Studio A Equipment List
Inside Outline
Now providing loudspeaker systems for events on the scale of Peter Gabriel’s 2010 performance at the Verona Arena, the recent Glastonbury Festival and Milwaukee’s Summerfest (the world’s largest music festival), Outline’s roots can be traced back to 1973, and founders Guido Noselli and Giorgio Biffi.
From modest roots, Outline has undertaken quite a journey: ‘We started out as an electronics company building FM tuners, little mixers and power amps primarily for the hi-fi market,’ EMEA Sales Director Chris Hinds says. ‘When the hi-fi market changed, we had to diversify. About the same time that this was happening, we were being approached by club owners in Italy to design loudspeakers. These were very successful, and that momentum carried us into being primarily a loudspeaker manufacturer. Today, we operate in the top end of the market; we make high-value, low-volume equipment, all manufactured in Italy.’
Unsurprisingly, there is rather more to the story, but it’s a good summary of the company’s direction.
Outline is now being steered by Giorgio Biffi and Guido Noselli’s sons, Michele and Stefano, Guido having passed away in 2006. ‘Outline is a family-owned company and is in charge of its own destiny,’ Hinds asserts. ‘Michele, Stefano and Giorgio are the three directors and major shareholders. Under their guidance, we’ve made quite an impression around the world. And we can back that with use by some high-profile acts and PA companies – the Good Ship Outline is steering a good course.’
By the late-1990s Outline had gained international recognition and distribution, and was on a journey that would carry it into the same waters as other pioneering high-end loudspeaker system manufacturers. One of the waypoints on this course was the development of the DPRWG (Double Parabolic Reflective Wave Guide) in July 2002, which is the key acoustic element in Outline’s mini-Compass, Mantas, GTO and GTO C-12 line array systems.
‘The Butterfly was our first line array with patented technology – the DPRWG,’ Hinds confirms. ‘That was the catalyst to becoming what we are today and demonstrates our engineering integrity in the face of competing manufacturers’ systems.’
Following the development of the DPRWG, Outline has assembled a number of proprietary technologies and systems – among them are its Open Array acoustic simulation software and its iMode DSP technology. Adding a single DSP card to the mini-Compass, FlySub and DBS subwoofers, DVS full-range systems or iSM stage monitors adds remote-controlled optimisation via iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch. Using 64-bit FIR filters, this provides control over level, delay, EQ, mute and network configuration.
‘I’d invite anybody to take a look at our mini-Compass,’ Hinds offers. ‘That is a single box that has all of our technology inside it – acoustics, electronics and software. That shows what we’re capable of.
‘If you move away from the mechanics of paper and glue and transducers and rigging, where is the funky stuff going to happen? It’s in DSP,’ he continues. ‘For example, we have a software update coming along that will include warped FIR. That will allow stuff like the use of hundreds of parametric filters without adding latency.
‘We’ve just gone through a long period of development and are pretty much settled on a line of products that will facilitate professional use – from an installer equipping a bar to the Rolling Stones and Glastonbury. We are seeing the seeds of our labours coming to fruition. The signs are that we could expand very rapidly, but have solid foundations in place.’
Counting Australia, Japan, China, America, Russia and – obviously – Italy as strong markets, Outline has identified Europe as one of its targets for expansion in the next few years. ‘The key to that is putting the right distributors in place, and having products that distributors want to distribute and that end-users want to use,’ Hinds says. ‘We’ve identified that more and more people want a systems approach, but to set yourself away from the crowd you have to offer solutions. That’s what is up our sleeves…
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More: www.outline.it
Recording Elmer Gantry
Taking Grammys for the Best Engineered Album, Classical and Best Contemporary Classical Composition categories, Elmer Gantry is a new American opera based on Sinclair Lewis’ satirical novel from 1927. The sound, however, is all 21st century…
The stunning recording is the work of the Korean Soundmirror (사운드 미러) team – Byeong-Joon Hwang and John Newton were the session team responsible, with Lewis creating the Grammy-winning master. Soundmirror’s producer on the sessions, Blanton Alspaugh, was also nominated in the Producer of the Year, Classical category.
Along with librettist was Hershel Garfein, Robert Aldridge began working on the score in 1990. Elmer Gantry follows the adventures of a fraudulent, womanising evangelist. Elmer, a small-town football hero with the gift of gab, falls in love with and becomes business manager for a beautiful traveling evangelist, Sharon Falconer. He helps her realise her dream of building a magnificent tabernacle before his misdeeds bring ruin to them both.
The music for Elmer Gantry places traditional operatic forms – arias, duets and large ensembles – into a boldly American, vernacular, and ‘roots’-based musical language. Original hymns and gospel choruses help to tell this quintessentially American story of religion, love and corruption.
The Opera was given its first complete performance by the Nashville Opera in November 2007. The recording was made on 19 and 21 March 2011 at the Marcus Center for the Performing Arts in Milwaukee. It was conducted from the pit by William Boggs and the performance was directed by John Hoomes, with its release following in July – and being listed by Opera News as one of the top ten opera recordings of the year.
The recordings were made and postproduced on Merging Technologies’ Pyramix DAW system.
‘Pyramix is really the only solution for us,’ Soundmirror’s John Newton says. ‘It just sounds way better than any other digital recorder and what is great is we can deliver clients masters in the best quality PCM or DSD.
‘We are really excited about the Horus Networked Audio convertor,’ he adds. ‘This is going to be perfect for the way we work and the ability to control the units remotely will be ideal for this type of recording.’
Return to Sound for the 2012 Grammys
More: www.soundmirror.co.kr
More: www.merging.com
- Yamaha DM7 update/PY64-D Dante card
- Musik Hack Fuel
- Waves Audio Immersive Wrapper
- Lawo mc² console v12.0.0 software
- Waves Audio V15 updates
- RCF Audio PMR 60T
- Mutec MC1.2 format converter
- Slate Digital Virtual Mix Rack 3
- Røde Wireless Go (Gen 3)
- Audiofocus Edge 210M/Edge 210Mx
- Lawo mc² console v10.12 software
- Audinate Dante Controller update
- Blaze Audio BL18S
- Solid State Logic SSL Live V6
- Lake People G103-D-4 headphone amplifier
- AIR Music Tech Multiband Filterbank
- Spitfire Audio AIR Studios Reverb Essentials
- Waves Audio IDX Intelligent Dynamics
- APG Uniline Max
- Studio Technologies Model 352A/Model 354A