* There are many types of audio engineers but there are two that are directly related to OP’s question:
* Touring Audio Engineers
* House Audio Engineers.
* Touring engineers work for the same band while that band is on the road.
* If the band is playing large venues and has a large budget then they will often bring all the equipment needed with them, usually in large trucks.
* For each stop on the tour they are setting up in a new venue and so things that can change on a nightly basis:
* The number of speakers used.
* The relative placement of the speakers.
* The relative intensity of the signal sent to a group of speakers.
* The audio processing (equalizing, delay, compression) on each group of speakers.
* For bands playing smaller venues, they will be working with whatever sound system the venue already has installed.
* For the audio engineer this often means using a different audio console each night and also having to figure out how to get the best sound for their band from that venue’s sound system and unique acoustic properties.
* (No two venues are the same).
* House engineers, on the other hand, work at the same venue for each show.
* They are in charge of maintaining the installed audio system so that doesn’t change but the band that is playing that night is usually different.
* Not all bands have touring engineers so often a house engineer will mix the band.
* So on a nightly basis the biggest change is the band.
* Each band has a different sound and a different mix of instruments and singers.
* The biggest change will be the talent.
* Talented musicians are very easy to mix because they are good at blending themselves together on stage, and they are also very good at knowing how to get the house engineer to give them what they need.
* Source: I’m a former professional audio engineer.
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