a
church hall in a nearby church, for example) and this is for
us a
tryout and possible stepping stone. We want to whet
people's
appetite, and leave them wanting more. We have a half hour
to do it...
OK...apologies for the verbose and windy post. Fond regards
to all of
you I know, hajimemashite ("nice to meet you" in japanese,
literally
"beginning") to the rest and many thanks in advance for your
time and
help...cheers...david
nothing rhymes with nostril...
09:38:22 2008
From: will at
dedicationtechnologies.com (Will Loving)
Date: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 09:38:22 -0500
Subject: [Callers] Microphone/Headset Survey Questions
Message-ID: <C5653E8E.2F453%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
I?m looking into getting a wireless microphone or headset
for calling and
while the past discussions have been helpful, the database
programmer in me
longs for more organized and detailed information. With that
in mind, I?m
thinking about making an online survey for individuals to
report the
experiences with various makes and models. My plan would be
to summarize the
results so we can get a sense what makes and models people
like and dislike
and why.
Before I create the survey, I?d like to get feedback on the
questions as
follows below. Please feel free to comment on the following
and to suggest
revisions or additions.
Will Loving
Amherst, MA
--
Wireless Microphone/Headset Survey ? Sample Questions
(Again, these are suggested survey questions, please don?t
answer them now)
1. Microphone Type: __Handheld __Headset
2. Microphone
Brand:_______ Model:________ Year
Purchased:_________
3. Base
Station: Brand:_______ Model:________
Year Purchased:_________
4. Transmitter (if sep)
Brand:_______ Model:________ Year
Purchased:_________
5. Battery Type/Size: __Built-in __AAA
__AA __C
__D __Other
6. Does this unit use rechargeable batteries or have
built-in rechargeable
pack: __Yes
7. Do you use rechargeable batteries: __Yes
8. Preferred Battery Brand: ___________
9. Battery capacity (If you know it) in MilliAmp Hours (mAh)
printed on the
battery: ____mAh
10. Battery life on a full charge or fresh set of batteries
(approx):____hrs
11. Does unit (mic or battery pack) have a
battery-charge-remaining
indicator: __Yes
12. Sound Quality 1 (poor) <-> 9 (superb)
13. Construction/Quality: 1 (poor) <-> 5 (Avg)
<-> 10 (superb)
14. Durability/Reliability: 1 (poor) <-> 5 (Avg)
<-> 10 (superb)
15. Range: 1 (poor) <-> 5 (Avg) <-> 10
(superb)
16. Interference Rejection (resistance to interference from
other radio
sources): 1 (poor) <-> 5 (Avg) <-> 10
(superb)
17. List up to three things you LIKE about this unit:
* __________________
* __________________
* __________________
18. List up to three things you DON?T LIKE about this unit:
* __________________
* __________________
* __________________
19. What kinds of calling/instruction do you use this for
(check all that
apply):
* Contra Dance
* Square Dance
* Family/Community Dance
* English Country Dance
* Waltz
* Ballroom
* International/Folk
* Aerobics
* Other ______________
20. What size group do you use this for: Average Size ___
Largest Size ___
21. Questions for Headset users: When you need to speak off
mike, do:
* Switch the unit off
* Cover the mike with your hand
* Move it out of the way
* Other_____________
22. Would you recommend this system to other callers:
__Yes __No __Maybe
17:54:15 2009
From: will at
dedicationtechnologies.com (Will Loving)
Date: Tue, 21 Apr 2009 17:54:15 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Earset microphone recommendations
In-Reply-To: <49EA7E52.1040700(a)gmail.com>
Message-ID: <C613B8C7.32064%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
I am in the process of buying a Shure PGX1/PGX4
transmitter/receiver system
with the intention of using it with an earset microphone,
the small, nearly
invisible 'rice grain' style.
A friend of mine is singer and I borrowed her Countryman E6
earset (the
omni-directional model) to use at a dance the other night. I
really liked it
though I did deal with some feedback getting too close to
one of the
speakers, so I'm thinking about the directional model. The
E6 is however
$310
http://www.ccisolutions.com/StoreFront/product/COU-E6IO5TSL-SL.prod?Origin=C
ategory
and so I'm interested to know what else people like and find
durable.
So, I'm looking for experience and recommendations on any of
the following:
Countryman E6/E6i (omni)
Countryman E6/E6i (directional)
OSP HS-09 (omni)
These next three all the same rig sold under different
companies
MM-PSM Pro Series Earset
Electovoice RE97Tx
Point-Source Audio CO-7
In particular, I'm interested in knowing about the OSP HS-09
and the
directional E6. Has anyone using the directional E6 had
problem with the
mike staying in proper position or being too sensitive? The
directional
aspect should make feedback a non-issue but I've been told
that positioning
can be a problem....
