DiGiCo Quantum 338 consoles took up both the front of house and monitor positions
UK - George Ezra completed his third album Gold Rush Kid in July last year, swiftly followed by a UK arena tour from September to November. DiGiCo Quantum 338 consoles took up both the front of house and monitor positions, offering monitor engineer Oliver Weeks and FOH Mike Timm a user-friendly interface, complete channel freedom and faster processing speeds.
Both Weeks and Timm have worked with the singer for a number of years, with Timm joining in 2015, halfway through Ezra’s first album campaign, and Weeks mixing monitors since early 2018, around the start of Staying at Tamara’s, Ezra’s second studio album.
Previously using an SD10 on monitors and SD12-96 at FOH, the setup worked well until Timm started running short of channels. Both he and Weeks knew they would need to up the ante for the new album campaign.
“This new album cycle was the obvious time to upgrade,” says Weeks. “The additional features of the Quantum range were an obvious draw for us. We briefly considered migrating to two Quantum 7 consoles, but this seemed like overkill for this project. The Q338 was an ideal middleground, and having three 17-inch high brightness screens was a major selling point for us.”
Although Weeks had not toured with a Quantum console before getting Q338, he had the opportunity to play with one at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 2019, where DiGiCo host a programming suite and demo facility. “I spent some time with Dave Bigg [Product Specialist, DiGiCo] going over the new Quantum feature set, which helped me gain a comprehensive understanding of what was on offer. And the surface is immediately familiar to any DiGiCo user, so it’s a painless transition,” Weeks notes.
Also new to Quantum Series is Timm, who Bigg also spent time with in DiGiCo’s prep room before going into the first round of rehearsals. “I was a bit rusty in all things DiGiCo after the pandemic, so it was great to spend some time with Dave to go over the features again. Everything came flooding back and the new features fit into my workflow very nicely,” explains Timm.
For monitoring, Weeks has 72 inputs fed from an SD-Rack and a Nano-Rack, both on 32-bit mic pre-amp cards. “We use 38 analogue outputs and two AES which are feeding PSM1000 IEMs, on stage sub-fills, a Porter & Davies kicker, shout speakers and a few mix stems to the drummer so he can control his own cue and click levels on the fly,” he adds.
“We are very pleased with the performance of Quantum 338s,” concludes Timm. “It has been fantastic to use them on this tour. The consoles sound great, and with a maximum of 128 input channels with 64 busses, and a trio of high brightness multitouch screens, Q338 has been a huge upgrade for us. We can’t wait to use them again.”

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