Solotech returned to Brockwell Park in South London recently for successive weekends of festival activity, fielding Martin Audio’s flagship WPL on main stage of several events for the first time.
After populating the event in previous years with MLA, it was time to for the company’s recently expanded WPL inventory. This provided site coverage for a variety of events that included Wide Awake, Field Day, Cross The Tracks, City Splash, Mighty Hoopla and Lambeth’s Country Show over the long duty cycle.
The festival site attracted an aggregate of more than 300,000 people in all, and Solotech – working alongside production manager Frankie Tee of EnTEEtainment and technical production manager Amy Harmsworth – fielded 62 WPL elements on main stage driven in one-box resolution from Martin Audio iKon iK42 multichannel DSP amplifiers.
The main hangs comprised 16 elements per side; side hangs were split six WPL (stage left) and 12 WPL (stage right), while the final 12 WPL modules formed a single central delay hang. A second delay tower of previous years was deemed unnecessary, thanks to WPL’s throw capability. Further boosting the sound were 18 SXHF218 in a castellated broadside cardioid sub-array, with front fill comprising 12 Martin Audio WPC and four XD12.
Moving from the second stage last year to main stage system tech duties was Ali Hellard, who has extensive experience working with WPL. It was his task to optimise the sound and ensure there were no offsite breaches while maintaining levels at FOH. As Solotech Account Manager David Preston notes: ‘It’s a tricky site, and so we needed that one-box control because we were moving from MLA to WPL – which is really good at steering audio.’
Hellard confirms that, with eight stages plus fairground rides, the site needed to be heavily monitored for sound spill, with around seven measurement points around its perimeter. Onsite limits were set at 103dB (C-weighted) for morning slots, 105dB(C) for afternoon, early evening and headliners 108dB(C). This was easily achieved, while meeting offsite thresholds.
The reggae-orientated City Splash had proved to be the greatest challenge in view of the heavy low-frequency demand: ‘Tonally, I tend to prefer arranging them in stacks of three with one reversed,’ he says. ‘However, on a sensitive site, castellated is much better from a pattern control point of view.’
The cardioid also helped mitigate noise propagation behind the PA, where it was needed with that entire area designated Hard Avoid in the Martin Audio software, a proprietary feature that actively reduces direct sound and sound leakage to an area by up to 30dB.
Both Hellard and David Preston reported on the high number of favourable comments from guest engineers, noting the PA’s ‘clarity, transparency and presence’. Preston couldn’t have been happier: ‘This has been a very busy summer for Solotech and so we have increased our WPL inventory in order to service the large number of events.’
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