FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Custom EAW®
Loudspeakers Selected for Yoshi’s San Francisco
EAW®’s Strategic Engineering
Group customizes AX Series to keep the club’s sightlines clear
without compromising the sound
Whitinsville,
MA, USA, May 24, 2010 – Famed jazz venue Yoshi's
most recent venture, in San Francisco’s Fillmore Heritage Center,
carries on the tradition begun by Founder Yoshi Akiba and her partners
Kaz Kajimura and Hiroyuki Hori in 1973, when they opened a tiny sushi
restaurant and jazz club in Berkeley. The new location is a 28,000-square-foot,
two-story, state-of-the-art venue that features the best of local,
national and international jazz artists, with seating for 417 in the
jazz club and nearly 371 in the restaurant and lounge. In order to
keep the intimacy that helped make the original Yoshi’s so popular,
JK Sound, the Bay Area sound systems
company that co-designed and installed the new venue’s P.A.
system, turned to EAW®’s
Strategic Engineering Group to do critical custom modifications to
the EAW AX396 3-Way
Full-Range Installation Speaker, thereby rendering a new model
dubbed the EAW AX-SY 3-Way Full-Range Installation Loudspeaker. Once
again, the Strategic Engineering Group came through, assuring that
the new Yoshi’s had great sound and clear sightlines.
Michael
Lacina, President of JK Sound, and Tom Schindler of acoustical consulting
firm Charles Salter Associates,
collaborated on the design and componentry of the new system. It was
determined that an L-C-R array design would provide the desired coverage,
using three pairs of EAW’s AX396 speakers with EAW’s UX8800
Digital Signal Processor.
The
AX396 pairs were to be oriented such that their 90-degree pattern
axis was vertical and that the 60-degree pattern axis was coupled,
rendering an overall horizontal coverage of 120 degrees for each of
the left, center and right speaker pairs. This was the goal of Tom
Schindler’s design: to provide a true L-C-R listening experience
for the entire audience.
However,
they encountered the perennial conflict of visual aesthetic versus
optimized acoustic performance. “The design called for two AX396
90 x 60 degree cabinets side by side with the vertical dispersion
at 90 [degrees] and the combined horizontal dispersion at 120 [degrees],”
Lacina explains. “The front dimension of the AX box is 2’
x 3’. Acoustically, one would want to arrange the boxes vertically
side by side so that the high-mid components have minimal distance
between them. But aesthetically, one would want the smallest vertical
profile possible so that the speaker would loom less large over the
performers’ heads.”
The
solution, they decided, was to strip out the low-frequency woofers
from the AX396 altogether and hide these components in the proscenium
directly above each L-C-R Mid High pair. Long time JK systems engineer
Brad Katz came up with the idea to marry the side-by-side 60 x 90
mid-high horns together in one cabinet, thereby simplifying the complexity
of the speaker installation. The new design greatly reduced the vertical
and horizontal profile of the speaker arrays, creating a sleek, compact
and powerful system. Lacina presented the idea to both Kenton Forsythe,
founder of EAW and its Senior VP of Engineering, and Joe Fustolo,
EAW’s Director of the Strategic Engineering Group. They agreed
it could be done, and that there was also an opportunity to minimize
the distance between the acoustic centers of the adjoining mid-high
components. Thus the AX-SY was born.
A
final tweak to the design was a 30-degree angle at the top of the
cabinet to get the speaker up as high above the stage as possible.
To handle the lows, now that the woofers had been separated out, Forsythe,
Fustolo and Lacina decided on the EAW SB625z
Medium Format Subwoofer, a compact but powerful dual 15”,
for the mid bass, which was to be placed above each pair of high-mids.
Then between each of the L-C-R dual 15" mid bass cabs, there
would be two dual-18 subwoofers, all hidden from view behind an acoustically
transparent scrim in the proscenium.
“The
beauty of the design is that all of the big low frequency boxes are
completely hidden behind the scrim, so the P.A. would look petite
but sound huge and effortless,” Lacina explains. Yoshi’s
would also add other groundbreaking elements to its sound system,
including the first installation of EAW’s then-brand new MicroWedge,
which turned out to be so successful (thanks to its small footprint,
large output and high phase coherency) that Yoshi’s purchased
a dozen more MW12s
and MW15s for their
Oakland venue. And the installation would also be the most extensive
use at the time of EAW UX8800s, with a total of five units providing
40 channels of processing output. Thanks to the resourcefulness of
EAW’s Strategic Engineering Group and the hard work of Lacina,
Brad Katz, and the rest of the JK Sound team, and Tom Schindler of
Salter and associates, the newest Yoshi’s lives up to the goal
that had been set for it from the beginning: to be one of the best
places in the world to listen to live jazz.
For
more information, please visit www.eaw.com.
###
Photo
File 1: EAW_Yoshis_Photo1.JPG
Photo Caption 1: Jazz venue, Yoshi’s, newly-opened location
in San Francisco, featuring EAW AX396 3-Way Full-Range Installation
Loudspeakers installed by JK Sound.
Photo
File 2: EAW_Yoshis_Photo2.JPG
Photo Caption 2: The logo above the stage at Jazz venue Yoshi’s
newly-opened location in San Francisco, located above one of three
pairs of EAW AX396 3-Way Full-Range Installation Loudspeakers installed
by JK Sound.
Photo
File 3: EAW_Yoshis_Photo3.JPG
Photo Caption 3: Jazz venue Yoshi’s newly-opened location in
San Francisco, featuring EAW AX396 3-Way Full-Range Installation Loudspeakers
installed by JK Sound.
About
EAW
Founded in 1978 and celebrating over 30 years of excellence, Eastern
Acoustic Works® (EAW®) is a global leader in producing high-performance
professional audio equipment trusted by the most discerning professionals
for every possible sound reinforcement application.
About
LOUD Technologies Inc.
As the corporate parent for world-recognized brands Alvarez®,
Ampeg®, Blackheart®, Crate®, EAW®, Mackie® and
Martin Audio®, LOUD engineers, markets and distributes a wide
range of professional audio and musical instrument products worldwide.
Our product lines include sound reinforcement systems, analog and
digital mixers, guitar and bass amplifiers, and acoustic and electric
guitars. These products can be found in professional and project recording
studios, video and broadcast suites, post-production facilities, sound
reinforcement applications including houses of worship, stadiums,
nightclubs, retail locations, and on major musical concert tours.
The Company distributes its products primarily through retail dealers,
mail order outlets and installed sound contractors. The Company has
its primary operations in the United States with operations in the
United Kingdom, Canada and China. For more information, please see
our website: www.loudtechinc.com.
EAW
is a registered trademark of LOUD Technologies Inc. in the United
States and other countries. All other trademarks are the property
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USA
Phone: (425) 402-6108 • Fax: 425-487-4337 • Email: kati.naish@eaw.com
• Internet: www.eaw.com