RBD with Allen & Heath’s dLive on 54 Show Reunion Tour

RBD recently embarked on their highly anticipated reunion tour, entertaining audiences in 26 cities.

With an analogue split being used between the FOH and monitor systems, Miguel Tapia, FOH engineer and Senior Consultant for Allen & Heath’s Mexican distributor Representaciones de Audio, had free rein when it came to choosing a mixing platform to deliver his preferred sound for the FOH mix, so he opted for a dLive system, supplied by Clair Global, based around a DM64 MixRack and an S7000 Surface.

The DM64 MixRack, featuring 64 XLR inputs and 32 XLR outputs, acts as the heart of the system, providing 128 input channels and 64 mix outputs coupled with a configurable 64-bus architecture, plus 0.7ms latency and phase-aligned signal paths. The 36-fader S7000 is the largest Surface in the dLive range and offers engineers a pair of 12” touchscreens and a plethora of configurable SoftKeys and rotary controls to customise their mixing workflow.

To meet the 71 input requirement for the production, and with the analogue split allowing Tapia to choose which preamps feed the FOH mix engine, Tapia augmented the system with a pair of DX32 modular I/O expanders, utilised to exploit Allen & Heath’s next-generation PRIME analogue technology, between them housing four PRIME input cards and 2 PRIME output cards to offer a total of 32 PRIME preamps and 16 PRIME outputs in addition to the 64 inputs and 32 outputs offered by the DM64. The remaining slots in the DX32 were populated with AES input and output cards which were used to interface with a Cedar DNS8, and a Waves card was chosen for multitrack recording and playback duties.

Tapia chose to use PRIME on the five lead and two backing vocalists but also deployed PRIME for other dynamic range sources such as guitar, bass and drums. Additionally, Tapia used the remaining PRIME I/O to interface with his Neve Portico II Master Buss Processor as well as providing high-quality analogue feeds to the PA. “The PRIME preamps are just fantastic,” Tapia added. “They deliver great headroom, a low noise floor and, most importantly, a great sound”.

Tapia relied on dLive’s DEEP processing emulations of classic hardware and Dyn8 engine for his signal processing. “I absolutely love the native dLive processing, I think I use just about everything,” Tapia says. “I really like the Mighty compressor on snare and kit subgroup, and I also like the Dual Threshold Expander on drums. I use a lot of Dyn8 (multiband compressor and dynamic EQ), the transient controllers, the de-esser – and more!”

“The dLive system has been fantastic so far, especially the PRIME Input Cards and Outputs,” Tapia concluded. “The dLive system is super robust and delivers a big, clear sound, making every show a memorable experience.”

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