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Meyer Sound Stories that include DF-4


Atlantic City's Lavish Revel Resort "Gets Up Close and Personal" with Flexible Meyer Sound Systems 

The $2.4 billion Revel casino resort in Atlantic City is an impressive sight, with its gleaming 47-story tower—the tallest in town—and over 1,000 rooms and 130,000 square feet of gaming floor. It's also an ear-opener at every turn, with Meyer Sound systems installed in Revel's vast and morphing Ovation Hall, the lively Social theatre and nightclub, and exclusive lounge and gaming areas. Read More »

October, 2012

Lake Pointe Church Finds Sonic Detail and Envelopment in Meyer Sound MICA (Worship)

A new audio reinforcement system based around 56 Meyer Sound MICA line array loudspeakers has made a clear difference at Lake Pointe Church in Rockwall, Tex., according to media pastor Wes Hartley. Read More »

April, 2012

Gateway Church Opts for Comprehensive Meyer Sound Solution at New Campus (Worship)

With weekly worship attendance nearing 20,000 across three sites in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, Gateway Church ranks as one of the fastest-growing congregations in the country. Having outgrown its original main campus in Southlake, Gateway opened a new 200,000-plus-square-foot facility a few miles away. The 4,000-seat sanctuary, at the heart of the campus, is equipped with cutting-edge technical facilities, including a powerful reinforcement system based on Meyer Sound MILO line array loudspeakers. Read More »

August, 2011

North Point Church Upgrades Main Auditorium to Meyer Sound MICA  (Worship)

After installing Meyer Sound reinforcement systems at two newer branch campuses, North Point Community Church has followed suit at its main campus in Alpharetta, Ga. by replacing the 12-year-old system in the 2,700-seat East Auditorium with a new system based on Meyer Sound MICA line array loudspeakers. Read More »

October, 2010

Mahalia Jackson Theater: Meyer Sound M'elodie Revitalizes Musical Heritage in Post-Katrina New Orleans  (Live Performance Venues)

The musical vitality in New Orleans was set back for three years with the widespread flooding of Hurricane Katrina closing down some of the city's biggest theatres, including the Mahalia Jackson Theater for the Performing Arts. The birthplace of jazz made an important step toward recovery when Mayor Ray Nagin reopened the iconic theater, following a total basement-to-rooftop renovation that included a new Meyer Sound M'elodie line array loudspeaker system designed to fully support the city's rich and multifaceted musical heritage. Read More »

October, 2009

Meyer Sound Reinforces the Arts at China's Striking Dongguan Yulan Theatre (Live Performance Venues)

Dongguan Yulan Theatre is one of China's newest multipurpose performing arts venues. With its multi-layered exterior suggesting an unfolding lotus petal, it has become a landmark in Dongguan city. The new cultural hub houses two theatres presenting a full schedule of performances, including Romeo and Juliet and Chinese classic Butterfly Lovers, all heard through extensive systems of Meyer Sound self-powered loudspeakers installed by Guangzhou, China-based Leifull Enterprises. Read More »

January, 2008

Meyer Sound MICA Meets High Expectations at North Point's Buckhead Church (Worship)

Buckhead Church is the newest of three campuses in the metro Atlanta area built by fast-growing North Point Ministries. The new multi-story church structure is part of a mixed commercial and high-rise residential development in Atlanta's Buckhead district. Starting a successful new ministry in Buckhead requires high-quality programming content and technical presentation that will satisfy the expectations of the neighborhood's worshippers. In Buckhead Church's 3,000-seat sanctuary, the high standards were met by a Meyer Sound system built around 33 self-powered MICA compact high-power curvilinear array loudspeakers. Read More »

November, 2007

Spokane's INB Performing Arts Center Gets Needed Power and Clarity from Meyer Sound  (Live Performance Venues)

When asked to name a Pacific Northwest structure built for a World's Fair, most people think of the Space Needle in Seattle, Wash. Yet 200 miles eastward across the Cascade Range, the Spokane Opera House (Spokane, Wash.) has remained in use since its Expo '74 debut. Through the intervening years, the 2,700-seat venue hosted the Spokane Symphony subscription series, as well as events ranging from pop and country concerts to ballet, civic celebrations and, yes, even the occasional opera. In the spring of 2006, the publicly owned venue was rechristened INB Performing Arts Center to reflect its diverse calendar of arts presentations and new corporate sponsorship from Inland Northwest Bank. Along with the name change, the venue was treated to extensive interior renovations, including a new system of 18 self-powered Meyer Sound loudspeakers. Read More »

March, 2007

Fellowship Church Depends on Meyer Sound for Consistency Across Five Campuses (Worship)

Under the dynamic leadership of pastor Ed Young, Jr., Texas's Fellowship Church has experienced exponential growth over the past five years, with typical weekly attendance surpassing the 20,000 mark. To accommodate growth while fostering a neighborhood church atmosphere, Fellowship expanded outward from its primary campus in Grapevine, Texas (adjacent to the Dallas-Fort Worth airport) to satellite campuses around the metro area: two in nearby suburban communities, and one in the Arts District in downtown Dallas. Read More »

November, 2006

Yokohama Arena Receives an On-the-Fly Audio Makeover from Meyer Sound 

Opened in 1989, Yokohama Arena has quickly become the standard of measure for all Japan's other arenas and convention centers, both in terms of its design and its business model. Truly warranting the overused description "flexible space," Yokohama Arena is constantly booked with trade shows, corporate functions, sporting events, and concerts galore. It's so solidly booked, in fact, that when the old sound system was replaced by a brand new one from Meyer Sound, the installation crew was forced to work around normal arena operations and bookings, and could only remove the old system after the new one was up and completely operational. Read More »

July, 2006
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