 When
I first started my lighting company, I didn’t know what the
hell I was doin’. . . not that I know anything now. Working
with nearly hundreds of musicians and artist in the first couple
years, I was more interested in the art of lighting and of course
meeting girls. I was Charlotte’s indie lighting guy working
with anybody who would give me a chance to practice my art. I felt
a certain amount of prestige working with the best of Charlotte’s
local musicians. I have played music venues all over the east coast,
and I am comfortable in the indie circuit. I was barely making $300
a week with my 6 movers and 3 LED pars, I did everything my way,
and I was happy.
Well, I cashed in, grew up, or whatever you want
to call it. Over the years I have learned a couple things; my clients
have learned to trust my judgment and art. Selling out to the high
paying clients, I don’t work the indie circuit anymore. I
could use my kid as the excuse but honestly I love designing bigger
shows and buying more gear which requires lots of money. Now that
Eye Dialogue has 8 full time employees, I spend most my time chasing
the big fish and the pressure sometimes gets to me. When Vance Carlyle
asks me to light his band’s CD release party at Snug Harbor,
I really wanted to do it. First, I hadn’t setup a show at
Snug Harbor yet, Charlotte’s sheik new live music pirate bar.
Also, Vance is a friend of mine from the beginning years. Plus the
Houstons are one of my favorite local bands. They ask how much it
cost. I told them both that they couldn’t afford me and they
need to just make an offer. The amount of money wasn’t important
but when I do things for free I am usually taken for granted.
Snug
Harbor is a small hip live music venue with no accommodations for
the power needs of cans. If you know anything about my company,
you know that doesn’t matter because our entire inventory
is LED and movers (with a dozen Lekos and pars . . . shh! Don’t
tell anyone). Vance was the creative direction behind the show and
he didn’t want a rock concert. We decided to use only LEDs
because he wanted subtlety and ambience.
The setup was simple but effective. 8 Elation Opti
RGB lit the stage. Justin Faircloth, the main singer, was cross
washed with two LED’s. The remaining members each had a dedicated
light. Vance decorated the stage with white Lycra stretches on the
walls giving me an empty palette for color. I lined the back walls
with Color Kinetics Colorcast 14’s to create layers of light.
The
ability to light every musician individually with LED’s allowed
me to high light them during features. For instance, one of the
songs, I was running a water effect created with a strong blue and
a random morphing of green unique to each fixture. For the singers
and soloist I manually morphed the dedicated light to yellow- a
dynamic and complimentary color. The back drop remained solid blue
increasing the visual depth from front to back of the stage threw
darkening colors.
If you haven’t got a chance to hear the Houstons,
go to their myspace page (www.myspace.com/thehoustons). They are
remarkable musicians and extremely nice guys. The CD release party
was a huge success both captivating musically and visually stunning.
I was honored to help create a visual presentation worthy of the
artist.
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