Thanks,
Will
--
Will Loving
Amherst, MA 01002
From gregmck at
earthlink.net Wed Apr 22 12:30:15
2009
From: gregmck at
earthlink.net (gregmck at
earthlink.net)
Date: Wed, 22 Apr 2009 09:30:15 -0700
Subject: [Callers] Earset microphone recommendations
In-Reply-To: <C613B8C7.32064%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
References: <49EA7E52.1040700(a)gmail.com>
<C613B8C7.32064%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
Message-ID: <7.0.0.16.0.20090422091957.01dc13f8(a)earthlink.net>
Will wrote:
I am in the process of buying a Shure PGX1/PGX4
transmitter/receiver system
with the intention of using it with an earset
microphone, the small, nearly
invisible 'rice grain' style.
Well, now that you mention it, here is another perspective
on this
technology. Before making the investment you might
want to consider
all of the implications.
Regards,
Greg McKenzie
************
Un-tethered from Reality: Some Thoughts on Wireless
Microphones
I have tried using a wireless headset microphone and found
the
experience wanting. I owned one for several years and
used it
regularly. I abandoned it for several reasons.
Not primarily
because of the increased instances of feedback--something I
find
devastating to the sense of safety and community spirit in
the
hall. And not because of the monetary and
environmental cost of
batteries, the extra trouble of setting up the mike and
receiver, the
complications of switching the mike off and on again to make
"off
mike" comments, or the feeling of being wired and walking
around with
an electronic device attached to my head. My decision
was also not
primarily based on concerns about exposing myself and others
to
high-frequency electromagnetic radiation--though I recognize
that
some people are very sensitive to the idea of such
exposure.
My primary reason for giving up on the wireless headset was
because I
saw that it was interfering with my ability to connect with
the
dancers, musicians, and others in the hall.
Any speaker at a public event needs to be in a position
where the
entire audience can see them. This is a very basic
principle. People naturally prefer to watch someone
who is speaking
to them. When someone hears a voice hailing them the
most natural
reaction is to turn one's head toward the source of the
sound. It
can be disconcerting to look toward the sound source and see
an empty
stage. The natural reaction is to feel a little bit
silly, and to
look around to try to find the source of the voice.
This is a
relative small matter but keep in mind that there are
probably dozens
of people going through this reaction whenever a speaker is
not in
the spot where the audience is accustomed to seeing
them. That means
that for at least a few seconds a big part of your audience
is
feeling silly and disconnected. Those people are not
feeling
confident or relaxed. They cannot listen carefully to
what the
speaker is saying.
As an aside here I would point out that an "off-stage mike"
is
commonly used in theatre and stagecraft. Please note,
however, that
the purpose of the "off-stage mike" is always to build
suspense and
tension. Something that I, personally, try to avoid
when calling
because I want people to feel relaxed and sociable.
The off-stage
mike is, therefore, usually accompanied with a visual cue
(such as a
spotlight at the edge of the stage during an introduction)
to direct
the audience's attention in the absence of a physical
speaker they can see.
I have attended dances where the caller has used a wireless
headset
mike off-stage freely during the evening. I always
found it
disconcerting to have to look for the caller in the
room. It also
seemed a bit creepy to think of a live microphone moving
around the
hall without warning. Callers sometimes use these
mikes while
speaking to individuals or small groups of dancers who are
confused. This is unprofessional because it draws the
entire hall's
attention to the confused dancers and exacerbates the
situation by
creating even more tension.
I quickly learned that when using a wireless headset it is
the
speaker's duty to alert the audience whenever they change
locations--particularly if they move off stage. I
would say
something like: "Ladies and gentlemen. Please direct
your attention
to the center of the hall," before stepping off the
stage. This is
the courteous thing for a speaker to do. This helped a
lot, but it
also complicated the process of moving away from my regular
location. Ultimately I found that the headset mike was
more trouble
than it was worth.
I can see that these headset or "earset" mikes are very
appropriate
for entertainers who dance or move while singing or speaking
and, in
particular, when they have a spotlight to keep the audience
cued as
to their location. They also work well for instructors
who must
gesture or handle props while talking, such as in
demonstrations. I
think such mikes are of particular use to exercise
instructors such
as Jazzercise leaders who generally remain in the same
location while teaching.
At calling gigs the sound engineer will often offer me a
wireless
mike to use. My response is that I am happy to use any
mike that
delivers a good range of high-frequency sounds so that my
voice can
be clearly understood. Wireless mikes are acceptable,
as long as
they are securely fastened to a mike stand where I will
leave them
during the entire dance.
