J-HALEY wrote:GuitarMikeB wrote:yod wrote:But for about $200 more you could get an L1 on eBay that does ALL of that, sets up entirely in 10 minutes, fits in the passenger seat of your car, and SOUNDS BETTER for an acoustic gig. Do you use more than 4 channels for an acoustic gig? If so, patch in a mixer.
If you play venues large enough have a PA system, you can use it as a stage monitor and control the mix sent to the main board (should you think that is necessary)
Those L1's do work great for acoustic, not sure about rock acts, though. There was a band setting up with one at a restaurant I was at on Saturday, but we had to leave, couldn't wait around another 1/2 hour for them to start, I was curious how it would sound with what looked like an unmic-ed drum set, 2 guitars and bass. They had it set up near the back with the drummer, so obviously it was being used as stage monitor as well as main output.
They work fine for small club and I STRESS SMALL VENUE! 100 people MAX. but better for the under 70 size venue. They have a wide field of throw and with them you really don't need monitors. If you have ever seen those speakers I can only say IMO "they sound about like they look" not very impressive! Only for very SMALL venue.
I'm not going to tell you they are the best PA system you can get; I'd prefer a wall of JBL cabs with a truck to carry them and a crew to set it all up and run it live. That's more than I can afford, if I'm going to make a profit touring.
But these Bose L1s will work for a rock band and they will work in venues up to about 500-600 seats depending on how you set them up, but you need the extra bass package (4 woofers per stick instead of one) and multiple sticks spread out.
The drawbacks are: If there are balconies in the room, you'll need sticks on every floor. For a high stage you need (at least) one on the floor and one on the stage. If there are a lot of bodies standing/dancing in front of them, the bass won't get through, so you need to spread them out wide in that situation.
It's a different technology which requires a different approach than traditional sound systems, but when used correctly they work for any venue. They are perfect for acoustic acts in venues under 500 seats. They automatically EQ to the room, all I have to do is adjust the volume.
Again....I'd rather a semi-truck load of JBLs and a crew to run them but lacking that, this works better 99% of the time.
For a solo act nothing beats them for ease, clarity, space, and quality independence.
I carry 3 of them and love being able to hear myself clearly now. I'm no longer subject to the whims of a soundman.