A pair of Genelec DSP monitors provide uncoloured and utterly accurate imaging
USA - The Jazz Theatre on the top floor of the Old US Mint Building in New Orleans is designed around the music itself: the small (120-seat) rectangular room is intimate and acoustically pristine, fitted with complex movable panels that provide both diffusion and absorption while offering variable acoustics as they slide into place as needed for different types of jazz artists.

As part of the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park, the Jazz Theatre is part of a larger museum that incorporates the State Museum's already substantial collection of jazz artifacts, a collection that includes sheet music, manuscripts, photographs, records (including what is thought to be the first jazz recording, from 1917) and instruments such as Louis Armstrong's first cornet.

The theatre is a modular 4,000sq.ft performance space with a stage that can be configured multiple ways to accommodate any type of jazz genre. The venue has hosted several great performances since it opened in late 2011, and it's recorded many of them via its state-of-the-art recording studio at the rear of the space, where reference speakers from Genelec serve as the monitor of choice.

A pair of Genelec 8240A Bi-Amplified DSP Monitors, featuring Genelec Directivity Control Waveguide (DCW) and the rounded edges and gently curved front and sides of the Minimum Diffraction Enclosure (MDE), provide uncoloured and utterly accurate imaging. A Genelec 7270A Active DSP Subwoofer provides additional low end, creating the ultimate stereo-and-sub monitoring system for music as nuanced as jazz.

"The Genelecs work amazingly well in this studio - their imaging and accuracy are the best," says Sam Brandt, AV Designer on the project and a senior consultant with Akustiks, the South Norwalk, Connecticut firm that designed the Jazz Theatre's acoustics and AV systems. Brandt says the Genelec monitors are connected using their onboard AES digital inputs in combination with a digital-thru connection. "The ease of their setup and the way they sound are equally remarkable," says Brandt. "They are impressive."

(Jim Evans)


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