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HK Audio rocks John Peel stage at Glastonbury 2008

HK Audio ConTour side fill monitors on the John Peel stage at Glastonbury 2008 The 2008 Glastonbury Festival again attracted some 150,000 visitors. The festivals' numerous stages big and small, outdoors and in tents featured performances of about 500 bands, artists, and DJs representing every conceivable style and genre.
The John Peel Stage is one of the main attractions at Glastonbury Festival. Named in honor of the late great radio DJ and talent scout par excellence John Peel, who had passed away in 2004, this venue affords gifted bands the opportunity to strut their stuff in front of a large audience. 43 bands took to the John Peel Stage in 2008, including The Cribs, Friendly Fires, Patrick Watson, and The Futureheads.
The John Peel Stage’s monitor tech, Mike Taylor from Emarty, used HK Audio stage monitoring products for the first time in 2008. Fourteen CT 115 ConTour Series high-/midrange units, biamped with DSM 2060 controllers and LABgruppen FP 10000 power amps, served as front monitors. Two CT 112 enclosures and four CTA 118 units provided the drum-fill, and one ConTour Array with two 2 CTA 208 and CTA 118 enclosures made up the side-fill system. Commenting on the performance, Mike Taylor noted, “I’ve been an HK Audio user for quite some time. Because the cabinets that we used last year didn’t work out so well, this year I used the CT 115 from HK Audio, which satisfied all the demands, and performed and sounded excellent. With 43 bands and 20 minutes each change-over time for the entire stage, you need monitors that handle this kind of action. I was tremendously satisfied with the CT 115 units. The ConTour Array side-fill was so accurate it felt like being in a studio. And the CTA 118 and CT 112 combos for the drummers were a real hit! The low end came in big and bold, and the high-end was so super-clean that every drummer left the stage after the gig with a smiling face. The Wedges really rocked." Commenting on the EQing, Mike Taylor says, “At very festival you encounter minor problems, usually in the guise of a band’s own audio engineer who doesn’t know the system and insists on tweaking it to his taste. This year, not once did I have to re-EQ, and that’s quite remarkable when dealing with 43 bands in three days."
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