
DANLEY SH-50s KEEP HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH ACOUSTICALLY ALIVE
MERIDIAN, MISSISSIPPI - MARCH 2008: It was frustrating. Highland Baptist Church in Meridian, Mississippi contacted several nationally-known audio
consultants and contractors to help solve their sound reinforcement woes, but all of them wanted to kill the beautiful acoustics in their 600-seat sanctuary and slap up line arrays.
That might not be so bad, except that
Highland Baptist regular Sunday services include a live orchestra, a large
electronic organ, and lots of congregational singing, all of which would
have suffered tremendously if the room's nice, 1.2-second, flutter-free
reverb were knocked back to nothing.
Will Roland of local firm Gracenote Consulting, Inc. got his foot in the
door by singing a different tune. As much an acoustics consultant as a sound
reinforcement consultant, Roland recognized and praised the sanctuary's
unadorned sound and proposed to improve the reinforcement situation by
designing a system with excellent pattern control to avoid over-energizing
the walls and ceiling in the first place. The tight, low-frequency pattern
control of the full range Danley SH-50 and the rich subsonic response of the
Danley TH-50 proved integral to his success.
The sanctuary typifies traditional Southern Baptist architecture, with a
sloped main floor, a balcony, stained glass windows, and an arched ceiling
with exposed beams. It is 105-feet front-to-back, 60-feet wide, and roughly
30-feet tall. The old system splashed sound all around the room, which
seriously degraded intelligibility and cut the gain before feedback to
annoyingly low levels. The choir, for instance, which needed to be
reinforced above the live orchestra and electronic organ, could scarcely get
a dB without generating a spirit-crushing squeal.
The solution was, in Roland's words, to "bring sound to the folks, not the
walls." The problem was that most full-range loudspeakers only maintain
their pattern control above 500 Hz, leaving plenty of mid-low energy to
splash around and muck things up. Roland had read about Danley Sound Lab's
remarkably tight pattern control, which extended well below 500Hz, and tried
the SH-50 in a model of the room. "It modeled perfectly," he recalled. "But
I had never actually heard a Danley. I asked everyone I knew in the
industry, from Los Angeles to New York, if they had heard Danley. Without
exception, the reviews were glowing. They came from people I respected, and
that, coupled with the way the SH-50 modeled, made me confident enough to
specify them sight unseen."
MS Audio, LLC of Jackson, Mississippi installed the system from Gracenote
Consulting, Inc.'s design drawings. As the room has two aisle's with a
center seating section and two side sections, Roland used two Danley SH-50s
powered by Lab Gruppen C48:4 amplifiers to cover each seating section with a
tight split cluster in a far/near configuration. Although it would have been
impossible with different loudspeakers, the SH-50s made it possible to
cleanly cover the balcony without going to a distributed system. "In the
model, the -6dB seam ran right down the outside aisle, between the pews and
the wall on either side," Roland explained. "I was amazed that when the
system was up and running, you could really hear the seam, both at the aisle
and in the front where the coverage drops just before the stage steps."
"Even without subwoofers, the SH-50s have plenty of low-end," he continued,"but I wanted to supplement that with some true subsonic energy - Not to
give it an audible subwoofer 'bump,' but to give them something they could
feel even at the relatively low 80-85dBA of their typical service." Also,
during special productions, when levels exceed 90dBA, they will have plenty
of SPL. He added two Danley TH-50s, each also powered by Lab Gruppen C48:4
amplifiers, to provide 20Hz to 70Hz coverage. "If you go in there, you'd
have a hard time hearing the seam between the arrays and the subs. The
transition is very musical, unlike many contemporary systems where the
presence of subwoofers as obvious. The whole system sounds like one smooth
full-range cone loudspeaker."
A Yamaha LS-9-32 console provides the input for the house system as well as
an extensive live broadcast feed and a Peavey Architectural Acoustics
Digitool MX DSP provides modest processing for the system. Some months from
now, a second phase of the project will add additional ancillary equipment,
a new technical mezzanine and modifications to the stage platform.
"The room is +/-2dB across the entire audible spectrum and rail flat from
50Hz to 18kHz, at nominal levels," said Roland. "It sounds astounding and
provides the operators with extremely accurate response to EQ and dynamics
at the FOH console. Their old sound system wasn't even close to being this
good!"
He continued, "Highland Baptist emphasizes the point that not all churches
need to be acoustically dead. There is a tendency among some to take the
easy approach, killing the acoustic space and relying on the sound system,
but this is not always a wise choice. We were able to take a nice acoustic
space and add premium sound reinforcement. So now, reinforced audio works
seamlessly with the room acoustics, and the blend of live orchestra, pipe
organ, and congregational singing with the reinforced audio is amazing. The
tight pattern control of the Danleys put sound where we needed it and kept
sound off the walls and ceiling. It was the perfect solution."
Tom Danley is one of the most innovative loudspeaker designers in the
industry today and is recognized worldwide as a pioneer for "outside the
box" thinking in professional audio technology. His legendary designs have
been utilized in projects ranging from ground zero bombing simulation, jet
engine active noise cancellation, and sonic boom generators to critical
listening mastering studios, high-end home theatre, and houses of worship
around the world.
Danley Sound Labs danley sound labs
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