Broadcast News
18/05/2026
Nerdmatics Consolidates Live Playback Infrastructure with DirectOut PRODIGY Series
Fred Carlton, owner of Los Angeles-based design team Nerdmatics and partner at ASAP Sound, has transitioned his complex live playback workflows into a unified infrastructure using DirectOut’s Smart Audio Platforms. Moving away from highly fragmented multi-vendor designs, Carlton utilizes the modular PRODIGY Series to combine a built-in switcher, advanced digital signal processing (DSP), and multiple network protocols—including Dante, MADI, Ravenna, and SoundGrid—into a single device. This robust setup was recently deployed for electronic artist ILLENIUM at the Las Vegas Sphere, powering a 128-channel redundant audio system. By routing critical audio through DirectOut and managing dynamic musical cues via MIDI, Carlton allows high-profile touring artists like Drake, Kendrick Lamar, and Maluma to maintain spontaneous, adaptive live performances without sacrificing production-grade stability.
Starting out as a musician, Carlton's career evolved into the technical side of music production. After building guitars for Fender, a chance encounter led him on tour as a guitar technician with 30 Seconds to Mars, an experience that would shape his entire professional path.
"For 30 Seconds to Mars, the demand on their technology was huge, it pushed me to become better quickly," he recalls. "Their playback system had to be completely adaptable, it wasn't just hit play on a click track and forget, we were jumping and looping, so I became proficient very quickly."
When the tour came to an end, Carlton founded Nerdmatics, officially launching the company that would later support artists across a wide range of genres. By 2014, he was working with Linkin Park, and soon his client list expanded to include Maluma, Becky G, Drake and Kendrick Lamar, among many others. Despite the diversity of artists and productions, one element has remained constant across his systems: DirectOut. The platform provides the stability and flexibility required to build playback rigs that can respond dynamically to live performance, rather than locking artists into rigid, predetermined structures.
"Most big pop shows now are completely locked in; every show is exactly the same, even the interaction with the audience. When you're dealing with automation for moving stages, or pyrotechnics, it's dangerous to have the artist in control, but for music and lighting, it doesn't have to be that way," he continues. "The desire for spontaneous live music, a shared singular experience that can't be anticipated, is really exciting and it's entirely possible to combine that with playback if you have the right set up."
Finding the right setup has been an ongoing process of refinement. A major turning point came in 2018, when Carlton was tasked with designing a system for a stadium show for Riot Games. Searching for a solution that could meet the scale and reliability demands of the project, he discovered DirectOut's PRODIGY.MC.
"When I built these systems in the past, I would probably be combining six or seven companies, I was basically a system integrator," he continues. "It wasn't easy because if there was an issue and I had to call support, and each brand would blame the next. Then DirectOut arrived and it was the first all in one system. I now have a built-in switcher, multiple styles of format and network protocol - Dante, MADI, Ravenna, Soundgrid - and they're all compatible."
A key advantage for Carlton is the modular architecture of the PRODIGY Series: what began with a single PRODIGY.MC configured with a Dante card and analog backup quickly grew into a long-term collaboration. Today, DirectOut forms the backbone of many Nerdmatics systems, including a recent installation for ILLENIUM at the Sphere: a 128 channel redundant audio system built around two Dual Network Dante.Dante SRC.IO cards.
Thanks to the dedicated globcon user interface, global system control can be managed by a single operator and even accessed remotely when needed, enabling ongoing support regardless of physical location.
By keeping audio routing and channel management within DirectOut devices, while handling musical elements through a flexible MIDI based workflow, Carlton maintains a system that feels musical rather than mechanical. This approach preserves spontaneity for the artist, while still providing the reliability and structure required by the wider production team.
"I like to use Ableton in rehearsals, we use MIDI locators to keep things fluid," he continues. "I can hit play and everyone's machines will follow, but if something changes, I can just send new locator files to everyone. It's much more efficient than bouncing files after a long day, it's not just audio tracks and waveforms. DirectOut delivers sample rate conversion and fail over redundancy, while MIDI control allows artists to move freely through their set, enabling them to react to the live audience and cater their set to their wants and needs."
Through platforms like Patreon, Carlton actively shares his system designs, helping others understand how a DirectOut powered approach can support creativity rather than constrain it. For him, a robust playback system does not need to be rigid or overly technical; it can be expressive, adaptive and responsive.
