Trooping the colour LSA Sept 15 SD7
Transcription
Trooping the colour LSA Sept 15 SD7
CLOSE-UP: LIGHTING/SOUND Copyright Lighting&Sound America September 2015 http://www.lightingandsoundamerica.com/LSA.html Trooping the Color By: Julie Rekai Rickerd began in 2008, when the color guard team of Blessed Sacrament High School in Cambridge, Massachusetts approached musical icon David Byrne, seeking permission to use some music from his album The Forest. Because the request came from a high school, Byrne allowed it, gratis, with the proviso that he be sent a DVD It 40 • September 2015 • Lighting&Sound America of the performance. Seeing the video, he says, “A door opened to a world I didn’t know existed, a sport of the arts; wildly creative in a vernacular way, an under-the-radar art form.” Color guard evolved from its military tradition of marching with flags, rifles, and sabers to a popular high-school artistic sport involving the spinning of flags, tossing of wooden rifles, and genuine sabers within a themed chore- ography set to prerecorded music: a mix of ballet, rhythmic gymnastics, interpretive dance, and cheerleading. Byrne’s “shock and awe” at this revelation led to his determination to spread the color guard news to a wider audience; he conceived the idea of inviting ten of his musician colleagues to pair with each of ten color guard teams, to write and perform live music for them and unveil the results Photos: Luminato/David Leyes Contemporary Color was an experiment in color guard spectacle in large public venues. Aaron Rosenblum, a producer, and LeeAnn Rossi, of Byrne’s record label, Todo Mundo, were drafted to organize what became Contemporary Color, which recently had its world premiere at the Air Canada Center as part of the 2015 Luminato Festival in Toronto, followed by performances at Brooklyn, New York’s Barclays Center, its firstever collaboration with the nearby Brooklyn Academy of Music. While Rosenblum and Rossi scouted teams, Byrne interested ten colleagues in matching up. Teams were chosen and paired with St. Vincent, Beastie Boys, Ad-Rock and Money Mark (of the Beastie Boys), How to Dress Well, Devonté Hynes, Zola Jesus, Lucius, Nico Muhly and Ira Glass, tUnE-yArDs, Nelly Furtado, and Byrne himself. Each artist wrote a number for a team, working with team members and their choreographers; at the same time, a superb creative team of concert touring professionals was assembled. Abigail Rosen Holmes’ lighting design was a cornucopia of brilliant hues that enhanced each team’s sparkling costumes, highlighted the colors and motions of each of their individual tarps, and created an appropriate mood for each performance. Holmes was inspired by the fact that the production was “a fusion of very different cultures. The most interesting aspect for me was that there would be no cultural and visual expectations of how the show would be lit. It was quite new, with no rules. I could contravene norms, because there were none. There were also no technical requirements, since the teams had never performed under stage lighting. I very consciously lit them so they could be seen clearly throughout. I wanted it to be modern and I used color to define dimensionality. I wanted each guard to be distinct, to individualize each guard, and also to create a common language for the whole. Everybody was truly excited and had signed on because they wanted to be there. It was a challenge to light the entire 90' x 60' floor area and high up into the air.” PRG supplied the lighting equipment and rigging, including 62 of the company’s Bad Boy CMY Spots along with 18 Philips Vari*Lite VL3000 Spots, eight VL2500 Washes, eight VL2500 Spots, and four Reel EFX DF-50 diffusion hazers. Felix Peralta programmed the show on two MA Lighting grandMA2 light consoles, two nected to their color guard. There was never any sense of one being more important than the other.” Music director Daniel Mintseris was the musical multi-tasker. “My early challenge was the band lineup that had to be determined before the music was written. We didn’t want to limit the composers’ instrumentation options, but had to secure the band with enough notice to make sure musicians were available. It wasn’t easy to hire a “The most interesting aspect for me was that there would be no cultural and visual expectations of how the show would be lit. It was quite new, with no rules. I could contravene norms, because there were none. There were also no technical requirements, since the teams had never performed under stage lighting. —Holmes ” grandMA2 fader wings, and two grandMA2 NPUs. The rigging included PRG’s BAT Truss, which can be prerigged with all automated lights prehung and ready to be flown once unloaded and pinned together. “Theatrical lighting established and defined the color guards as performance,” Holmes says. “We were all excited to try something different and to have the opportunity for two distinct cultures to be introduced to each other. The musicians were truly con- band with backgrounds diverse enough to perform music by Nelly