Shows at Massey Hall have generated a variety of live albums over the years, including a legendary 1953 Charlie Parker-Dizzy Gillespie concert, a 1971 performance by Neil Young, Rush’s 1976 gig, captured on All the World's a Stage, and Ronnie Hawkins’ 60th birthday celebration concert in 1995. Bringing concert recording capabilities into the modern era, Allied Music Centre is comprehensively wired with fiber, McKendrick says, with a 10-gig backbone extending throughout the entire facility and into Massey Hall. To record an event in Massey Hall, for example, staff move the 96-channel remote preamp system, which includes a selection of SSL’s Network I/O interfaces, to the stage. “They plug in, we carry Dante up to the System T and away we go,” he says.
For live shows, engineers have been taking advantage of System T’s snapshot capabilities, McKendrick also reports. One of the first events mixed through the System T was the Polaris Music Prize awards gala in September, which included performances from seven of the nominees. “The snapshots are intuitive so we're not finding that there's a giant learning curve for people coming in and using the console. In fact, we’ve been giving people an afternoon orientation on it and the next day they're in here mixing 90 or 100 tracks, live.”
On the studio side, he continues, “The way that we've got snapshots set up to switch back and forth between playback and recording is the fastest that I've seen on any console. So we're able to work very, very effectively with the System T.”