Engineer Martin Walker has a long history of working with hard rock bands
UK - Iron Maiden's current tour production includes a DiGiCo SD7 at Front of House. Engineer Martin Walker has a long history of working with hard rock bands, including Judas Priest, Slash, Whitesnake and Californian thrashers Testament. He began working with Iron Maiden last year, bringing his console of choice, a DiGiCo SD7, with him.

"I really like DiGiCo consoles and was using an SD8 with Judas Priest," he says. "The first time I was involved with the SD7 was when I sat with Lars Brogaard on the first Rod Stewart residency at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas. I moved up to one with Judas Priest two years ago and I haven't looked back."

Maiden generate about 40 inputs, plus another dozen from various outboard units and playback at FoH. Outputs comprise main left and right, with subs on an aux and vocal fills. Martin also does a multi-track recording of most shows on to ProTools with a JoeCo system backup.

"I have nothing but good results from the SD7. Sonically it's in a league of its own, it sounds natural, warm and has a rock'n'roll edge without you having to overdrive, over EQ or over anything," says Martin.

"I love the onboard multiband compressor - it's an absolute necessity with Bruce's voice - but one of the most important features for me is the video screen. There is a camera dedicated to following Bruce throughout the show and I have a feed from it, which I literally watch all night. It shows me where he is on stage, so I can mute his mic when necessary, it also shows me how he is handling the mic and I can see from his performance how much input I am getting. It can vary a lot, so a smooth vocal mix would be impossible without being able to keep a constant watch on him. It remains a big challenge, but the close up video eases the task."

The band continues its Maiden England tour with two shows at London's The O2, before moving on to the USA and South America in September and October.

(Jim Evans)


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