In response to tremendous growth, New Beginnings DFW Church in Bedford, Texas, purchased a former 10-screen Cineplex and converted it to a stunning sanctuary for contemporary worship. Its high-energy services, complete with a full band and plenty of vocalists, reportedly are benefitting from the simple but tremendously powerful Danley Sound Labs loudspeakers, subwoofers, and amplifiers that Jeff McLeod, managing director at Grand Prairie, Texas-based Church Audio Video, designed and installed.
"It’s a big space, and we needed to fill it with musical, intelligible sound. Clarity is everything."
—JEFF MCLEOD, Managing Director, Church Audio Video, Grand Prairie, TX.
“It’s a big space, and we needed to fill it with musical, intelligible sound,” says McLeod. “Clarity is everything, and Danley has a proven record of delivering products that are well-articulated and powerful. We gave them a left-center-right system that would convey all of the excitement and invite all of the immersion that their energetic services deserved.” At the front end, two Yamaha CL5 consoles paired with two Yamaha RIO stage boxes provide control of New Beginnings’ nuanced stage setup. A third CL5 allows for separate broadcast mixes. A Symetrix Radius 12x8 DSP -- with an ARC-2e for scene selection -- condition the inputs and allow for different input counts. Four Danley DSLA 4.5 and three DSLA 6.5 dual-channel amplifiers power the system with reliability, fidelity, and plenty of muscle.
The choice and arrangement of Danley loudspeakers and subwoofers is characterized both by its simplicity and by its horsepower. Two Danley SH-96 loudspeakers form the left and right elements of the system, and a close-packed pair of Danley SH-46s form the center channel. Two additional SH-96s provide delays for the wings of the sanctuary, and four beefy Danley TH-115 subwoofers convey high-fidelity bass from beneath the stage. “Danley is well-known for making very honest, clear loudspeakers and subs,” says McLeod. “They’re clean, affordable, and great-sounding, and they don’t require a lot of signal processing voodoo to sound right. Danley’s simple design concept, paired with the right components, the right enclosures, and a great passive crossover, made for a simple point-and-shoot installation. A line array wouldn’t have worked at New Beginnings because there’s not enough ceiling height, but even if the height had been there, Danley’s point source system still sounds a lot better because it doesn’t have any phasing or comb filtering issues.”