########
From mawild at
sbcglobal.net Fri Apr 24 03:07:14
2009
From: mawild at
sbcglobal.net (Martha Wild)
Date: Fri, 24 Apr 2009 00:07:14 -0700
Subject: [Callers] Headset mikes
In-Reply-To: <mailman.3.1240502427.35777.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
References: <mailman.3.1240502427.35777.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Message-ID: <472256C1-AF1A-4D2B-AAB8-869874A2D54D(a)sbcglobal.net>
Well, I have an entirely different and positive perspective
on
headset mikes.
We have a nice headset mike here in San Diego. I love using
it, and
our sound engineers set it up nicely so that I have no
trouble with
feedback. I have to remember to keep it a little ways from
my mouth
so that it won't pop on Partner and Promenade and any other
P sounds,
but as long as I do that, it's great.
I call up on some steps here because I'm short and like to
see the
whole hall while I'm calling - and they can see me. I don't
usually
run around the hall while calling. During the beginner
sessions, a
handheld mike that is attached to a cable is a nightmare -
my voice
is not big, and I have a hard time teaching a large group
without a
mike. Trying to demo a ladies chain with a cable following
you around
is a recipe for disaster, and I hate having to use one when
I'm
calling elsewhere. During walkthroughs here I am no longer
tethered
to the stage, and can hop down to demonstrate a move, though
I often
just ask regulars to do it. I can move down once a dance
gets going
and briefly consult with the musicians without worry (I
usually just
move the mike away a little and then back, and don't worry
about the
mute). I can keep calling even if I need to quickly flip
through my
cards as I realize that the next dance might be too
difficult or too
easy and another would be better.
I find that a handheld mike hurts my hand if I hold it all
night.
It's just too darned heavy and a real inconvenience. When I
call in
places that set up a mike in a stand, I find that I often
stand in
such a way in front of it that I'll end up with a backache
or my feet
or legs aching by the end of the night. Not fun.
As far as connecting with the dancers, I really don't see
how
juggling a stupid mike in one hand or being constrained by a
mike in
a stand in front of you, inhibiting your ability to look
around you
at the dancers or at the musicians while calling, is in any
way
helpful. Those of you who enjoy having your hands cramp up
and
tripping over cords can keep doing it, but for anyone who
hasn't been
thrilled with the experience, I recommend you get a good
"Madonna
mike", as we call it, and free yourself from the tyranny of
a tether.
Enjoy!
Martha Wild
From lcpgr at
yahoo.com Tue Apr 28 23:54:14 2009
From: lcpgr at
yahoo.com (Laur)
Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2009 20:54:14 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [Callers] Headset mikes
In-Reply-To: <472256C1-AF1A-4D2B-AAB8-869874A2D54D(a)sbcglobal.net>
Message-ID: <248537.13560.qm(a)web52906.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
can you identify the mic,? Martha?? thx
I agree,? if I could? find a? comfortable good? quality
headset I prefer hands free.
Laurie~
--- On Fri, 4/24/09, Martha Wild <mawild at
sbcglobal.net> wrote:
From: Martha Wild <mawild at sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [Callers] Headset mikes
To: callers at
sharedweight.net
Date: Friday, April 24, 2009, 3:07 AM
Well, I have an entirely different and positive perspective
on headset mikes.
We have a nice headset mike here in San Diego. I love using
it, and our sound
engineers set it up nicely so that I have no trouble with
feedback. I have to
remember to keep it a little ways from my mouth so that it
won't pop on
Partner and Promenade and any other P sounds, but as long as
I do that, it's
great.
I call up on some steps here because I'm short and like to
see the whole
hall while I'm calling - and they can see me. I don't
usually run around
the hall while calling. During the beginner sessions, a
handheld mike that is
attached to a cable is a nightmare - my voice is not big,
and I have a hard time
teaching a large group without a mike. Trying to demo a
ladies chain with a
cable following you around is a recipe for disaster, and I
hate having to use
one when I'm calling elsewhere. During walkthroughs here I
am no longer
tethered to the stage, and can hop down to demonstrate a
move, though I often
just ask regulars to do it. I can move down once a dance
gets going and briefly
consult with the musicians without worry (I usually just
move the mike away a
little and then back, and don't worry about the mute). I can
keep calling
even if I need to quickly flip through my cards as I realize
that the next dance
might be too difficult or too easy and another would be
better.
I find that a handheld mike hurts my hand if I hold it all
night. It's just
too darned heavy and a real inconvenience. When I call in
places that set up a
mike in a stand, I find that I often stand in such a way in
front of it that
I'll end up with a backache or my feet or legs aching by the
end of the
night. Not fun.
