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Mighty Electro-Voice System for the Verve’s Biggest Shows

One of Britain’s favourite alternative rock bands, the mighty Verve, has just triumphed at London’s newest and biggest concert venue, the O2 Arena, using a substantial EV line array sound system to deliver their singular style of post-punk pop-rock.

   One of the most influential alt-rock acts of the last decade, The Verve had its biggest hits in 1996/7, notably ‘Bittersweet Symphony’ for which they were successfully sued by The Rolling Stones. Rather prone to breaking up and reforming, this tour marks the band’s latest reunion, playing clubs across the UK before stepping up to six arena shows.

   Front-of-house engineer Ian Laughton (pictured) ordered up an Electro-Voice X-Line array system from Britannia Row for the arena shows, declaring it his favourite PA: “I’ve got total faith in these boxes, they just get better and better.”

   “I first heard this PA in Wembley Arena and I was just astounded,” he recalls. “To be honest, I was never really happy with line array systems until I got the X-Line. It just seems to fill the whole area. EV subs are the best I’ve heard in a line array, they’re just phenomenal.”

   Laughton first worked with The Verve in 1993. “With this band, their concert programme starts off with the racket of the post-punk era and moves to the orchestrations of the ‘Bittersweet Symphony’, culminating in very acoustic-led pop. The X-Line system can track that seamlessly, and I can do it all by faders. However, to create the effect I want for the band, I’m using some old-fashioned rough-sounding reverb and old compressors. With a brand-new Midas XL8 digital desk and Electro-Voice X-Line speakers, it would sound a bit too fresh and clean so I’ve had to colour it, dirty it up a bit, especially for the songs off the first album.”

   This is Laughton’s first gig at the 20,000-capacity O2 Arena, and he praises Brit Row’s system engineer Richard Trow for supporting him with a system design that provides excellent coverage. Says Trow, “ the O2 is a great-sounding venue but it is very high so we have to think carefully about coverage. We needed an extra hang of speakers to handle the top seats at the very side of the stage, but otherwise the arena was covered by main left/right hangs of X-Line (13 cabinets each side) and supplemented by side hangs (10 cabinets), with 12 X-Subs either side of the stage.”

   EV’s P3000RL amplifiers were run by proprietary IRIS management software, and EV’s new NetMax units were used to control the system.

   “The IRIS programme is constantly being improved by Electro-Voice,” explains Trow. “It has been enhanced by good new construction software which makes it much faster and simpler to use. But it is the addition of the NetMax digital matrix controller to the system which has improved things a heck of a lot! Day-to-day, we’ve got all our control and delays in NetMax which makes life a lot easier. Using it as a matrix EQ delay unit, we don’t have to change the settings in the amplifiers from show to show, although we could if we wanted to. Operationally it’s comparable to the BSS Soundweb, but sounds much better.”

   Trow has had experience with EV X-Line in the O2 venue, having used it recently with the Foo Fighters. “It’s quite a dead room, so you can’t skimp on the PA, and you really need the subs, but EV definitely works in there.”

   Laughton is in full agreement. “With The Verve being a 3-piece, every little frequency matters. Yes, I admit I like to go very heavy on the bass! We used 3 kick-drum channels; one of them was a NS10 speaker right against the kick drum - Pete Salisbury only needed to touch it, and people wanted to go to the toilet! It was shockingly good!”

18th January 2008

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