Mighty Rock launches with Midas console

The first XL8 to be based in Australia has been named as the flagship console for Melbourne-based rental company Mighty Rock Performance Technology.

Supplied by Midas distributor National Audio Systems in Melbourne, Mighty Rock’s XL8 is joined by a Midas PRO9 digital sound system, with the addition of the new Midas PRO2 series planned within a matter of months.

Mighty Rock was created by husband and wife teamTony and Tonie Miller, CEOs and founders of events outfit Production Works based in Hobart, Tasmania and sister company to Mighty Rock. Tony Miller has long been a Midas fan and holds an XL200, several Venice consoles and a Midas PRO6 in the Production Works inventory. It was the acquisition of the PRO6 in 2009, which first turned him on to Midas digital systems.

In 2010, Production Works upgraded its PRO6 to the PRO9, but with the acquisition of the XL8, the Millers decided it was time to create a new company dedicated to Midas digital to cater for the growing demand for these systems. 

Location of the new company was a key consideration. “Our long established Hobart office will handle the admin,” explained Miller, “but we deliberately sited Mighty Rock’s storage facility in Melbourne to facilitate hires to Australia’s East and West coasts, Australasia and beyond. We are set up to support worldwide tours and as well as hardware we offer technical crew for touring, system integration, patching and programming support.”

Along with with the XL8, Mighty Rock also had a Klark Teknik DN9696 high resolution audio recorder delivered by National Audio Systems direct to Adelphia Studios in Melbourne for two weeks of production rehearsals ahead of the eight week Australia-wide John Farnham Whispering Jack-25 Years On tour, which runs through to December 2011. John ‘Hendo’ Henderson, monitor engineer for the Australian star for more than 25 years, who already had experience of Production Works’ Midas PRO9, was delighted to snap up the XL8 for a complex and demanding show.

“Until I knew the XL8 was available, I was having real trouble trying to spec my rider,” said Henderson. “John divides the show into two sets: one acoustic, one electric. The opening acoustic set alone encompasses drums, Wurlitzer, sax, harmonica, guitars, banjo, electric bass, double bass and four backing singers, and with the electric set we’re adding full drum kit with octo pads, 16 channels of keys and two electric guitars… and nearly everyone has stereo in-ear monitoring. 

“Only the XL8 can provide the 36 outputs I need, and the sound quality is a real bonus. There’s no brittleness or break-up at the top end like I’ve experienced with other digital consoles.”