Two Door Cinema Club - back on the road (photo: Joe Okpako)
UK - Northern Ireland’s new wave indie pop returned to touring with their fourth studio album, False Alarm, continuing a worldwide relationship with Britannia Row Productions. At FOH is Ian Laughton, a long-time Britannia Row customer who has live engineered the Club’s shows for over five years.
“A great thing about mixing this band is that they want you to put your own stamp on it. They want a pretty different vibe compared to their recorded sound, and I love that; I have to be able to put my own touch on whatever I work on,” says Laughton, who works closely with monitor engineer Steve Donovan.
The band’s engineers are joined by Britannia Row’s seasoned system tech Cesar Lopez, newly qualified stage tech Jacopo Fois and second system tech Giacomo Gasparini. The audio team’s combined efforts have been noted in the band’s close circles.
“I’m very happy with how this tour’s going,” Laughton continues. “The band’s management came to the first of two nights in Manchester and said not only was it the best gig they’d heard at that venue (the notoriously tricky Victoria Warehouse), but possibly the best they’d ever heard the band sound live.”
Laughton says this is where Britannia Row’s Training Academy comes into its own and ensures its engineer are a real asset to any tour he works on. “The best thing you can do is get trainees on the road and into real life touring experience. The quality and enthusiasm of the crew they send us is great. They’re producing very dedicated and intelligent audio techs who are on their way to becoming great engineers in the future, so they’re doing something right.”
Two Door Cinema Club production manager Bennie Brongers also likes to keep his engineers happy: “Brit Row are one of my suppliers of choice, and they are my FOH and monitor engineers’ first choice. I’m very happy with Brit Row’s service, but as a production manager, you have to listen to your engineers, and to what equipment they want to use from which company.”
Both Laughton and Donovan opt to mix on a Midas PRO2, with Ian choosing custom racks of analogue outboard gear for a “warm sound.” Britannia Row invested in vintage GML 8900 compressors for Laughton some years ago. His rack also houses TC M6000 multichannel-FX processors, Avalon VT-737DP channel strip and a Klark Teknik DN9650 digital network bridge.
In monitor world, Steve is working with Sennheiser 2000 Series in-ears and Sennheiser 935 mics with a DL431 mic split pre-amp.
The tour is travelling largely with an L-Acoustics K2 PA, KS28 subwoofers and Kara enclosures, with the biggest configuration for London’s O2 Arena expanding with a main K1 hang.
“I love L-Acoustics,” comments Laughton. “On the last tour, I used the K2 for the first time, and although it took me a while to get used to the high fidelity, once I knew it could really pack a punch, I was really impressed considering how light the box is. Of course, a lot of how your boxes sound is down to the system tech and once again Brit Row have an amazing reputation with their crew. Cezar nails it every time.”
Laughton, who has been using Britannia Row’s services for over 20 years, chooses Clair Global in North America and describes the strategic partnership as “a fantastic joining of forces.”
(Jim Evans)

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