Furtado, Nico Muhly, tUnE-yArDs, and Money Mark & Ad-Rock in the same program. This had to be done before I had any idea of what their pieces would be like. Once the demos came in, it was clear that there was going to be a very wide range of approaches from the artists. “I wanted to avoid a generic house band sound and deliver tailored, detailed arrangements for each of the www.lightingandsoundamerica.com • September 2015 • 41 LIGHTING/SOUND artists. This required time, of which there’s never enough. The band was originally scheduled to rehearse for two full days, but, due to technical and scheduling changes, it turned into 12 hours. We had three days to rehearse with the artists and run through the entire program a couple of times. We didn’t get to rehearse with the color guard teams until our first day in Toronto, although they had been able to go over their routines with recordings from our rehearsals. “Organization and preparation were key. Kelly Pratt was invaluable as the horn/string arranger and trusted collaborator. With a concert tour there are usually one or two artists, and the music is ready months in advance. Here, we had ten artists with 42 • September 2015 • Lighting&Sound America very diverse styles and musical personalities, and the pieces in some cases were still being finalized days and hours before rehearsals started. I really didn’t want to shortchange the music, so there was about as much planning, programming, and arranging as there would be for a regular tour, except with only a couple of weeks to do it and only four shows to play.” Sound engineer and mixer Paul David Hager translated the sounds and music in what, for him, was a novel assignment. “With Contemporary Color, we were using the wide side of the arena. This ended up being an advantage for side coverage, as the distances to get to the audience on the side and the front were a lot closer to each other. Bob Weibel, our systems tech, made several different possible calculations in Clair Bros. prediction software before we got on site. We could predict what the speakers were going to do as production was designing the show and moving things around. We could show what would be covered and what would not. It was a challenge mixing in the ADA section of the arena. In Canada, it was way off to house right, on the very outer coverage of the PA system; in Brooklyn, the ADA section was a lot closer to the center. “We used 32 of the new Clair Global [Cohesion System C0-12] linearray speakers. There are only a few of these systems built at the moment and we were lucky to get one. The Clair Global new sub, the CP-218 with six per side flown in cardioid behind the array, and two per side on the ground provided more sound for the color guards to feel. The front-of-house console was a DiGiCo SD7 with an insert rack of [George Massenburg Labs] GML 8200 EQ, API 2500 stereo comp, eight distressors, and three [Empirical Labs] fatso jrs [for compression]. For effects, there were two Bricasti M7s, a [T.C. Electronic] M4000 [reverb], and two [Eventide] H3000s. A hard part was meeting 13 musicians and ten artists I had never met before and figuring out in a very short time what each liked and was looking for in their performances. The most challenging was making sure the details of the mix translated in the larger room. The music had a lot of delicate parts that could normally be lost in such large spaces, but the sound system had a very direct sound and made the person in even the farthest seat feel like he was right up front. “From the mix point of view, each artist has his/her own style that needed to be a signature for each song. “From the mix point of view, each artist has his/her own style that needed to be a signature for each song. Some had more space and were very quiet; some were rocking; some more pop and dance. The sound system needed to handle all these requirements. — Hager ” Some had more space and were very quiet; some were rocking; some more pop and dance. The sound system needed to handle all these requirements. The band that played with each artist did a great job getting this to happen from a musical point of view. With the SD7, I could program starting snapshots for each song. Then I could mix each song in whatever way I chose. The dynamic of each song needed to match what each performer and color guard team was going for. What ended up being really nice about this particular system is that I could mix with very wide dynamics in each song and nothing was missed, so each song was its own little concert within the show. “Everything happened as we planned and maybe better. I was really pleased that the quality of the sound was noticed by a lot of people and it made their experience that much better and made me feel that all the time put into this was well worth it.” There was an explosion of joy in the grand finale showcasing all ten teams and their musicians in a rainbow of lights and colored streamers. It had been a great adventure that everyone was keen to repeat. www.lightingandsoundamerica.com • September 2015 • 43