Document details

Zén And The Art Of Using Wireless Microphones
[Synchronizing "Main Street Parade" sounds]
Dale Scott

[…]

Disneyland. As the floats in the "Main Street Parade" wind along their way, various instrumental versions of the same tunes emanate from them ... in unison.

[…]

Disneyland

Disneyland and Walt Disney World have used wireless mikes for years. More recently, they have incorporated such technology into their "Main Street Parade." This was done to solve a specific problem: synchronization of music between floats. Formerly, separate tape players and sound systems were used on each float. Since there was no way to synchronize the music between floats, this caused a conflict of sound, especially when two floats were equidistant from a particular point along the parade route. Disney technicians solved the problem by feeding individual synchronized music tracks to several transmitters - brass to one transmitter, rhythm track to another, strings to a third, and so on (Figure 2). Each transmitter was operating on a separate radio frequency, sending its track to a receiver and sound system mounted on each float. In this way, a fully-synchronized music program could be fed to all the floats in unison. More than one curbside spectator has wondered, "How do they all play together like that ?"

[…]

Source

Title
Source type Magazine
Volume 12.2
Published
Language en
Document type Feature
Media type text
Page count 8
Pages pp. 62,64,66,68,70-72,76

Metadata

Id 4083
Availability Free
Inserted 2019-01-17