Legacy Church uses Mixing Station Anywhere to remotely support broadcast volunteers, maintain consistency across campuses, and create scalable workflows for future expansion.
Supporting Volunteers While Maintaining Consistent Broadcast Quality
As a growing multi-site church in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Legacy Church manages a complex production environment across multiple campuses and ministries. With several Allen & Heath console platforms in use and a growing volunteer team, maintaining consistency in broadcast audio was becoming increasingly important.
Production Manager Cody Brunet wanted a way to not only provide backup coverage during last-minute emergencies, but also improve long-term consistency across broadcast mixes. He also saw an opportunity to bring in a trusted remote contractor — someone already mixing the church’s albums — to help shape a more polished and recognizable broadcast sound.
At the same time, Legacy Church needed a system that would allow production leadership to remotely support volunteers, troubleshoot issues quickly, and maintain quality control without always being physically present at every location.
Remote Oversight and Flexible Backup Mixing
Legacy Church integrated Mixing Station Anywhere into its broadcast workflow as both a support tool and a backup solution for remote production.
Currently, the church uses an Allen & Heath dLive console as its primary broadcast mixing platform and leverages Mixing Station Anywhere to remotely monitor services, assist volunteers, and step in for control when needed.
According to Cody, one of the biggest benefits has been the ability to remotely oversee volunteer engineers in real time.
“I use Mixing Station as a way to check in on my volunteers to make sure they aren’t going off the rails, so to speak, in the sound they are producing,” Cody explained. “I can also jump in if I’m hearing something I really don’t like, and then use that as a training opportunity for what they should be listening for.”
The workflow has also created greater confidence among volunteers, knowing experienced leadership can log in and assist from anywhere if needed.
“Volunteers knowing I can log in from anywhere gives them peace of mind more than anything,” Cody shared. “They know I always have their back.”
Legacy Church plans to continue expanding this workflow across all campuses as a centralized quality-control system for broadcast audio.
Greater Volunteer Confidence and Scalable Remote Support
While Mixing Station Anywhere currently serves primarily as a backup and support solution at Legacy Church, it has already become an important part of the team’s production strategy.
The platform gives Cody and his team the flexibility to remotely assist services, provide coaching opportunities for volunteers, and maintain more consistent audio standards across campuses.
One of the most significant moments came shortly after Mixing Station Anywhere launched in partnership with BoxCast. Due to family health issues, Cody was unexpectedly unable to travel to the broadcast location for a service.
Instead of scrambling for a replacement or compromising the quality of the broadcast mix, he remotely mixed the service directly from his living room.
“The week that Mixing Station teamed up with BoxCast, I was not able to make it to the broadcast location due to some health issues in the family,” Cody shared. “I was able to mix the broadcast from my living room with great success.”
Although someone remained onsite during that service, the experience proved the viability of remote mixing workflows for the Legacy Church team and opened the door to even larger possibilities moving forward—including remote front-of-house mixing for traveling worship events.
Flexible Remote Mixing for Multi-Campus Ministry
Legacy Church uses Mixing Station Anywhere to remotely oversee broadcast audio, support volunteers, and maintain consistency across services and campuses.
By combining remote access with structured workflows and real-time oversight, the production team has created a more scalable and resilient approach to broadcast mixing — without sacrificing quality or volunteer development.
Creating Consistent Workflows Across Teams
For churches looking to improve livestream audio consistency, Cody emphasizes the importance of establishing repeatable systems and reinforcing them across every engineer and campus.
“Come up with a system that works well for your group of engineers and reinforce that system; hold the line,” Cody said. “If you let people do their own thing when it comes to workflows, you will likely get not only an inconsistent mix to your stream, your room, and your bands will likely hear these differences as well.”