July 2, 2026
 • 
Industry News

Meyer Sound Powers The Black Crowes’ ‘Southern Hospitality’ Tour

The Black Crowes are back on the road this summer for the “Southern Hospitality Tour,” a 41-city run across the U.S. and Canada in support of A Pound of Feathers, the band’s 10th studio album. Delivering the tour’s sound is a Meyer Sound PANTHER™ line array provided by Bay Area-based rental house and integrator UltraSound.

Scaled for Every Stop

For UltraSound project coordinator Jason Mills, the challenge was to design a single system capable of serving diverse venue sizes from 3,000 to 30,000 seats. “The band is playing a smattering of arenas, and then mostly amphitheaters,” he says. “It’s easier for the guys on tour to scale back than it is to scale up.”

The Meyer Sound system centers around 18 PANTHER line array loudspeakers per side, with LYON® line array loudspeakers in out-fill arrays of 16 per side covering extended side seating in larger venues. Six 1100-LFC™ low-frequency control elements per side fly above the stage, with 12 additional ground-stacked units, all configured in cardioid. Six LEOPARD® line array loudspeakers handle front fill.

Mills used UltraSound’s archive of Meyer Sound MAPP 3D™ files from previous tours at the same venues to inform the flexible design. Systems engineer David Williams manages day-to-day refinements on the road. “He can look at the venue in the morning before load-in, get on MAPP 3D right away, and adjust easily, with predictions day-to-day for that specific venue and any specific challenges that come up,” Mills says. Rigging logistics are also straightforward. “It’s easy to deploy, it’s easy to scale,” he adds. “The riggers have no problems with it.”

Performance Meets Road Economics

Veteran front-of-house engineer and production manager Tim “Quake” Mark brought 48 years of experience to his first tour deployment with PANTHER. For Mark, PANTHER addressed both performance and the increasingly unforgiving economics of touring. “PANTHER intrigued me because of the weight savings and the capability of it,” he says. “With the size of the P.A. I have now, I save 20,000 pounds. That’s a huge help with fuel.”

When it comes to sound, Mark has clear goals. “I want to paint on the console, not on the P.A.,” he says. “PANTHER just sounds pretty, right out of the box. I don’t have to do as much to it as I have to do with other systems.” He says he is also impressed with PANTHER’s consistent coverage. “I can go up in to that bleacher a hundred feet from me, and it’s still covering everything,” he says. “That’s the beauty of PANTHER.” To preserve a stereo image, Mark configures the LYON outfill arrays in an alternating left-right sequence.

Focused Low End

The cardioid 1100-LFC configuration gives the system the low-end impact the tour needs while helping keep sub energy under control onstage. “Instead of them facing straight on or straight downstage, we’ve gone to turning them out,” says Mills. “Even in the cardioid pattern, that controls the rejection a little bit more right into where Chris Robinson is standing. He doesn’t want to get bothered with the sub energy.”

“The name’s Quake,” Mark says. “I don’t look for a punch. I want to shake your pant legs. I drive the band with a bass player, all the time.” He says the PANTHER system supports a philosophy he’s shaped in decades behind the console. “My job as a front-of-house guy is not to create. Mine is to interpret and reinforce you in the room. After I do that, then I sit down and I can mix.”

The “Southern Hospitality Tour” continues through August 20 at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, CA.

About Meyer Sound
Founded in 1979 by John and Helen Meyer, Meyer Sound is the global leader and innovator in self-powered loudspeaker systems and active acoustics. Headquartered in Berkeley, California, with operations globally, the company is driven by a singular mission: to create the best sonic experiences in the world. With more than 100 patents and a legacy of breakthrough technologies—including the first dedicated loudspeaker processors and large-scale self-powered arrays—Meyer Sound combines scientific innovation with precision craftsmanship. Its premium systems power the world’s most iconic concert tours and festivals, theatrical productions, cinemas, houses of worship, educational institutions, and more. The company champions sustainable manufacturing and invests in the future of sound through education and global partnerships.

Photo Credit: Jesse Faatz

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