As far as connecting with the dancers, I really don't see
how juggling a
stupid mike in one hand or being constrained by a mike in a
stand in front of
you, inhibiting your ability to look around you at the
dancers or at the
musicians while calling, is in any way helpful. Those of you
who enjoy having
your hands cramp up and tripping over cords can keep doing
it, but for anyone
who hasn't been thrilled with the experience, I recommend
you get a good
"Madonna mike", as we call it, and free yourself from the
tyranny of a
tether.
Enjoy!
Martha Wild
May 6 21:42:16 2009
From: will at
dedicationtechnologies.com (Will Loving)
Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 21:42:16 -0400
Subject: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone) channel"
Message-ID: <C627B4B8.3247E%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
A very knowledgeable pro audio person just gave me a
mini-course on how to
do basic sound setup for a mike, something I?ve always
wanted to know more
about. At many dances there is a sound person who will do
this for you but
sometimes there isn?t and this little bit of info may be of
help. It
certainly demystified things for me. I wrote this up and
then edited it a
bit more after getting his feedback. Others may have
additional comments.
How to ?Ring Out a Channel? for a microphone
You overall goal is to adjust the sound coming out of the
house speakers to
get as much volume as you can without any ?ringing? sound.
Every room is
different in terms of what frequencies it absorbs and
reflects, so the
necessary settings will differ from place to place.
Different mikes will
also require different settings. The adjustment described
below can be done
systematically and in just a few minutes.
1. Setting Initial Gain from the Mic (aka input level or
?trim?)
* Turn house volume (for your mike) completely
down ?
usually the last knob or
slider
* Set all EQ controls to flat (middle position)
* Turn up Gain - usually the first control knob or
slider for your microphone
?channel? - while speaking into mike until you
see
levels on the meter or the
clipping light flashes. Adjust gain to just below
clipping or 0db (same thing)
depending on what kind of feedback ? level meter
or
clipping light - is
available on the sound board.
2. Setting
EQ (balancing the sound for the room by getting
rid of the
ringing)
* Turn up house volume on the mic channel until
you
hear a ringing along with
your voice
* Reduce level on first EQ slider/dial (often labeled
?highs?) to see if it
reduces or eliminates ringing. If it does,
increase
house volume again until
ringing is again apparent. If no change, reset to
flat
and go to next EQ
range.
* Reduce level on next EQ slider/dial to
reduce/eliminate ringing. Increase
house volume again until ringing occurs.
* Repeat for each subsequent EQ range available on
sound board ? some may just
have highs, mids and lows, others may have
multiple
mid-range adjustments. You
may not need to adjust all the EQ?s, e.g. the low
frequency in particular,
just keep running up the volume and adjusting out
the
rings until you have
plenty of volume. Your objective is to get as
much
volume as you need for the
performance without ringing.
3.
Fine-tuning: If time permits after you?ve rung out the
channel you can
then play with the EQ to adjust for sound quality. Keep
talking into the mic
and make very subtle adjustments to the EQ until you get a
smooth natural
sound.
Will Loving
Amehrst, MA
From gregmck at
earthlink.net Thu May 7
22:01:02 2009
From: gregmck at
earthlink.net (gregmck at
earthlink.net)
Date: Thu, 07 May 2009 19:01:02 -0700
Subject: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone) channel"
In-Reply-To: <C627B4B8.3247E%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
References: <C627B4B8.3247E%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
Message-ID: <7.0.0.16.0.20090507185818.01d6b480(a)earthlink.net>
Will wrote:
"Your overall goal is to adjust the sound coming out of the
house speakers to
get as much volume as you can without any 'ringing' sound."
Thank you Will for this information. I
understand how this process would work for most
PA system setups at musical concerts and other
performances. It is certainly targeted at
minimizing feedback--a worthy goal in any situation.
I have concerns, however, if this is the best way
to set up a caller's mike. When I attend dances
I find that the caller's mike is often set up
with a lot of low frequency response and little
high frequency. I wonder if that may be because
the audio person has followed this very advice.
With little high frequency response the caller is
likely to have difficulty being understood
clearly because the highs are essential for
hearing the speech articulation sounds that help
us to distinguish between words. The words
"left" and "right," for example, will sound
almost identical when the high frequencies are removed.
A concert is a very different situation than a
social event. At a concert the fans already know
the words and those who don't can simply buy the
album and read the insert, (if that kind of thing
is important to them). The voice is really being
used as a musical instrument and clear
articulation is not vital. The context of words
in a song will often reveal the meaning without
being able to make out every word. In any case
there is no pressure to catch every word either sung or
spoken.
Do you remember the sound of a PA system on a
military ship? You've heard it in movies. The
voice is transmitted through metal horns that are
very tinny, reproducing all of the high
frequencies with great effectiveness. This may
not sound soothing or melodious but in a critical
situation--where lives depend on instructions
being understood clearly--this setup is perfect
for cutting through the roar of the sea, the
engines, and the wind to make the message understandable.
