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Equipment:
2 Elation 250 XT spots
2 Elation 250 XT washes
2 Elation 575XT vision scans
2 American DJ H2O 250s
2 American DJ Enfernos |
3 Color Kinetics C-200s
5 Alkalite Octopod 80s (Distributed thru Elation)
6 MBT Par Cans
4 Altman sets of pipe and base
4 Moving Light Stands
Martin Light Jockey |
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I
love outdoor events. Trees, tents, and numerous textures that are
unique to outdoor lighting open many creative avenues for the ambitious
lighting designer. New style stages, new environments, new clients;
All provide new challenges that open the doors of creativity often
suppressed during the “usual” show formats each designer
becomes accustomed to. Calvin and Friends was fun with its fair
share of trials.
Without getting into the technical difficulties
of our generator that evening, I have one word of advice. Always
make sure you have an Allen wrench or appropriate tool large enough
to tighten the socket head cap screws, or whatever mechanism used
to attach the feeder tails. Ask the rental company if the tools
are provided, if not buy or rent the appropriate tool now. If you
wait till day of, you will likely not find the tool you need in
stock at Grainger and Home Depot/ Lowes doesn’t carry many
specialty tools. Anyway we ended up using the flat head screwdriver
and hammer technique. Look out, I know everyone of you at some point
been brought to your knees while cursing the guy responsible for
providing the correct tool. Now, I would like to introduce our next
guest on the technical difficulty press release, the rain.
I
love the rain. The sound on the roof late at night soothes my ears
and uplifts my heart, except when I remember that some of my electrical
equipment is screaming for shelter. Their fuses blowing one at a
time into the darkness as small footholds of rust and decay build
on its surfaces. Trash bags, trash bags, trash bags; they are inexpensive
and compact. When they are needed, no greater satisfaction can be
had than the prepared technician whipping out a box of industrial
strength bags. From picking up debris to covering outdoor lighting
to neatly wrapping eyesores in black- cloaking their appearance,
trash bags cannot be overlooked. Fortunately, I had watched the
weather report and purchased them before the flash flood that happened
at 4:28 pm on that glorious Cinco de Mayo Festival. Rushing to get
everything covered as the storm suddenly rolled in, we prevented
a mid-day strike and reset with a little foresight.
Although
the rain never stopped, the wind did and the rain became more of
a drizzle. The roof of the thirty foot stage kept the rain away
from the equipment. I had a haunting awareness that the wind could
sweep through at anytime. Hesitantly removing all the bags off of
the equipment, I quickly finished up the last steps of the setup
and began programming.
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Anytime I walk onto a location, the
first thing I do is look for any unique elements that could give
me dynamic projection places (that comes from the LD in me) and
of course power location (that come from the technician in me).
The stage roof was white and so was the party tent. I love white.
The gobo and color played off the tent and the mobile stage roof,
thrilled the audience and made the band bigger than life. It also
reflects light providing natural ambient light textures on the band.
The other joy of my life is trees. Although
the pictures didn’t turn out, take a spot fixture outside
right now, rotate and prism the gobo, then shoot it right on a tree
full of leaves as you change the colors and gobos. The result is
the most beautiful light display outside of the suns play on water.
Any time a tree is close to stage, I will always find a moment to
sweep a tree's branches full of summer leaves.
Finally I would like to discuss the equipment setup.
I set up three pars with light amber and light pink gels on each
side of stage. Running them at about 18% the par cans brought a
little color to the faces of the band. I had 8 small LED pars on
both sides of the stage to provide a little variation and punch.
If you are unfamiliar with LED fixtures, they have completely seamless
color transitions and also strobing capability. Running a random
strobe over a transparent background gives a nice build into the
chorus or transitions easily layering over any color. Also having
the fixtures fluctuate between colors such as red and orange or
blue and aqua, creates motion on stage increasing the complexity
and interest of the viewer. If you have ever found your self staring
into firelight or at the side of the dock as the sun sets, buy a
set of 8 to 12 led pars (American DJ P64 LED is only $199 online)
and re-create the vision with color macros and layers. I promise
an evening of endless enjoyment.
I
brought my favorite sextet: two Robe 250 XT spots, two Robe 250
XT washes, and two Robe 575XT vision scans. If you are starting
a small production company and are looking into buying moving lights
I strongly recommend Robe. I have owned several of my fixtures for
5 years and have yet to have any major problems. I typically ground
set the scanners for two reasons: great shadows on the side walls
from the band doubling the size of the stage, and providing a nice
uplight to eliminate of some of the shadows on the members themselves.
I usually place the washes high and the spots mid-stage for obvious
reasons. To augment the white ceiling during moments when none of
the moving lights are projecting onto it, I placed two American
DJ H2O 250s to layer a nice red water effect to go with the Caribbean
theme. The final touch was adding the American DJ Enfernos for the
20 minute Latin driven finale of the band, added the fiery ending
to an already vibrant evening.
The
show and the video of the band both turned out great. After three
and a half hours of dancing in the rain, the audience did not want
to stop. The audience didn’t disperse for nearly an hour.
Children and adults alike enjoyed On the Border’s Cinco de
Mayo Festival with Calvin and Friends (www.calvinandfriends.com).
Their dynamic performance and light show inspired young and old.
Unaware of the energy required to set up an unrehearsed production
and challenges conquered, they only felt the natural breath of performance,
much like watching the effortless grace of well seasoned ballroom
dancer. The next event is always an open window to see new ways
of doing things and new ways of expressing the art of light.
Contact Jack Kelly, the owner of Eye Dialogue at
www.eyedialogue.com
Contact Calvin and Friends at www.calvinandfriends.com
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Eye
Dialogue is an Authorized Dealer for Martin,
Color Kinetics,
Sennheiser, Da
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Ready, Elation,
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and adding more every month. Special pricing on about everything
else. |
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