These are the same guys playing at Azusa conferences with Carlton Pearson ...??????....am i right ... Because if it is , i can tell you these guys were AWESOME !!!!!!...back then ...now even more so
@@bigshaq12 Still too loud! When you have to pump yourself up so high in order to hear, what you end up doing is your personal mix becomes so loud until you can’t judge your overall volume in respect to the rest of the band. In ears shouldn’t be loud. You should be able to hear the tiniest of details. You should always mix your instrument relative to the overall band levels. Because if you don’t you either end up playing too loud or too soft. In this situation too loud. You cause the FOH and Monitor mixers to have to constantly change your levels on stage and in the house. They can’t devote their focus to the Talent on the mic.This is what I do!
@kenfcarzn you truly don't know how inear setups work. It's his *Preference * some musicians like to hear everyone at the same level in their ears... Whereas some prefer to hear themselves clear cut above the rest... To ensure that they're playing what they're supposed to.
@@youngkingmike9589 Dude I’m a musician and have been playing long enough to remember when the In Ear systems for musicians were first introduced. I also hold a degree in Audio Engineering. So you’re not talking to someone who doesn’t know sound and how all of this stuff works. I hold Certifications on several Boards and I’m a long time member of the Audio Engineering Society. Still what I said stands. Players that have their instruments louder than others in their personal mix often struggle with balance and engineers have to constantly fight to keep them balanced. Reason being is they have no sense of relevance to levels of others around them. They play louder rather than balanced. The organ is a support instrument especially when you have a keyboard player. This ain’t James Hall with Melvin Crispbell playing lead from the organ. That’s Jason White on keys please respect that and fall back. Jason would murder that dude on organ.
That’s one of my favorite all-time songs on Azusa😂😂
This video footage is cold!🔥🔥
Great Behind the Scenes shots!
These are the same guys playing at Azusa conferences with Carlton Pearson ...??????....am i right ...
Because if it is , i can tell you these guys were AWESOME !!!!!!...back then ...now even more so
Absolute 🔥🔥🔥 Yall jammin👌🏾 🙌🏾
Y’all Killen🔥🔥🔥🔥💯
I enjoyed this. Sounds amazing. Well done
Wish we had a little more keys in this one.
Me too.. Organ too loud in all the mixes..
@@Danthomas829 it’s probably his ear mix so I understand the organ being very present.
That is true
Me three lol
Didn't know what the mix REALLY sounded like till I listen on my phone afterwards smh
Organ Player is nice
He wearing me out too much over playing
The organist is too loud
You're probably hearing the organ players in-ear mix in this recording... Stay blessed!
He is playing the piano part 😢
@@bigshaq12 Still too loud! When you have to pump yourself up so high in order to hear, what you end up doing is your personal mix becomes so loud until you can’t judge your overall volume in respect to the rest of the band. In ears shouldn’t be loud. You should be able to hear the tiniest of details. You should always mix your instrument relative to the overall band levels. Because if you don’t you either end up playing too loud or too soft. In this situation too loud. You cause the FOH and Monitor mixers to have to constantly change your levels on stage and in the house. They can’t devote their focus to the Talent on the mic.This is what I do!
@kenfcarzn you truly don't know how inear setups work. It's his *Preference * some musicians like to hear everyone at the same level in their ears... Whereas some prefer to hear themselves clear cut above the rest... To ensure that they're playing what they're supposed to.
@@youngkingmike9589 Dude I’m a musician and have been playing long enough to remember when the In Ear systems for musicians were first introduced. I also hold a degree in Audio Engineering. So you’re not talking to someone who doesn’t know sound and how all of this stuff works. I hold Certifications on several Boards and I’m a long time member of the Audio Engineering Society. Still what I said stands. Players that have their instruments louder than others in their personal mix often struggle with balance and engineers have to constantly fight to keep them balanced.
Reason being is they have no sense of relevance to levels of others around them. They play louder rather than balanced. The organ is a support instrument especially when you have a keyboard player. This ain’t James Hall with Melvin Crispbell playing lead from the organ. That’s Jason White on keys please respect that and fall back. Jason would murder that dude on organ.