At a contra dance we don't need the blare of a
ship's PA system, but the principle is an
important one. English is not a tonal language
and fricatives, stops, and glides are essential
for communication. We need to hear these speech
elements clearly, and they all occur in the higher
frequencies.
Contra dances are social events. As such the PA
system is really there for reinforcement only and
high volume does not need to be the primary
goal. Perhaps our efforts would be better
directed at discussing the skills a caller uses
to earn and hold the attention of the hall so
that we can lower the overall volume. For many
dancers this would be greatly appreciated. It
would lower stress levels in the hall and
encourage a more sociable and gracious tone. I
find that at a lower volume I can crank up the
treble on my mike without feedback problems. It
is much easier to be understood at a lower volume
with the high frequencies emphasized.
Thank you Will for educating me on this
technique. I can see why it is done and I can
also see how it can create problems for a dance caller.
I would be very interested to hear what others think of all
this.
Just a thought,
Greg
*********
From joemicheals1 at
yahoo.com Thu May 7
22:50:29 2009
From: joemicheals1 at
yahoo.com (joe micheals)
Date: Thu, 7 May 2009 19:50:29 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone) channel"
In-Reply-To: <7.0.0.16.0.20090507185818.01d6b480(a)earthlink.net>
Message-ID: <758653.29737.qm(a)web50702.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
I totally agree with Greg on cutting the low frequencies.? I
also appreciate the info on ringing out the room.??I have
wondered: ?do men need to hear higher frequencies and women
not so much?
Joe Micheals
Seattle
--- On Thu, 5/7/09, gregmck at
earthlink.net <gregmck at
earthlink.net> wrote:
From: gregmck at
earthlink.net <gregmck at
earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone)
channel"
To: "Caller's discussion list" <callers at
sharedweight.net>
Date: Thursday, May 7, 2009, 7:01 PM
Will wrote:
"Your overall goal is to adjust the sound coming out of the
house speakers
to
get as much volume as you can without any 'ringing' sound."
Thank you Will for this information. I understand how
this process would work
for most PA system setups at musical concerts and other
performances. It is
certainly targeted at minimizing feedback--a worthy goal in
any situation.
I have concerns, however, if this is the best way to set up
a caller's
mike. When I attend dances I find that the caller's
mike is often set up
with a lot of low frequency response and little high
frequency. I wonder if
that may be because the audio person has followed this very
advice.
With little high frequency response the caller is likely to
have difficulty
being understood clearly because the highs are essential for
hearing the speech
articulation sounds that help us to distinguish between
words. The words
"left" and "right," for example, will sound almost
identical
when the high frequencies are removed.
A concert is a very different situation than a social
event. At a concert the
fans already know the words and those who don't can simply
buy the album and
read the insert, (if that kind of thing is important to
them). The voice is
really being used as a musical instrument and clear
articulation is not vital.
The context of words in a song will often reveal the meaning
without being able
to make out every word. In any case there is no
pressure to catch every word
either sung or spoken.
Do you remember the sound of a PA system on a military
ship? You've heard
it in movies. The voice is transmitted through metal
horns that are very tinny,
reproducing all of the high frequencies with great
effectiveness. This may not
sound soothing or melodious but in a critical
situation--where lives depend on
instructions being understood clearly--this setup is perfect
for cutting through
the roar of the sea, the engines, and the wind to make the
message
understandable.
At a contra dance we don't need the blare of a ship's PA
system, but
the principle is an important one. English is not a
tonal language and
fricatives, stops, and glides are essential for
communication. We need to hear
these speech elements clearly, and they all occur in the
higher frequencies.
Contra dances are social events. As such the PA system
is really there for
reinforcement only and high volume does not need to be the
primary goal.
Perhaps our efforts would be better directed at discussing
the skills a caller
uses to earn and hold the attention of the hall so that we
can lower the overall
volume. For many dancers this would be greatly
appreciated. It would lower
stress levels in the hall and encourage a more sociable and
gracious tone. I
find that at a lower volume I can crank up the treble on my
mike without
feedback problems. It is much easier to be understood
at a lower volume with
the high frequencies emphasized.
Thank you Will for educating me on this technique. I
can see why it is done
and I can also see how it can create problems for a dance
caller.
I would be very interested to hear what others think of all
this.
Just a thought,
Greg
*********
From markrdjones at
gmail.com Fri May 8
00:00:28 2009
From: markrdjones at
gmail.com (Mark R Dobyns Jones)
Date: Fri, 8 May 2009 00:00:28 -0400
Subject: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone) channel"
In-Reply-To: <C627B4B8.3247E%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
References: <C627B4B8.3247E%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
Message-ID: <2e45c3c90905072100o8b95a42n6a974a811f56af4c(a)mail.gmail.com>
Speaking as a dance producer and sound mixer...
