To celebrate the 10th anniversary of Bon Iver’s sophomore album, Bon Iver, Bon Iver, frontman Justin Vernon and his band performed the work in its entirety, along with additional material, in a pair of live shows at the new YouTube Theater at Hollywood Park in Inglewood, California.
As well as being the first concerts the group had performed in more than a year and a half, the two-day event also represented the first official worldwide deployment of the L-Acoustics L-ISA Processor II. FOH engineer Xandy Whitesel used the next-generation 3D audio processing engine to mix the two shows, which garnered praise from patrons and press.
“My goal with this band is always to enhance the music and connect with the audience, not distract them with the sound,” said Whitesel. “When it comes to immersive audio, there’s a fine line between glitz and gold, but the intimacy that L-ISA can bring to even a big venue like the YouTube Theater is amazing. I equate it to what it must have been like going from listening to mono recordings in the 1950s to first hearing stereo in the 1960s. Suddenly there’s a whole new world out there, and it’s much more sonically interesting and engaging.”
Whitesel added that the L-Acoustics immersive audio platform allows him to “more easily make my mix sound huge and beautiful, and I can use spatial panning in ways that I’d previously feel guilty for,” he laughed. “That can radically change how one mixes because normally we make so many choices and compromises based on building a clean and big-sounding ‘mono-ish’ left-right mix. With L-ISA, the mix from my FOH position translates consistently to almost the entire venue – not just to a narrow strip of audience standing in the middle of the room. I heard someone describe these YouTube Theater shows as a ‘visceral, communal explosion of emotion,’ which perfectly sums up the ideal Bon Iver concert experience that L-ISA helps create.”
Whitesel is no stranger to L-ISA – having used the technology for the second leg of the band’s i,i tour in early 2020, and for a one-off concert at the Santa Barbara Bowl two years prior. He said the recent availability of the L-ISA Processor II makes an already great thing even better.
“The new spatial front-fill is an uber-cool improvement,” he said. “Before now, front-fill was mono, and so this new ability finally brings a full spatially immersive experience to the very front rows. L-Acoustics has also developed a new reverb that’s remarkable. The ones that I normally use are stereo, whereas the onboard L-ISA reverb spreads out the ‘verb tail amongst the whole L-ISA configuration, and it sounds fantastic.”
“The new Controller software adds several new features that greatly enhance usability as well,” Whitesel added. “There is a feature for tying solo on the desk – in my case, a DiGiCo Quantum7 feeding out to all of L-ISA’s 96 available objects – to focus on the correct object in the L-ISA Controller software. And they added compatibility with stereo channels and groups, which also helped me easily translate my left-right session and left-right brain to the L-ISA Scene/Extension setup. Even though it does take some training and practice to optimally use object-based audio, I don’t think it’s possible to have a bad mix with L-ISA.”
Although it might be easy to assume that transitioning a 6,000-seat venue’s fixed stereo loudspeaker system into a 7.1 L-ISA Immersive Hyperreal spatial audio design might require a significant investment in additional gear and time, these two shows disproved that, L-Acoustics noted. The YouTube Theater’s stage PA primarily features 57 L-Acoustics K2 and 30 Kara II enclosures that make up the LCR main arrays and out-fill hangs. For Bon Iver’s shows, local certified provider 3G Productions brought in 11 more K2, plus two dozen extra Kara II for the panoramic system’s Extension arrays. The switchover time to lower, reconfigure and re-fly the entire loudspeaker system to match the L-ISA design was five hours from start to finish.
For these shows, five Scene arrays – spread out and flown over the width of the stage – all featured 10 K2 over four Kara II down-fills, paired with far left and right Extension arrays, both composed of a dozen Kara II. Nine K2 over six Kara II per side served as out-fill hangs, while six Kara II per side functioned as over-balcony out-fills. Two arrays of eight KS28 subwoofers each were hung behind the centre array in a cardioid configuration, with a further 12 KS28 positioned on the floor across the full arc of the stage. A dozen Kiva II spread out across the stage lip delivered spatial front-fill for the first several rows of seating. LA12X amplified controllers fully powered the entire system, which was driven by an L-ISA Processor II and three P1 digital audio processors, all on redundant Milan-AVB networking.
L-Acoustics’ head of product and technology marketing, Scott Sugden, described the result of using more than 180 loudspeakers combined with object-based mixing: “Although most fans walking into these shows didn’t know what to expect, what they heard was much more clear, detailed and nuanced than they had ever experienced before. Even if they were seated all the way at the back of the venue, it felt like Justin was 10ft [3.05m] in front of them. The effects of his voice engulfed the entire theatre and enveloped each patron with sound, giving the shows the intimacy of listening to the band on headphones. But it also very much had the dynamic raw power of a live performance and the ability to connect the fans with the artists on stage.”
“L-Acoustics has spent the last 30 years developing technologies to ensure that everyone in the audience has an amazing experience, and L-ISA is the absolute culmination of those efforts,” continued Sugden. “It will be hard for those fans who were at one of these shows to go back to a ‘regular’ concert again after experiencing this.”
“It was a cathartic experience for myself, the band and the audience,” said Whitesel. “From a personal perspective, to be mixing my favourite band in a wonderful, huge, brand-new venue on an insanely good PA is amazing. I feel very lucky for the opportunity. This show felt, in many ways, like the ideal version of a live Bon Iver show. I’m very proud of the band for pulling their performance together after having been away from each other for so long. Pros! They had the time of their lives up there, and so did I using L-ISA again.”