Responsible for making sure that every show lives up to the band’s reputation, Queens of the Stone Age FOH engineer Jay Rigby has specified a Solid State Logic L500 mixing console for their current epic international tour.

Queens of the Stone Age FOH engineer Jay Rigby The tour began last June 2017 with an SSL L500 console already specified and supplied by Eighth Day Sound. Rigby (The War on Drugs, The 1975, Cage The Elephant) and monitor engineer Francois Pare, joined the tour in April 2018, with Rigby sticking with the SSL console ‘I haven’t looked back’, he says. ‘I absolutely love it.’

Choosing to start from scratch rather than try to adapt himself to the previous set-up, Rigby used multitracks from earlier shows to build a new show file. ‘I was able to go into the Eighth Day Sound warehouse and prepare as much as possible. Interestingly, the first show I did with Queens of the Stone Age, and the first time I met the band, was headlining at a festival in Mexico, in front of 50,000 people.’

It was at the first show that Rigby felt his choice was fully justified. The multitracks he had been using to prepare had been recorded through a different console, so Mexico was also the first time he heard the full and final signal path: ‘Even during the line check at that first show, it was like night and day going through the SSL preamps,’ he recalls. ‘For me it’s the first digital console I’ve used that sounds as good as an XL4 – you push a fader up and it sounds like a kick drum. Then the meat of the guitar, drums, bass… it all sums together really nicely.

‘It’s really the whole package, starting from stage and coming out to FOH. It’s second to none. I’m not using any plug-in systems or anything like that, and the only outboard I have is from my time on analogue consoles. You could use just the console and it would sound amazing.’

Rigby describes the Queens of the Stone Age set-up as a standard rock band, with drums, bass, three guitars (including lead vocalist Josh Homme), and keyboards. The drum kit does use some triggers, but there are no tracks, clicks or anything to limit the band’s choices once on stage. ‘With these guys, you’re hanging on by the seat of your pants,’ says Rigby. ‘You never know what’s going to happen; you get the set list five minutes before the show starts, and that can change at any time during the show.’

The biggest challenge – and pleasure – of the tour might be the band’s signature sound. The three guitars come together in what Rigby describes as a ‘mid-range, gnarly sound’ that, in most contexts, shouldn’t work. ‘The first thing most people would do is start pulling that mid-range out and try to smooth it off,’ he says. ‘But the first thing Josh said to me was ‘embrace the mid-range and really get it out there.

‘I am pushing and pulling the mix the entire time during a show, bringing it together into a crazy wall of sound. This console lends itself to that – I have everything at my fingertips.’

Rigby makes extensive use of stem groups to help manage multiple kick and snare mics, as well as multiple amps per guitar rig. He brings feeds from instrument microphones together into their own pre- mix, pre-processing stems – mics from guitarist Troy Van Leeuwen’s three guitar amps into a single stem, or two snare drum mics into a single snare stem. These can then be routed into further stems – the snare stem into the drum stem, for example.

For Rigby, one of the most important aspects of that signal path is the All Pass Filter, included in every processed path of an SSL Live console. ‘Without the All Pass filter those stems would sound phasy and uncorrelated. Instead of trying fix that with delay or a polarity reverse, the All Pass Filter lets you dig in and get the stem to sound really wide, really solid – multiple amplifiers become one amplifier.’

Using Stem Groups for effects sends instead of traditional auxiliaries means that Rigby does not have to use FX returns and thus complicate his show layout; and using Stems for instrument groups means he has a ready broadcast feed whenever it is required: ‘For broadcast situations I can just send the broadcast truck six stereo Stems instead of giving them a whole 48-channel fan-out. That’s really helpful.’

A Queens of the Stone Age show is a special event. The band has a unique approach to every audience, and a special relationship with every audience member. ‘The really cool thing about Josh is that he will not stop until every person is into the show,’ says Rigby. ‘He will make it his mission to make sure everyone is enjoying it. That might involve a song change, to maybe get something heavy going. It’s an interaction between the band and the audience. They almost decide where the show goes.

‘Every night is special, every night is different, and every night they perform the best show they can. It’s so nice to be a part of that.’

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