Girl Named Tom recently wrapped a several-month US tour
USA - When pop music siblings Girl Named Tom - Bekah, Josh and Caleb Liechty - first set out in 2019 they would travel from city to city and gig to gig in an old minivan. Then, in 2021, Girl Named Tom made history as the first trio to ever win NBC’s The Voice, placing four songs concurrently on the iTunes Top 10 charts, with two of them reaching #1, during the show’s 21st season.
Now playing to larger audiences in bigger venues across the United States, Girl Named Tom recently wrapped a several-month tour on which they used the new Sennheiser EW-DX digital wireless system for vocals as well as electric and acoustic guitars and the EW G4 wireless in-ear monitoring system for all five musicians in the band.
“We were honoured to be the first American touring act performing with this specific set up, and we are thrilled to report that these microphones are the best we’ve ever used, by far,” the siblings commented. “At our first soundcheck, our sound man, Felix, was raving about the system, the strength of signal, the ease of set up and the consistency from night to night, city to city. The sound quality is smooth and consistent, giving us the ability to improve our music immensely - which means when we have an off night, we can’t blame it on technical difficulties.”
The three singers are all using Sennheiser’s MM 435 cardioid dynamic vocal microphone capsule. “I was excited to try out the 435 and it definitely delivered,” says Felix Hunt, who mixes front-of-house, monitors and is also the band’s tour manager. “It has a lot of nice detail, especially for a dynamic mic, but it is still predictable in the way that a dynamic mic should be. I really love the microphones. I like the 435 pretty much better than any other vocal mic I’ve ever used. I’m anxious to try it out on other artists as well.”
Hunt has been especially impressed by how easy it is to set up the EW-DX system at each show. “It has been a new thing for me with how quickly these mics scan and how easily they sync. Every day I fire them up, I scan and sync them, I hand the band the mics and they are good to go. I’ve never even had to mess with networking, they scan so fast, and I don’t think I’ve ever had to resync, so it is super simple,” he says.
The siblings are quick to praise the EW-DX mics for helping them take their vocals to the next level. “When Bekah first sang into the 435 capsule she was amazed at the natural sound of her voice," says band member Joshua Liechty. “And Caleb has reflected multiple times throughout this first tour on how these mics have improved his confidence as a singer. Thanks to the richness of the mic and the clarity of the IEM system, Caleb has been transformed from a confident harmoniser into a confident lead singer when so called.”
The band’s touring EW-DX system was also fit for a wireless electric guitar and three wireless acoustic guitars: “We did the first couple of weeks wired, then we went wireless, and everything went really well,” Hunt reports.
The three singers and the bass player use G4 wireless IEM set ups, with the drummer on a wired body pack. “It is super easy to tune them, and it doesn’t take much time at all,” Hunt says. “I scan the packs every day and then attach the relevant frequencies to the network boxes. There is almost no processing on the in-ears, which is a testament to the mics, for sure. I haven’t had to fuss with sculpting and EQ and they are always really, really happy with their vocal sound.”

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