Connect Savannah's Gear Geek with Michael Gaster

Gear Geek is our chance to shine a light on local musicians and talk about something musicians love perhaps more than anything: their gear. This week we’ve got veteran sound engineer and sound designer Michael Gaster.

Michael has been in the industry for decades, and in that time has become the leading provider of sound and lighting for shows across the Lowcountry and beyond. He’s a brilliant engineer with a true passion for what he does; this is perhaps best evidenced by his recent Quarantine Concerts series that has continually grown in popularity since the onset of the pandemic earlier this year.

Michael has the floor today for a unique and interesting installment of Gear Geek.

I’m curious about your history in the music industry. How did you get started?

I guess it “started” when my oldest sister Amy showed me “The Song Remains the Same” (I may have been 11) and I immediately became obsessed with the guitar and wanting to be involved with music. However, it was when my other sister Carrie took me to see Aerosmith and spent most of the show looking at the production and the sound system that things started to shift. Still playing guitar, I found myself building and tinkering with speakers, figuring out ways to record and manipulate sound not quite realizing the path I was headed down, but I wanted to know more about audio.

Now, where it started professionally was in Spring of 1991. I was 14, and my mother’s best friend’s husband who owned a sound company needed extra help for the St Patrick’s Day weekend with multiple stages downtown and on River St., I was asked if I was interested in joining the crew and even though I really knew nothing about any of it, I was in and did not leave once that weekend!

What sealed it for me was when I “saved the day” during a set change when (RIP) Dave “the rave” Sheppard grabbed a mic to talk to the massive audience at our main stage (located where the Bohemian hotel now sits) and there was nothing! My job during set changes was to sit at FOH and make sure everything was secure (from the partiers). Mind you, I have never been this close to a “real” mixing console before, but I knew if dude was going to be heard anytime soon it was up to me to figure this thing out. I translated the hieroglyphics that were used to label the channels figuring out which mic he was on, how it was routed, brought down the (CD) playback, brought up the subgroup his mic was routed through, and there it was. I just “did sound.”

Within seconds the rest of the crew realized what just happened (their backs were to the audience as they were changing things over), each turned around (I swear it was in slow motion) from the stage looking back to FOH giving me a big thumbs up with a very approving nod! It was at that moment, possibly mixed with another moment that same day, that I knew what I wanted to be when I grew up!

Do you remember where your love of gear came from? Any particular moment that stands out?

Definitely didn’t come from having to move it and set it up!

I would say it has come in different waves for me, with each cycle bringing a newfound sense of excitement of what can be done with these awesome tools. The “love” isn’t just from getting new advancing technologies in my hands but from my own growth and learning what things do.

At first, it really was a matter of getting past the initial hurdle of simply wrapping my head around what exactly these different pieces of gear do and how to make them do what I wanted. Sure I’ve had my moments of ABC-123 gizmo talk, which I typically try to avoid, but I really was/am more focused on what the hell is happening with these pieces than memorizing the fun terms and model numbers.

Read the entire article here https://www.connectsavannah.com/savannah/gear-geek-michael-gaster/Content?oid=15045413

Team Quarantine: Quarantine Concerts series helps musicians find home in uncertain times

By Laura Pleasants / For Do Savannah Posted Jun 4, 2020

Like many of you, I am sick of hearing and reading the phrase “In these are uncertain times.” But somewhere between media–bred fear tactics and reality, the truth is there.

By now, Do Savannah readers should know about the Quarantine Concert Series happening at the Tybee Island Theater and (mainly) online. We’ve been following Michael Gaster and his team of dedicated individuals throughout the past couple of months. Do Savannah contributor Laura Pleasants caught up with Gaster recently via email to get the scoop on how they operate

IF YOU WATCH

For more information, please visit the following links:

www.quarantineconcerts.org

https://vimeo.com/quarantineconcerts

https://www.facebook.com/Quarantineconcerts/

https://www.facebook.com/groups/qconcerts/

Do: What’s your background in live sound?

Gaster: “I started working for a regional sound company when I was 14 in 1991, went from not knowing anything to working my way behind the consoles in months; in 1995 went on the road with an 18-piece corporate show band (which is a freakishly fascinating story), came back to Savannah to be the production manager and technical director for the Savannah Civic Center in 1996, (then) left there in 1998 to work as the audio specialist for a regional company designing audio systems; started my first company in 1999 providing audio and lighting services for both live and installed applications; partnered up with another area business in 2010 after the recession and now (since 2014) doing the same (plus staging and other related services) under my current banner Michael Gaster + Associates. My niche within the live audio world is actually in orchestral sound, doing most of my work with the Charleston and Hilton Head Symphonies as well with a few other regional orchestras.”

Do: Top 3 favorite performances thus far?

Gaster: “Oh this is tough, as the shows have been so diverse; many with unique aspects that made them really stand out like the DJ Serch show with the visual graphics blended in with Jamie from Stardust Pixxies dancing and Eric’s creative punching on the video and crazy camera work; then the Andrew Sovine improv show with AJ doing a live painting (which you can hear him paint in the music as I had a mic on him). I know I have watched the Bero Bero show at least a dozen times, and Voodoo Soup was non-stop badassery, Jason Bible’s performance, and damn, Isaac Smith’s may have brought a tear to my eye; I could name something about each performance that could make them a favorite.

Read the entire article here https://www.dosavannah.com/news/20200604/team-quarantine-quarantine-concerts-series-helps-musicians-find-home-in-uncertain-times