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  • Rüfüs du Sol Live

Rüfüs du Sol Live

One of Australia’s biggest musical exports returned to Australia, selling out arenas. We caught up with the sound crew at the second Melbourne Showgrounds date.

By Christopher Holder

20 February 2023

Performing electronic/dance music live has always been a tough nut to crack. Early attempts were often hilarious. The implicit contract between the stage and the audience was: we’re miming; you know we’re miming; we know you know; but let’s have some fun anyway.

I don’t think anyone does live dance music better than Rüfüs du Sol. The three-piece group supplements playback parts with actual, meaningful live performances. There’s live drumming… and not just triggers, actual acoustic drumming too. And the vocals of Tyrone are compelling. Fragile, reedy… you hang off every word.

“We have a lot of inputs from stage — around 70,” explains Cam Trewin. Cam is more than the Rüfüs du Sol front of house engineer he’s part of the group’s inner audio sanctum and has been for around a decade. Everyone in that inner circle is utterly meticulous about sound. Once a studio track joins the live set list, it’s painstakingly prepared. The band’s studio producer and mixer, Cassian, readies the music and preps them into stems. Cam confers with Cassian on aspects that need massaging for a live context — reining in the 808 kick drum sounds is a good example.

During production rehearsals the band elects to perform certain parts on their synths and SPDs, and it’s determined which drums and percussion parts are retained in the live tracks. That said, a kick sequencer part is always retained. Drummer James Hunt will play the kick during jams but at all other times a kick sequencer leads the timecode driven sections.

“The kick part is a fundamental part of the mix,” explains Cam Trewin. “In fact, I’ll sidechain any other parts that operate in that area of the frequency spectrum. I spend a lot of time fine tuning the attack and release on that sidechaining such that it’s imperceptible in the mix but it does help to maintain low end clarity.”

FOH Engineer, Cam Trewin
Cam Trewin’s centre section faders on his Avid S6L are loaded with vocal-related levels and FX returns. (Apologies for the refresh rate weirdness of the labels.)

RINSE & REPEAT

Power and clarity are key and the fundamentals of the live show mix have been fastidiously fine-tuned and balanced to within an inch of their lives. It’s a ‘unity mix’ as Cam describes it. Spark up the Avid S6L, set all the input faders to unity and let ‘er rip.

It doesn’t mean that Cam gets to phone his mix in from a room at the Hyatt. It just means that anything and everything that can be nailed down has been… meticulously. Instead, Cam spends the show with all eight digits hovering over the centre section faders. All eight faders pertain to Tyrone’s vocal performance, including FX returns. The way Cam describes it, his routine sees his focus flip from mixing those faders and tweaking the system EQ: “I’m balancing the subtleties of all of those effects returns; precisely anticipating the delay throws; and then constantly critiquing the tonal balance of the front of house mix like a mastering engineer. I’ll always flip between the graphic EQ, the parametric EQ, then the system EQ and I’m forever massaging it; I’m making changes throughout the whole show. I never sit static: mixing the vocal, tweaking EQ, mixing, EQ.”

Cam Trewin relies on Waves’ C6, F6 and noise suppression plug-ins to surgically sculpt the vocal sound.

VOCAL SIGNAL PATH: WAVES

Now that you’re getting a sense of Cam Trewin’s perfectionist tendencies, you won’t be surprised to hear that his vocal signal path is specific and involved.

Cam relies on a suite of Waves plug-ins that take care of all the corrective EQ and dynamics… actually, I’ll let Cam explain:

“I run two lots of inserts. Some primary Waves plug-ins that are hosted inside of the S6L and I use these tools more for sonic surgery or noise suppression. The chain starts with the Waves C6 multiband compressor and then goes into an instance of Waves Tune vocal pitch correction. All these plug-ins are snapshot recalled between each song, depending on how much time Tyrone spends in falsetto, for example.

I then go into a Waves WNS noise suppression plug-in. It’s intended more for post production dialogue work but the fact it’s multi-band works for me. You can target specific spill areas and dial that band’s fader in and out. That said, I also use the Waves NS-1 noise suppressor. It’s bit of a push/pull relationship and I juggle them to find the best balance. Get it wrong and you can really choke the tone. Those settings are automated from song to song as well.

“Next is the Waves F6 dynamic EQ. I love this plug-in. It’s really subtle and really transparent but does its job really, really well. Post that, I have a high-frequency limiter that works as a de-esser. Finally, there’s just a little bit of channel EQ and I tend to chase this from show to show, depending on the spill and how Tyrone’s feeling on the night.”

Bricasti reverb units (above) for the band’s IEM mixes, “once you hear it you can’t go back”. An SSL Fusion mastering processor (left) sits across each of the three IEM mixes.

MONITOR WORLD

We caught up with James Gueness behind his Avid S6L to discuss mixing Rüfüs monitors.

“The band is very particular and they’ve got really good ears. So I’m just trying to deliver consistently good results and keep them happy — like any good monitor engineer!

“The band is all on in-ears. They use (Jerry Harvey Audio) JH16v2s over Shure PSM1000 wireless. The drummer has a Porter & Davies thumper in his stool as well.

”Stage spill from the PA is minimal. I was only just having a conversation up on the centre riser and it was at normal speaking voice, while the d&b GSL PA was going full tilt. It’s amazing. It’s nice and clean and allows me to give the band something like a studio mix — that’s the sort of clarity and separation we’re talking about. For indoor shows, it’s a little tougher, you notice the difference and it’s not as quiet.