Everything is in proportion to the need of the moment and
the current set-up.
It is worthwhile and fundamental to ring out a hall for rock
concerts,
where the voice is often competing with extremely loud
instruments,
and the producer/sound engineer needs to have as loud as
possible
voice amplification, and feedback is a genuinely limiting
factor in
voice amplification.
It is not so common that contra dance sound approaches the
limits of
feed-back levels, hence adjusting for the hall, by ringing
out the
channel may or may not be all that significant, and it can
be that the
contribution of either the hall or the speakers toward
emphasizing
some particular set of frequencies is less significant than
figuring
out the relationship between the current caller's
voice, microphone,
and sound system at hand.
And it can be quite useful to ring out channels for
troublesome halls.
And even for non-troublesome halls. It matters in relation
to many
other things too. Placement of the speakers, if they can be
adjusted,
for example; also placement of the caller in relation to the
speakers.
For Contra dance it may well be that adjustments made for a
turned-up
channel and speaker system are helpful, but also may not be
that
important. Further, it's an artistic and producer standard
for the
music to be turned down in relation to the caller, when
desirable, as
in a no-walk-through contra and for squares.
Can there be value in ringing out the hall and the caller's
mike? Yes.
You can also end up with strange sounding vocals, because
you may be
adjusting for a sound level you will never approach during
the show.
Intelligibility, which can involve ringing out the channel,
yet mostly
involves appropriately, as-needed reducing
low-intelligibility
fundamentals, especially but by no means exclusively for
male voices,
somewhere below about 700 or so hertz, and potentially
slightly
boosting higher ranges, 1,500 hz to 4,000 or so, depending
on the
voice, caller, hall, speaker location, monitor (if any),
type of
speakers, the pointing of speakers, sound system, humidity,
and so on.
The typical caller doesn't have a monitor, and the
relationship with
the monitor is a primary starting point for feedback for
musicians,
where ringing out the channel can really matter.
Caller technique, though, can have much more influence on
intelligibility.
Does the caller have his mouth on the mic the whole time?
Then the
bass-proximity effect of directional cardiod microphones
will
emphasize the base end of the caller's voice, to great
detriment of
intelligibility in higher frequencies, even if the caller's
lows are
turned down radically.
If the same caller spoke from a foot away from the mic,
intelligibility can be improved many-fold, by reducing that
bass-proximity effect, and this alone can be far far more
important
than adjusting the channel for the hall's reverberation on
certain
frequencies, and a god deal quicker. Indeed, this could aid
the caller
in challenging halls, if the sound person is not able to
change the
difficulty, for whatever reason. Step back from the mic and
speak up,
can be a useful strategy in such cases. (Recognizing the
caller must
save her voice for the next performance too.)
Is the caller consistent in volume?
I can say that some callers are wildly inconsistent, by
spurts loud,
and by spurts soft, or maybe they are punchy in voice, or
perhaps
worse, loud on a walk through and soft when the music is
played. A
punchy voice which is loud and soft from phrase to phrase is
quite
challenging for a sound person to adjust for. If turned up,
then the
loud is booming. If compressed, by the sound system to
squash the loud
and bring the soft up in volume, then the vivaciousness of
the voice
can be quite flattened.
Does the caller enunciate clearly, with verve, enthusiasm,
melody and joy?
Are words well chosen, and few in number so that the
audience hangs on
every sound, instead of ignoring the caller because he talks
too much,
or a conversely a challenge to understand because only every
3rd word
"counts" informationally?
These non-sound amplification aspects of the caller
performance too
can be more important than technical sound efforts.
Mark
May 8 00:25:29 2009
From: will at
dedicationtechnologies.com (Will Loving)
Date: Fri, 08 May 2009 00:25:29 -0400
Subject: [Callers] How to "Ring out a (microphone) channel"
In-Reply-To: <758653.29737.qm(a)web50702.mail.re2.yahoo.com>
Message-ID: <C6292C79.3250B%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
It's been my experience with contra dance that, in general
and with some
exceptions, I hear female caller's voices more easily than
those of male
callers. I've always attributed this to the timbre of many
men's voices
being closer to the background sound people talking and
moving about.
However, as I've recently been learning more about sound
management I've
realized that there are sometime other factors involved such
as the sound
mix and the type of microphone used. In particular, I've
discovered that the
Shure Beta 58A mic instead of the more common SM58 makes it
easier for
people to hear my baritone voice.
Will
on 5/7/09 10:50 PM, joe micheals at joemicheals1 at
yahoo.com wrote:
I totally agree with Greg on cutting the low
frequencies.? I also appreciate
the info on ringing out the room.??I have
wondered: ?do
men need to hear
higher frequencies and women not so much?
