‘Audio is key’: Meyer Sound celebrates first Roskilde Festival partnership success

‘Audio is key’: Meyer Sound celebrates first Roskilde Festival partnership success

Roskilde Festival and Meyer Sound led extensive training sessions over the months prior to the festival as part of a technical education initiative

Meyer Sound’s exclusive partnership with Roskilde Festival in Denmark saw a 130,000-strong crowd gather for eight days of music from Gorillaz, Eminem and many more.

All stages – from the small and intimate to the main Orange stage – were powered by Meyer Sound systems.

Roskilde Festival and Meyer Sound led extensive training sessions over the months prior to the festival as part of a technical education initiative. The education programme is one of the many initiatives of the partnership that appealed to Meyer Sound in collaborating with the not-for-profit festival. Any profits from the festival are distributed to charity every year.

Meyer Sound co-founders John and Helen Meyer were in Denmark to experience the results. “Working with the whole team at Roskilde has been amazing right from the start,” said executive vice president Helen Meyer. “It feels different than the other big festivals. Everybody is very cooperative, and always coming up with new ideas. Also, there’s a warmth to it. Everybody really cares about what they’re doing, and that makes it a very special experience.”

Supervising the technical education side of the collaboration was Morten Büchert, who works with the festival year round as consultant and project manager. Under the five-year agreement forged late last year, all sound reinforcement systems at all Roskilde stages are Meyer Sound. The systems are supplied by the Bright Group, a leading European AVL rental and integration firm. The technical teams of Bright, Meyer Sound and the festival were fully integrated, collaborating on the sound design and deployment.

“This partnership with Meyer Sound was an opportunity to move into uncharted territory,” Büchert said. “The mindset that everybody brought to the table was one of openness and curiosity, and that had a positive effect on the audience experience.”

“The sound systems for all the stages have been redesigned since last year,” added Lars Liliengren, Roskilde production manager. “We looked at the entire site and calculated the coverages we needed to achieve our goal, which is to close the gap between the audience and the artists on the stage.”

Under the five-year agreement forged late last year, all sound reinforcement systems at all Roskilde stages are Meyer Sound. The stage systems are supplied by the Bright Group, a leading European AVL rental and integration firm. The technical teams of Bright, Meyer Sound and the festival were fully integrated, collaborating on the sound design and deployment.

Close to 1,000 Meyer Sound loudspeakers were deployed across the eight festival stages as well as all other festival-related events and activities requiring sound. The largest system by far was at the Orange stage, anchored by LEO and LYON main line arrays with added power from LEOPARD line arrays and deep bass from 1100-LFC and 900-LFC low frequency control elements.

Systems for the Arena, Avalon and Apollo stages were built around LYON main arrays, with LEOPARD arrays doing the heavy lifting at the Pavilion, Rising and Countdown stages. The low end of the new VLFCs brought a visceral feel to the EDM experience at Apollo. LINA arrays, the newest and smallest of the LEO Family, held forth at the Gloria Stage.

Meyer Sound production manager Dennis Tholema led the technical team embedded at the festival. Bob McCarthy, Meyer Sound’s director of system optimisation, led the team charged with the design and tuning of the festival systems, working together with Bright logistical and rigging teams and the festival’s own technical staff.

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For the Bright Group, Roskilde afforded a unique, collaborative opportunity to demonstrate how their Meyer Sound inventory and support teams could manage a massive, multi-stage festival. “I’m looking forward to many more years of this,” comments Bright Group CEO and President Patrick Svensk. “We have been partners with Meyer Sound for many years and we expect to strengthen that partnership through the festivals yet to come. Audio is key for a music-centered festival like this.”

Another notable feature of the festival was “Big Mix Lounge,” organized by Meyer Sound, where legendary Metallica FOH engineer “Big Mick” Hughes hosted a relaxed island of hospitality for his visiting peers. “You couldn’t come up with a better plot,” says Hughes. “You’ve got the Roskilde family forming a bond with the Meyer family, and only good things come out of that. It ensures the quality of the audio across the entire site, so that every stage is catered to fully – and expertly so. I hope this model is recognised by other festivals as a good way to go.”

Summing up the thrust of the novel partnership, Roskilde Festival Group CEO Signe Lopdrup says that the purpose of the collaboration is to “enhance the experience for all participants here at Roskilde. I think this partnership goes beyond great sound. It is about creating community, and creating experiences at a new and higher level.”

Meyer Sound leveraged its relationship with the festival to conduct R&D experiments over the course of the week. Working under the direction of Morten Büchert and Meyer Sound senior scientist Dr. Roger Schwenke, students from the Danish Technical University helped set up experiments to measure variations in sound propagation at different heights above ground level as caused by increases in temperature and moisture from the crowds.

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Source: mi-pro.co.uk