“Tyrone’s mix is the toughest. He’s close to the drums and he has a quiet, airy voice, so trying to keep the drums spill out of the vocal mic is probably the biggest challenge. The Waves PSE (Primary Source Expander) is crucial in that regard. I’m riding the PSE’s threshold up and down the whole show. It means that when there’s not much going on, I can really open it up and when it starts to kick off I’ll just tighten up the threshold. The challenge is to ride it in such a way that Tyrone doesn’t notice the PSE working it in his ears. 

“Apart from the PSE, the Waves F6 dynamic EQ is my go-to, which is awesome. I also use the Waves Sheps Channel for just a bit of finishing at the end of the channel.

“In the rack I have a couple of Bricasti reverbs. Once you hear those things you don’t ever want to use anything else! They just sound so natural — you’re not aware they’re on, until you bypass them. I use one for a drum verb and another as a vocal plate. It’s everything I want.

“In the analogue domain I have an SSL Fusion across each of the three mixes, for a little bit of ‘finalizing’ at the end of the chain.

“The mics haven’t changed much over the years. For drums, we use Earthworks mics on the toms and overheads, a Shure SM57 on the snare, an Audio-Technica ATM450 on hi-hats and the Shure KSM9HS on the vocal.”

UAD plug-ins are used more to apply some sonic fairy dust and FX.

VOCAL SIGNAL PATH: UAD

“Post that insert, I go into a separate Universal Audio chain and this is not snapshot recallable — effectively, it just sits like a hardware insert over his vocal throughout the show. First up, I’ve got a Fairchild 670 (the Legacy version) applying a little notch EQ. That goes into an 1176 (the AE version) and I really like the sound of this. And then at the very end is the Chandler Limited Curvebender with just a little bit of air and some other little bits and pieces to restore some frequencies that may have been hit by previous processing. And that’s obviously all fed back into the console.

“From an effects perspective: vocal effects include a short room and a longer verb, in this case a UAD EMT140, which stays pretty static throughout the show. I really love the sound of that. I have a couple of delays as well, which change from song to song: a high- and low-passed ping pong quarter-triplet delay that I throw and another, long-note delay.”

What about Tyrone’s vocal mic? It’s a Shure KMS9HS and has been for more than five years. “The KMS9 has won multiple shootouts we’ve conducted. It sounds good but it’s the off-axis rejection that is the biggest winner. I recently tested a new DPA de:facto handheld and it’s a gorgeous-sounding microphone but we were picking up too much spill — when you’ve got James on drums smashing 16ths on the hi-hats right next to him, that’s a big factor, in fact, it’s a bigger deal than subjective sound quality.” 

Cam’s mobile Pro Tools rig can go back to the hotel with him for in-the-moment mastering and mixing.

AVID CONSOLE CONSUMER

Cam’s S6L is pivotal to his workflow. He was an early adopter, touring the first mixer in Australia, and willing to forgive the odd quirk in exchange for the seamless ProTools integration, just for starters.

“We tour a full content team — videographers, photographers, a creative director, and more — which means all the socials, every piece of content, is generated internally. That, of course, includes audio. So I record each night into Pro Tools and I can generate broadcast mixes for whoever needs it based on the desk mix — I have a portable Pro Tools rig in my hotel room that allows me to do a quick master on the two-track mix. I’ve managed to automate/sidechain the level of the ambient mics in the mix and that saves me time finalising those two-track mixes.

“If someone needs something specific, then I can generate a multitrack mix as well. That said, the desk mix actually translates really quite well and I often end up using that as a reference on my multitrack mix. I think because it’s just so refined — there’s so much programming that’s gone into that desk mix.

“So you can see why I’m so wedded to the S6L, it’s not just a mixing console to me. Saying that, it’s a damn good mixing console. The level of programmability, in the snapshots, even through to the event control, is amazing. For example, I have a Show Start event that will prompt the console to put Pro Tools into Record, and it will flash the console to tell me that we’re in Record. Plus, it’s the only console that allows me to host the Waves plug-ins inside the console.”

d&b GSL leads the way on the main and side hangs. d&b SL subs (below) do the bulk of the sub arc work.

GSL IS AN 8TH DAY WONDER

8th Day Sound’s Simon Farrell talks us through the PA package for the sellout Melbourne Showgrounds date.

“We’re using d&b GSL for the main hangs. The hangs are 18 deep on the mains, 12 deep on the outfills. Each hang has some GSL12 at the bottom to get a little bit more coverage down there. Then we’ve got a sub arc array across the front comprised of 20 x d&b SL subs (10 stacks of two) and four d&b J Infra on the outsides — two at the time. We’re running d&b V8s for the front fill. For this date we’re running four delay towers, with 12 x J8s per tower. The whole system’s running d&b’s Array Processing.

d&b’s SL boxes work amazing well outdoors — they’re extremely directional, so you don’t hear anything on stage and you can keep the sound away from places that don’t want to hear the gig.

“The other thing about KSL or GSL product is the HF seems to stay coherent even in windy conditions. Don’t ask me how that works — physics is physics but the highs don’t get washed away in the wind as much. My guess is there’s some proprietary magic going on in the array processing. 

“We deployed our first KSL system on Australia Day, 2019, at the Sydney Opera House steps and it’s been a real game changer. The pattern control keeps the residents happy, but tonally the SL series, especially in the vocal range, is just so sweet — the vocal clarity is just so much better, even compared to the likes of the J Series. It’s just far more present — with J Series you’d have to do a little bit of massaging in your EQ around your hi/mids to get the vocals to pop through. I very rarely have to do anything like that with an SL system.”

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