Small Is Beautiful - Yamaha DM7-EX Tours Clubs With Twenty One Pilots

In May 2024, global superstars Twenty One Pilots played five secret club dates in Berlin, London, Mexico City, New York and their hometown of Columbus, Ohio, in anticipation of their upcoming album release and worldwide arena tour. Sound engineers Cliff Skinner and Kenny Sellars were faced with the challenge of how to shrink the band’s arena-sized audio system into small clubs without compromising audio quality. The answer was built around Yamaha’s DM7-EX digital mixing console.

The short An Evening With Twenty One Pilots tour was booked in anticipation of the band’s new album, Clancy, to be released in late May, and a world arena tour which kicks off in August.

Front of house engineer Kenny Sellars and monitor engineer Cliff Skinner are used to mixing arena shows on Yamaha’s flagship RIVAGE PM5 and PM10 digital mixing systems using Yamaha’s Genius.lab software and the Open Sound Control (OSC) protocol to create highly customized setups. They faced a major challenge because of the band’s commitment to delivering the best sounding show possible.

“The band care about being perfect - it doesn’t matter where we are. In the past, whether it’s an arena or a club, we were bringing in triple width racks with full size consoles,” says Kenny. “This time we needed a compact and also cost-effective package, knowing we wouldn’t be selling 20,000 tickets every night.”

Having seen a demo of the Yamaha DM7 at Clair Global’s Lititz headquarters, Cliff realized that the DM7-EX (the DM7 coupled with the DM7 Control expansion controller) would have the capacity and flexibility they needed, in a small, physically manageable format. “Being in the Yamaha family, and with the similarities between it and the RIVAGE PM systems we’re comfortable with, it was the obvious choice,” he says.

“To be honest, I was a little hesitant at first. Sound engineers don’t always like change! But Cliff was like, ‘Dude, you’re gonna love this’,” smiles Kenny.

“I was kind of worried about some of my workflow, but it’s only got a few less faders than a RIVAGE PM control surface. My layout’s almost exactly the same, the layers and center section are the same, and it programs just like the RIVAGE PM system. I was like, wow, this feels just like home.”

He continues, “The band didn’t want us to scale down and and not be as good. We had to say trust us, we feel comfortable making it happen on these consoles. It’s the first time we’ve been able to say that - we can take a smaller console and still give the band what they need, with all the tools to do the things that we need for the show.”

The two DM7-EXs were on the same Dante network, along with a Rio3224-D2 I/O rack, eight channels of Axient digital wireless microphones and playback. Every input in the system was either local I/O on each desk or from the devices on the Dante network.

“There are only two people on stage, but we have a lot of communication between techs and band members. We’re hitting 70 channels before we’re even talking about returns and everything else,” says Cliff.

Meanwhile, Russ Long at Yamaha has been available to help. “Russ will always get an answer for me right away. Working with Yamaha has been a great, great experience,” says Kenny. “Everyone at Yamaha has been great, working with us to help implement things better,” agrees Cliff. “Having that relationship, the trust between us and their support has enabled us to be more creative.”

As the club tour ended, both engineers described the experience of using the DM7-EX as completely positive. “The console has allowed us to maintain the highest possible standard in the smallest possible footprint. I never expected to have 120 channels available on something this small, which didn’t feel claustrophobic. The familiarity with the Yamaha ecosystem has allowed the transition between the RIVAGE PM to DM7 and back to be seamless,” says Cliff.

“The DM7-EX has everything I need. It’s the perfect solution to keep me comfortable in the Yamaha world, and fit the bill for these club shows in four different countries,” concludes Kenny.

Pull quotes

“We needed a compact and also cost-effective package, knowing we wouldn’t be selling 20,000 tickets every night” - Kenny Sellars

“The console has allowed us to maintain the highest possible standard in the smallest possible footprint. I never expected to have 120 channels available on something this small” - Cliff Skinner

Pull quotes

Ohio, United States

Yamaha Digital Mixing Console DM7

Série DM7

La série DM7 est une gamme de tables de mixage numérique innovante qui garantit non seulement une qualité sonore inégalée, une facilité d’utilisation et une fiabilité élevée pour connecter les ingénieurs, les artistes et le public, mais est également hautement évolutive et suffisamment flexible pour être adaptée à diverses applications. Il peut être configuré sous diverses formes en fonction des préférences de l’ingénieur pour prendre en charge un large éventail d’applications.

Série RIVAGE PM

Pour accompagner au mieux les ingénieurs du son et les artistes qu'ils sonorisent, Yamaha ne fait absolument aucun compromis en matière de qualité. Le son, l'opérabilité et la fiabilité doivent refléter la perfection, et être implémentés de manière à permettre aux ingénieurs du son de se concentrer pleinement sur l'essence de leur travail. La série RIVAGE PM incarne cet idéal au plus haut niveau, tout en connectant la technologie, l'art et le public.

Racks de la série R (A/N N/A) : 2è génération

La deuxième génération des racks d'entrée/sortie (AD/DA) compatibles Dante de la série R apportent des améliorations significatives au niveau de la qualité sonore, de la fiabilité, et de la confirmation visuelle des statuts. Avec la surface de contrôle CSD-R7, ces racks d'entrée/sortie sont des composants du système de mixage numérique RIVAGE PM7. Ils s'utilisent également avec les consoles de mixage numériques des séries CL et QL.