The three new SSL Live consoles have delivered a noticeable improvement in processing power and speed of operation, reports Basquez, who started at the church as a production intern 14 years ago.
The church employs full-time production managers, audio engineers by trade, to operate the SSL consoles. It also has a pipeline in place to train volunteers as A2 assistant engineers for all four venues. “Students are learning how to run the SSL consoles,” Basquez elaborates. “We also already have students who know how to run the consoles, so now it's about showing them how to make it sound good. We have anybody from 14 years old and older running these consoles now.”
When he used to mix on the L200 at Broken Arrow, Basquez found it extremely useful that an A2 could assist him without getting in his way, thanks to the console’s inverted T-shaped layout — similar to the L650 — with a triple-wide fader bank across the lower level. “If I needed something changed, the A2 had easy access to a Fader Tile,” he says.
The Live Remote Expander with the L500 in the Tulsa Auditorium, purchased to support the major productions at the Tulsa church at that time, was also especially useful when training A2s, he says. “It helped us to be able to say, ‘I need you to add this cue; I need you to rename this; I need you to make a mix change.’ But now, with the T-shaped layout of the new L650 Plus console, if I need someone to change something there's an open Fader Tile off to the left where they don’t have to reach in front of me.”
SSL looks forward to meeting its customers and partners at NAB 2026 and will be offering live demonstrations during each day of the show. To learn more, register for NAB or to book an appointment with an SSL expert, please visit SSL’s NAB event page.