KROQ Creates In-Studio Performance Space with DiGiCo

Los Angeles’ iconic rock radio station, KROQ, looking to create their own intimate, in-studio listening space complete with a stage, studio lighting, and amazing sound for their listeners, cleared out some cubicles and the Red Bull Sound Space became a reality.

Perhaps the initial stepping-stone towards the new internal space was the 2010 and 2011 KROQ Coachella House stage, adjacent to the main event site, where performers played live mini-sets and conducted interviews broadcast on air. Scott Ramsay of Broadcast Support, working with the station, supplied a DiGiCo SD8 to handle FOH, Monitors, and the station’s On-Air Broadcast, as well as distinct mixes for the Webcast and backup recordings. Those broadcasts proved to be so successful, with a record number of listeners tuning in.

“KROQ had done live remote recordings in the past, taking feeds from the band’s boards but most of the results were spotty at best, but that all changed with the results from Coachella,” recalled Ramsay. “Having a dedicated board—in particular the space-conscious, feature-packed and great sounding DiGiCo SD8—made a huge difference and probably got the station to consider more seriously the idea of taking more control of their remotes and content.”

An SD9 was used on the first test run with New Found Glory, where broadcast engineer Steve McNeil was set up in one of the not-yet-disassembled cubicles. “During that first show” he laughs, “I was mixing next to someone working in their cubicle in a hallway while the space was in transition. We rolled in the SD9, mixed the show, and the results were really good.”

The inaugural event was on October 18 with Coldplay as part of a promo with the morning team of Kevin & Bean and 100 of their biggest fans, mixed live—with no prior soundcheck—on an SD8.

“The band was taping The Ellen Show prior to this so there was going to be no time with the band to get a soundcheck,” McNeil recalled, “which was a bit unnerving. We had an SD8 brought in for FOH and to mix the broadcast and web feeds, and the band had their SD7. Tony ‘Tone’ Smith, their engineer, gave me 32 stems from their previous shows so I was able to set up a few presets on the SD8, a Viva La Vida song, which was very different from the new album, and one for the old stuff. I also custom built a whole section of faders for their producer to have access to in case he wanted to participate in the mix, which he didn’t. The biggest kicker was that I never saw the band until they stepped on stage and started to play. The biggest show of my career, and my only soundcheck was off of the master returns that the engineer gave me… broadcast around the world on YouTube and to millions of listeners. Talk about nerve wracking!”

“On top of it, the station’s web producer Jay “Lightning” Tilles had planned a family vacation and ended up watching the whole thing on his iPad from Hawaii and called in to say it sounded perfect.”

Password must contain the following:

A lowercase letter

A capital (uppercase) letter

A number

Minimum 8 characters

;
SVGLogoHR_NOTAG-200

The Latest in Sports Video Production & Technology
in Your Inbox for FREE

Daily Email Newsletters Monday - Friday