Joe Micheals
Seattle
From jeremykorr at
hotmail.com Mon Nov 16
11:25:24
2009
From: jeremykorr at
hotmail.com (J L Korr)
Date: Mon, 16 Nov 2009 11:25:24 -0500
Subject: [Callers] Digital audio recorder
Message-ID: <SNT101-W226E591B736F6E80D488E8C7A50(a)phx.gbl>
Greetings all,
I'm looking to say goodbye to the 1970s and replace my
analog tape recorder with a portable digital one. (My
4-year-old can inherit the old unit and play around with it
to his heart's delight.) The digital recorder will be used
for recording at dances as well as recording interviews in
my professional life.
I've seen some callers and musicians using small digital
recorders, but I know little about the specific units. I'd
appreciate advice on recommended digital recorders and
external microphone attachments, from those of you who have
gone down this path long before me. Thanks in advance!
Jeremy Korr, southern California
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From David.Millstone at
VALLEY.NET Mon Nov 16
14:22:24 2009
From: David.Millstone at
VALLEY.NET (David Millstone)
Date: 16 Nov 2009 14:22:24 -0500
Subject: [Callers] Digital audio recorder
Message-ID: <124966573(a)retriever.VALLEY.NET>
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09:23:20 2009
From: will at
dedicationtechnologies.com (Will Loving)
Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 09:23:20 -0500
Subject: [Callers] Digital audio recorder
In-Reply-To: <SNT101-W226E591B736F6E80D488E8C7A50(a)phx.gbl>
Message-ID: <C7281C08.35F2F%will(a)dedicationtechnologies.com>
Jeremy,
I've been using the Zoom H4 for some time for recording
dances as well as a
number of other situations, and am extremely pleased with
it. The H4 costs
more than the H2, but the H4 has the advantage of having two
input jacks
that accept both XLR and 1/4" phone plug connections. I
regularly use this
ability to record from the "Tape/CD Out" jacks on the sound
board. When
that's not possible the Zoom devices (either one) do a
fabulous job with
their external mikes.
You can record at various sampling rates including MP3,
standard CD quality
WAV files, plus two levels above that, and it has a built-in
limiter and
compressor which I've found quite useful. Using NiMH 2700mAh
rechargeable
batteries, I get 6-7 hours of recording time. And, recording
at the CD
standard 44.1Khz rate to a WAV file, I can easily fit a long
evening of
music on a 4GB SD card with room to spare.
The Zoom H2 is smaller, has four built-in mikes that you can
use in twos or
all four for 90 degree, 120 degree or almost 360 degree
recording and it has
a standard tripod mount. But, the H2 doesn't have the same
inputs and input
control as the H4 (though it might accept a mini stereo mike
input...). The
H4 has a clumsy wrap on tripod mount but I've gotten used to
it. Both
devices suffer from a WAY too small screen, somewhat awkward
controls and
the inability to skip ahead quickly when checking a large
file (which is
what I always wind up with at a dance - a 1GB+ file for each
half of the
dance.
If you are on a Mac and just getting started with sound
editing, I highly
recommend the shareware editing program "Fission" by
http://rogueamoeba.com
Will
From aawoodall at
verizon.net Sat Mar 6
23:35:16 2010
From: aawoodall at
verizon.net (aawoodall)
Date: Sat, 06 Mar 2010 23:35:16 -0500
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
Message-ID: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
Hi,
I am looking for a stand that attaches to a mic stand to
hold my
cards. I have seen some callers with one. Does
anyone know
what I am talking about and where to purchase one?
Send responses to aawoodall at
verizon.net.
Thanks.
Andrea
From joy2the at
mindspring.com Sat Mar 6
23:41:22 2010
From: joy2the at
mindspring.com (Joy Greenwolfe)
Date: Sat, 6 Mar 2010 23:41:22 -0500
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
In-Reply-To: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
References: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
Message-ID: <643A5417-2D04-491B-9463-C3DE0EFE84F1(a)mindspring.com>
I'm also interested in a similar card stand!
From David.Millstone at
valley.net Sat Mar 6
23:44:23 2010
From: David.Millstone at
valley.net (David Millstone)
Date: 06 Mar 2010 23:44:23 -0500
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
Message-ID: <128884898(a)retriever.VALLEY.NET>
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From richgoss at
comcast.net Sun Mar 7
01:17:52 2010
From: richgoss at
comcast.net (Rich Goss)
Date: Sat, 06 Mar 2010 22:17:52 -0800
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
In-Reply-To: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
Message-ID: <C7B88510.88BD%richgoss(a)comcast.net>
I got mine at our local music store. You may have
better luck at music
stores that carry band instruments vs a Guitar Center type
place.
