Press release
19.08.2009 - Jacksonville, Florida
Sennheiser Backs Limp Bizkit Reunion Tour
Jacksonville, Florida — August 2009: Nu-metal pioneers Limp Bizkit are back on the road, having kicked off their Unicorns N’ Rainbows world tour in Latvia in May before rolling through twenty countries to complete the first European leg in Paris, France on July 5. The band, which has reunited the original lineup from its twelve-time platinum 2000 release, “Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Fla-vored Water,” is making use of Sennheiser wired and wireless microphones across the stage.
Frontman for Limp Bizkit, Fred Durst, sings into a Sennheiser SKM 935 wireless microphone on the band’s worldwide reunion tour, Unicorns N’ Rainbows.(Photo Credit: © 2009 WireImage) |
“All the mics used on tour are Sennheiser,” states front-of-house engineer Bryan Worthen, well known for his long, ongoing affiliation with the Foo Fighters and, previously, blink-182. Worthen has brought some of his Senn-heiser microphone model and mounting choices from his work with the Foo Fighters to the Limp Bizkit stage. “I’m pretty particular about what works where,” he says. Fred Durst is the only onstage performer of the band using Sennheiser wire-less equipment, reports Worthen, who maintains four channels for the front-man: “I have Fred’s main vocal plus three spare channels, all with 500 Series 935s.” |
Drummer John Otto’s twin kick drums are each miked with an e 901 inside and an e 902 outside. The snare drum features the exact same mic combination that Worthen utilizes on Taylor Hawkins’ kit with the Foo Fighters — an e 905 on the top head and an e 614 condenser on the bottom. Often associated with string and woodwind instruments, the e 614 might at first seem an unusual choice for snare drum, notes Worthen, “But it’s great. You get tons of snap out of it.” The super-cardioid pickup pattern also offers good rejection, which can really help with the mix. “Monitor engineer George Squiers was skeptical about the e 614 on the snare bottom, but now he likes it,” says Worthen.
Five more e 614s occupy the two hi-hat and three overhead positions. Three Octobans, two rack toms and two floor toms are covered by e 904 dynamic cardioids. The e 904s are all mounted inside the toms — but only on the drum kit located in the U.K. Although Squiers had little previous experience with mics mounted inside the toms, a technique that was popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s and is also favored by the Foo Fighters, he was soon won over by the superior separation and control that it brought to his mixes, ob-serves Worthen. “But the kit that’s over here in the U.S. has no mics in it and he’s bummed. Now he can’t live without them.” Positioning the mics inside the drums makes his job easier, too, shares Worthen. “With digital consoles it’s a little more work than an analog console, but the work is worth it. You don’t have to clamp your gates down as hard. And John’s drum fill is so loud, I can only imagine what external mics are going to be like on U.S. shows. I’m going to be chasing gates the entire show, I’m sure.”
The clean guitar is covered by an e 935 while the distorted guitar features a combination of Sennheiser MD 421 and an e 935. The choice of the e 935 dynamic mic, which is more typically associated with vocals, was driven by Worthen’s experience with the Foo Fighters, and more specifically Dave Grohl’s guitar. “The 935s threw George for a loop,” laughs Worthen. “He said, ‘That’s a vocal mic!’ I said, ‘trust me.’” Although not designed specifically for a guitar cabinet, the 935 can easily handle the high SPL, says Worthen, noting, “That’s a tough mic.”
Limp Bizkit are getting set to record the band’s first new studio album in nine years with the original lineup. The band’s Unicorns N’ Rainbows tour continues through the summer with more shows scheduled in Europe as well as Japan.
The Sennheiser Group, with its headquarters in Wedemark near Hanover, Germany, is one of the world’s leading manufacturers of microphones, headphones and wireless transmission systems. The family-owned company, which was established in 1945, recorded sales of over €385 million in 2008. Sennheiser employs more than 2,100 people worldwide, around 55% of whom are in Germany. Sennheiser has manufacturing plants in Germany, Ireland and the USA, and is represented worldwide by subsidiaries in France, Great Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark (Nordic), Russia, Hong Kong, India, Singapore, Japan, China, Canada, Mexico and the USA, as well as by long-term trading partners in many other countries. Also part of the Sennheiser Group are Georg Neumann GmbH, Berlin (studio microphones), K + H Vertriebs- und Entwicklungsgesellschaft mbH (Klein + Hummel studio monitors, installed sound) and the joint venture Sennheiser Communications A/S (headsets for PCs, offices and call centers).
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Frontman for Limp Bizkit, Fred Durst, sings into a Sennheiser SKM 935 wireless microphone on the band’s worldwide reunion tour, Unicorns N’ Rainbows.