Aktuelle News & Schlagzeilen

Fineline supplies Duran Duran special show

Fineline supplies Duran Duran special show
Fineline supplies Duran Duran special show

Bristol, UK based lighting and visuals rental company Fineline supplied lighting, video and rigging equipment plus crew to Duran Duran Live at Eden with BBC Music Day, staged at the Eden Project in Cornwall. The special concert was the finale of the BBC’s 2016 Music Day, a nationwide celebration designed to unite different generations and communities through music.

 

Fineline was working with TAO Productions with whom they also regularly collaborate as a technical solutions provider for the annual ‘Eden Sessions’ concerts. The concert was broadcast live on BBC Radio 2, aired a few nights later on the BBC 2 TV channel and available via The Red Button interactive channel.

 

Lighting for the band was designed by Vince Foster. He submitted a plot and a spec to Fineline who built the Eden production lighting rig based on this, with some fixture swaps related to their stock on consultation with Foster, explains Fineline’s Stu England, who project managed the event for them.

 

Eden has a permanent 18 metre wide stage and roof structure that is a hybrid flown/ground supported design and familiar to Fineline through their ‘Sessions’ work. Four flown over-stage lighting trusses were added for the show plus another on the deck. The fourth flown truss was right upstage and low slung under the video screen, utilised for eye candy fixtures.

 

Fineline provided an 8 by 4.5 metre surface of 6 mm pitch LED at the back and the band were touring a custom curved floor-mounted video screen which sat in front of their risers. Twenty-nine Ayrton Magic Blades were the principal fixtures on the low flown truss, joined by 16 Solaris Flare LED strobes.

 

Above these, on LX 3 the full height upstage truss, were 12 x Clay Paky K20s fitted with B-Eye lenses rigged on drop arms, joined by another 12 Magic Blades also on drop arms. All these pixel-mappable fixtures combined and contrasted with the video. Ten Robe Pointe multi-purpose moving lights were also on LX3.

 

Moving further downstage, on LX2 were six Robe LEDWash 600s, another 12 x Pointes and 6 x linear 4-lite Moles. On LX1 were an additional four LEDWash 600s, 6 x Robe Robin 600E Spots and four 6-lamp PAR bars for providing base stage washes. For key lighting on LX1 were six ETC Source Four profiles with 26 degree lenses and six 8-lite blinders on the front rail of the truss were used for blasting out into the audience. On the floor truss upstage, eight more Pointes and seven more Solaris Flare strobes were deployed.

 

The production lighting console was a Hog 4, with a live backup unit supplied by Fineline running via DP8000 DMX processors. Multiple networking was involved in the control set up, as there was also another Compulite console and a backup supplied by TV lighting operator David Bishop and overseen by BBC lighting designer Nigel Catmur, running a number of additional TV key lighting fixtures also supplied by Fineline, all amounting to a total of 23 x DMX universes. Duran Duran’s production also carried their Catalyst media server which ran playback video to the screens, triggered via their Hog 4 console.

 

Stu England designed the data network, together with co-ordinating the production lighting design and ensuring that the other acts playing also had good looking lighting. The additional broadcast lights were 16 x Chauvet LED Slip PARs and 16 x 2-lites rigged off the front arch of the stage, alternating. Another 8 x 6-lamp PAR bars included four rigged vertically on the roof ground support legs and focussed directly across stage and out into the audience. They also added in two 12 metre upstage/downstage trusses each side of stage at the BBC’s request, each containing six LEDWash 600s for secondary washes.

 

The four FOH desks - controlling the production rig and all the TV extras - had to be merged. During the Duran Duran set, the BBC needed to control their TV lights and have access to the production lighting intensity control, so the four FOH consoles were merged over the network to allow this to happen. Four Xenon Super Trouper follow spots positioned at FOH completed the lighting picture.

 

The Fineline team started the LX get in on the Tuesday for a Friday show. The BBC arrived on site the next day to start their programming, the band came on Thursday for a rehearsal and Vince Foster was on site to do his programming Thursday night, with it all ready-to-roll for the show on Friday. Fineline’s crew of four - including Stu England - was chiefed by Tim Williams and joined by Will Dale looking after assorted FOH elements and technician Sam Kenyon.

 

www.finelinelighting.com

© 1999 - 2024 Entertainment Technology Press Limited News Stories