From limerickfarm at
gmail.com Sun Mar 7
05:55:24 2010
From: limerickfarm at
gmail.com (Donald Primrose)
Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 05:55:24 -0500
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
In-Reply-To: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
References: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
Message-ID: <1bf75db1003070255s5f486764labbe926da556315b(a)mail.gmail.com>
They come in two sizes... actual card size 3x5 and page size
81/2 x 11. The
3x5 works for me. Any music store. . usually needs to
be ordered. -don
From meedwards at
westendweb.com Sun Mar 7
10:33:11 2010
From: meedwards at
westendweb.com (Martha Edwards)
Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 09:33:11 -0600
Subject: [Callers] card stand for callers
In-Reply-To: <1bf75db1003070255s5f486764labbe926da556315b(a)mail.gmail.com>
References: <4B92E6B4.7464.987191@localhost>
<1bf75db1003070255s5f486764labbe926da556315b(a)mail.gmail.com>
Message-ID: <7d8d864a1003070733k2e811273xd2af80b102af7412(a)mail.gmail.com>
Online, Elderly Instruments has them - I bought one last
year. It's pretty
good, though you'll have to find little extra bits of grippy
stuff to keep
it stable on the mic stand. I used a tip of a pressure
curtain rod and bits
of that shelf stuff you get at the grocery store that is
so...rubbery sticky
grippy.
M
E
From jeremykorr at
hotmail.com Tue May 25
19:29:46
2010
From: jeremykorr at
hotmail.com (J L Korr)
Date: Tue, 25 May 2010 19:29:46 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Wireless mikes -- many soon illegal
In-Reply-To: <mailman.3.1274803201.99857.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
References: <mailman.3.1274803201.99857.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
Message-ID: <SNT101-W40DB28B8262348D631AF54C7E80(a)phx.gbl>
Hello friends,
I received the following message from a local sound tech,
and found to my dismay that my wireless mike, and many
others, become illegal in three weeks. I encourage anyone
with a wireless mike who isn't familiar with this imminent
policy to follow the links below. Meanwhile, a quick plea
for advice: I have been very pleased with my Samson Airline
system, recommended to me by users of this listserv, and
would love to know what Samson Airline systems you all would
recommend that don't operate in the 698-806 MHz band. Thanks
--Jeremy, Southern CA
In January 2010, the FCC announced that the operation of
wireless microphones in the 700 MHz band (698 ? 806 MHz)
will not be permitted after June 12, 2010. These frequencies
have been reallocated for new wireless communication
services (cell phones and public service).
For more information:
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/wirelessmicrophones/
To see if your wireless microphone operates on the 700 MHz
band, go to;
http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/wirelessmicrophones/manufacturers.html
Click on the name of the manufacturer and see if your model
is listed.
If it is listed, it is a 700 MHz wireless microphone and can
not be used (sold or repaired) after June 12, 2010.
If you can find your manufacturer?s name and your equipment
is not listed, then you may continue using your wireless
microphone because it does not operate in the 700 MHz Band.
If your manufacturer is not listed, please contact the FCC
for additional assistance.
Some of the 700 MHz equipment can be modified and there are
trade-in rebates available.
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From chris.weiler at
weirdtable.org Wed May 26
06:55:45 2010
From: chris.weiler at
weirdtable.org (Chris Weiler (home))
Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 06:55:45 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Wireless mikes -- many soon illegal
In-Reply-To: <SNT101-W40DB28B8262348D631AF54C7E80(a)phx.gbl>
References: <mailman.3.1274803201.99857.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
<SNT101-W40DB28B8262348D631AF54C7E80(a)phx.gbl>
Message-ID: <4BFCFE31.8000401(a)weirdtable.org>
It's important to note that this is not every microphone, so
it's
important to check to see if yours is affected. My Shure PGX
system
operates in the 600-650 range, so will be fine, for example.
There is
usually a label on the product that indicates what
frequencies it uses.
Chris
From ebay at
hands4.com Wed May 26 19:28:45 2010
From: ebay at
hands4.com (Beth Parkes)
Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 19:28:45 -0400
Subject: [Callers] Wireless mikes -- many soon illegal
In-Reply-To: <4BFCFE31.8000401(a)weirdtable.org>
References: <mailman.3.1274803201.99857.callers(a)sharedweight.net>
<SNT101-W40DB28B8262348D631AF54C7E80(a)phx.gbl>
<4BFCFE31.8000401(a)weirdtable.org>
Message-ID:
<001201cafd2b$3015da40$90418ec0$(a)hands4.com>
In our household half our wireless mics affected and the
other half not (we
have 4). So Tony has to upgrade his mic. Poor guy.
Beth
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