"The modular part of my DirectOut systems is super important because people change their minds last minute. By using PRODIGY Series solutions, I can build a system that is maxed out, so I can be asked for anything and it's not a problem," he finishes. "PRODIGY has done the hard work with its DSP so you can run with every single slot filled and everything happening at once, or you can run a simplified version and it's happy. That is flexibility on another level, and it makes a world of difference."
www.directout.eu/
Starting out as a musician, Carlton's career evolved into the technical side of music production. After building guitars for Fender, a chance encounter led him on tour as a guitar technician with 30 Seconds to Mars, an experience that would shape his entire professional path.
"For 30 Seconds to Mars, the demand on their technology was huge, it pushed me to become better quickly," he recalls. "Their playback system had to be completely adaptable, it wasn't just hit play on a click track and forget, we were jumping and looping, so I became proficient very quickly."
When the tour came to an end, Carlton founded Nerdmatics, officially launching the company that would later support artists across a wide range of genres. By 2014, he was working with Linkin Park, and soon his client list expanded to include Maluma, Becky G, Drake and Kendrick Lamar, among many others. Despite the diversity of artists and productions, one element has remained constant across his systems: DirectOut. The platform provides the stability and flexibility required to build playback rigs that can respond dynamically to live performance, rather than locking artists into rigid, predetermined structures.
"Most big pop shows now are completely locked in; every show is exactly the same, even the interaction with the audience. When you're dealing with automation for moving stages, or pyrotechnics, it's dangerous to have the artist in control, but for music and lighting, it doesn't have to be that way," he continues. "The desire for spontaneous live music, a shared singular experience that can't be anticipated, is really exciting and it's entirely possible to combine that with playback if you have the right set up."
Finding the right setup has been an ongoing process of refinement. A major turning point came in 2018, when Carlton was tasked with designing a system for a stadium show for Riot Games. Searching for a solution that could meet the scale and reliability demands of the project, he discovered DirectOut's PRODIGY.MC.
"When I built these systems in the past, I would probably be combining six or seven companies, I was basically a system integrator," he continues. "It wasn't easy because if there was an issue and I had to call support, and each brand would blame the next. Then DirectOut arrived and it was the first all in one system. I now have a built-in switcher, multiple styles of format and network protocol - Dante, MADI, Ravenna, Soundgrid - and they're all compatible."
A key advantage for Carlton is the modular architecture of the PRODIGY Series: what began with a single PRODIGY.MC configured with a Dante card and analog backup quickly grew into a long-term collaboration. Today, DirectOut forms the backbone of many Nerdmatics systems, including a recent installation for ILLENIUM at the Sphere: a 128 channel redundant audio system built around two Dual Network Dante.Dante SRC.IO cards.
Thanks to the dedicated globcon user interface, global system control can be managed by a single operator and even accessed remotely when needed, enabling ongoing support regardless of physical location.
By keeping audio routing and channel management within DirectOut devices, while handling musical elements through a flexible MIDI based workflow, Carlton maintains a system that feels musical rather than mechanical. This approach preserves spontaneity for the artist, while still providing the reliability and structure required by the wider production team.
"I like to use Ableton in rehearsals, we use MIDI locators to keep things fluid," he continues. "I can hit play and everyone's machines will follow, but if something changes, I can just send new locator files to everyone. It's much more efficient than bouncing files after a long day, it's not just audio tracks and waveforms. DirectOut delivers sample rate conversion and fail over redundancy, while MIDI control allows artists to move freely through their set, enabling them to react to the live audience and cater their set to their wants and needs."
Through platforms like Patreon, Carlton actively shares his system designs, helping others understand how a DirectOut powered approach can support creativity rather than constrain it. For him, a robust playback system does not need to be rigid or overly technical; it can be expressive, adaptive and responsive.
"The modular part of my DirectOut systems is super important because people change their minds last minute. By using PRODIGY Series solutions, I can build a system that is maxed out, so I can be asked for anything and it's not a problem," he finishes. "PRODIGY has done the hard work with its DSP so you can run with every single slot filled and everything happening at once, or you can run a simplified version and it's happy. That is flexibility on another level, and it makes a world of difference."
www.directout.eu/
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