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Lukas Graham opts for Solid State Logic System T flypack

Lukas Graham opts for Solid State Logic System T flypack
Lukas Graham opts for Solid State Logic System T flypack

When Frank Grønbæk, front-of-house engineer with Danish pop band Lukas Graham, visited Solid State Logic’s U.K. headquarters and had a demonstration of the System T Tempest Control App, paired with a TE1 processing engine and a 16-channel Fader Tile, he realized he had found a system meeting his needs.

 

Grønbæk, who is also a live and studio product specialist at Nordic Pro Audio, one of SSL’s partners in Denmark, has worked with Lukas Graham since 2012. The band’s monitor engineer, Rasmus Valentin, also works for Alfa Audio, SSL’s live sound products distribution partner for Denmark. “We’re both involved with the same band, but we’re also involved with the same brand”, says Grønbæk.

 

In Grønbæk’s custom-configured FOH mixing package, a System T 16-channel Furniture Fader Tile and a dedicated touchscreen are housed in a custom case to protect the rig in transit. A single-rack-space SSL TE1 Tempest Engine, which supports up to 256 paths, is paired with a custom-configured Windows-based computer running SSL’s Tempest Control App.

 

The TCA Flypack is interfaced to an outboard hardware interface managing routing and matrixing in and out of the setup, as well as a hardware processor providing multi-zone P.A. management. A Mac Mini computer also acts as a server, hosting plug-ins and presets that Grønbæk has developed during more than a decade with Lukas Graham, and additionally runs sound level measurement and metering apps.

 

Grønbæk’s idea, beginning in 2016 with Lukas Graham’s busy touring schedule, was to find a lightweight mixing console that took up minimal rack space and occupied a small footprint at FOH. “We travel a lot and do as many as ninety gigs a year, all over the world”, he says. “We need to be able to travel light when we fly, so the weight can never exceed 32 kilos for the whole rack. But we also want to maintain a high level of audio consistency. It doesn’t matter if we’re playing a festival for 30,000 people, a showcase for 500 people or a morning TV show, it has to sound exactly the same all the time.”

 

About the time before 2016, when the touring production switched to portable consoles, Grønbæk says: “We did some festival gigs with a combination of SSL Live consoles at front-of-house and monitors, so we were familiar with the sound of SSL equipment. But you cannot easily fly with an L550.”

 

Despite the high channel count supported by the TE1 Tempest Engine, Lukas Graham’s stage setup demands relatively few inputs, says Grønbæk. “We have a drum kit and a bunch of microphones for vocals, so about sixteen of the 40 or 45 channels coming from the stage are mic-level.” The wireless bass passes via Dante to the console while the wireless guitar is fed over AES/EBU. The outputs from the computers driving the MIDI keyboards are routed to FOH via MADI. The support tracks playback rig is also networked over Dante to FOH.

 

When mixing, Grønbæk typically has the system configured with VCAs on the top fader layer. The link between the physical faders and the touchscreen can be disengaged, allowing him to direct his creative focus onto the faders yet still adjust other channels on the touchscreen. It’s also a simple matter to take control of an onscreen channel from an encoder on the Fader Tile, he notes.

 

Lukas Graham’s live show is timecode-based. “I have snapshot automation”, says Grønbæk. “The incoming timecode is triggering different snapshots.” When playing festivals or fly-dates where there may not be enough time to optimize the P.A. rig before the band take the stage, Grønbæk has the timecode triggering a variety of snapshots - adjusting channel mutes, controlling auxiliary sends or making delay and reverb changes - during the first few songs so that he can make fader moves with one hand while trimming the speaker system with his other hand on a separate touchscreen.

 

System T has two faders per channel, he also points out: “So whenever there’s a new song, there’s a new level on fader two, but fader one stays at unity gain. All my faders are flat at 0 dB, but the other fader is doing all the automation underneath.”

 

Grønbæk first took his new TCA console out on a U.S. tour with Lukas Graham in January 2024, followed by a string of dates in the U.K. in March, then eight nights at the same venue in Denmark around Easter. The band is playing festivals across Europe this summer.

 

(Photos: Solid State Logic)

 

www.solidstatelogic.com

 

Lukas Graham opts for Solid State Logic System T flypackLukas Graham opts for Solid State Logic System T flypack

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