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BNY Streams Live Events Remotely with eMotion LV1

Aug 23, 2020

Like many providers of video, audio and lighting services for live events, Iowa’s BNY Productions has recently shifted its focus to streaming. We learned how the Waves eMotion LV1 live mixer has helped them streamline their remote live streaming and broadcast services for major clients.

BNY owners Ben and Bill Kristijanto with eMotion LV1

BNY owners Ben and Bill Kristijanto with eMotion LV1

The industry-wide shift to live streaming in 2020 has found some companies in a unique position to provide remote services to their clients. In the case of the Sioux City-based BNY Productions, a provider of video, audio and lighting services in the Midwest, this has included live streams for political rallies and speeches, as among their clients are recent presidential candidates and former presidents of the United States of America.

“We were out on the road with a client earlier this year,” says BNY co-owner Bill Kristijanto, “using the Waves eMotion LV1 mixer and also supplying video, lighting, staging, and room accessories such as stanchion, flags, pipe and drape, and more. However, due to COVID-19, the client had to stop doing all live events. They came to us for a solution to be able to do broadcast, without a crew in the room. Subsequently, we needed to build a TV/broadcast studio that was able to handle the client’s needs, such as phone interviews, podcast, video conferencing, direct to camera recording, live network TV interviews, and live virtual events, while being controlled/produced off site.”

“To clarify,” he adds “the only person accompanying the client is his personal assistant, so everyone else – the audio engineer, lighting engineer, video engineer, shader, producers, and everything in-between – is off site and in a different state. To make things a little more complicated, the client has a team of people who are involved in producing/directing the events who are scattered in different states, and they too need to monitor the feed at near-zero latency!”

“Little did we know that our decision to move to the Waves eMotion LV1 mixer in 2016 was the best choice we could have made for a situation such as this. Today we own ten Waves eMotion LV1 mixers. We are now able to easily remote into the mixer from states away. This is definitely a feature that wouldn’t be as easy to do with any other console on the market.”

A Waves eMotion LV1 system at the client’s “remote studio”

A Waves eMotion LV1 system at the client’s “remote studio”

Kristijanto describes BNY’s setup: “Our Control Studio here at the BNY headquarters has two SoundGrid Extreme Server-C’s and an Apogee Symphony Mk II 8x8+8MP SoundGrid audio interface. Then, the studio we built for our client, which we call the “Remote Studio,” includes two SoundGrid Extreme Server-Cs and three DiGiGrid IOX audio interfaces. The Remote Studio’s audio signal chain starts with either a DPA 4017B shotgun mic or a DPA lavaliere mic, into a DiGiGrid IOX. The client has an option of monitoring through an IFB or a wedge, depending on the event. Out of the console, the audio gets embedded into the video system, which then goes into a custom server that takes care of the point-to-point streaming over to our Control Studio for low-latency monitoring. Once the data is decoded by another custom server in the Control Studio, the audio then goes into the Waves eMotion LV1 mixer using an Apogee Symphony SoundGrid I/O, feeding into the Meyer Bluehorn system.”

“One of the big advantages of this setup,” he says “is that we are able to have different engineers and operators control part of the system from different locations. For example, we can have a video engineer in Pennsylvania, a shader in Washington D.C., and an audio engineer in Iowa, all running an event from their respective homes.”

On choosing the LV1, he comments, “There are several unique benefits using the LV1 system. As an audio engineer, I like that I’m able to make a custom signal flow to the individual channel strip. Other consoles don’t have that capability. Typically, the channel strips, such as the EQ, dynamics, effects, etc., are predetermined in other consoles. The Waves eMotion LV1 allows us to integrate easily with plugins so I can precisely shape the sound to my liking.”

“Waves plugins are an integral part of our workflow,” he say. “We are currently using the Mercury, SSL 4000 Collection, Abbey Road Collection, Dugan Automixer + Dugan Speech, Pianos & Keys, API Collection and CLA Classic Compressors bundles. The full line of Waves products, really. But if I were to choose only four or five must-have plugins, I would start with the Waves WNS Noise Suppressor, since rather than only having one control, the WNS lets me have control in several frequency bands, allowing me to suppress some bands, without affecting others. The Primary Source Expander (PSE) would be next – it is unique in that the talent doesn’t always want to mess with IFB and would prefer to use a wedge instead. The PSE really helps minimize the wedge noise into the talent’s feed.”

“Vocal Rider is among our top plugins to use with the LV1”: The LV1 at BNY’s control studio

“Vocal Rider is among our top plugins to use with the LV1”: The LV1 at BNY’s control studio

“I would also include Vocal Rider, which is a true timesaver, as we required something that could keep up with a dynamic speaker. The talent can sometimes talk very softly followed by a dramatic change in volume. By putting this plugin on top of the signal chain, it helps keep the level consistent down the chain, so it hits the dynamics at about the same level. That way, the presenter’s voice is always present regardless of the volume changes. And of course, the F6 Floating-Band Dynamic EQ – since we can’t be there physically to do things like properly place microphones, we have to rely on personnel with limited production knowledge and mic placement isn’t always optimal. Thanks to the F6, proximity effects due to poor mic placement are taken care of automatically. It also allows for easy transition between our female talent and male talent vocals as well as quick turnarounds.”

“Another great feature of the LV1,” Kristijanto adds, “is that the console is extremely compact in size. When working in a residence where space is limited but we do not want to sacrifice sound quality, the LV1’s size makes it easy for us to maintain our high-quality audio standard, without taking up the large amount of space that most mixers of that caliber require. To further this point, the backup capabilities are similar to what you’d find in ‘big-boy’ consoles, which leads me to another benefit – stability. The issue of stability is something that we cannot compromise on, and currently our custom LVfly system has been running continuously for months without a single glitch.”

“A final feature that I would like to highlight is the overall design and scalability of the LV1: the flexibility of being able to add an additional I/O whenever and wherever is unprecedented.”

In this period when remote work and live streaming have become essential, Kristijanto believes his company made the right choice when they first chose the LV1 system in 2016: “eMotion LV1’s strengths continue to reaffirm that we made the right decision four years ago.”

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