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Snarky Puppy: European Tour 2017

Award winning lighting designer Francis Clegg applied his imagination and magic to the latest Snarky Puppy tour, where his penchant for creating interesting and different visual environments is perfectly suited to the band’s improvisational instrumental jazz-pop sounds. Colour Sound Experiment was delighted to be the lighting and video supplier for the tour. The west London based company has worked on other projects with Francis, part of creative practice design Mirrad, including most recently, Giggs and Kano. “You know that a design will look fresh and alternative when Francis’ name is on it,” commented Colour Sound’s H (Haydn Cruickshank).

Francis worked on Snarky Puppy’s 2015 UK tour, their first with full production. He finds the fluidity and organic nature of the music and performance very inspirational. Every show is unique, and that provided a clear starting point for the visual design which also had to be infinitely flexible. A key is being able to operate on the fly and apply accents, punctuation and nuances, sometimes very subtly as and when they are happening with the music – almost like another instrument. There’s no set list at Snarky Puppy gigs and if they do play the same piece of music two nights running, it won’t be the same arrangement so it’s absolutely a ‘buskers paradise’.

This tour also took the production levels up a notch with the addition of a remote operated robo-cam (utilising Panasonic AW-UE70 4Ks) system which was also operated by Francis along with lighting and the live mix, who took the challenge of multi-tasking in his stride. Also informing the design was the itinerary, which included a wide variety of venues across the UK and Europe. The rig had to be scalable, and the final designs included an A rig for the UK dates and a smaller B rig for Europe.

Video and video sharing media channels have been prominent in the distribution of Snarky Puppy’s live material so the band are used to cameras, so with an average of 10 musicians onstage for a performance, Francis also wanted a neat way of featuring solos and came up with the idea of individual rotating screens and the camera system. The band are also somewhat of a cult act amongst serious musicians – so knew he needed to have some more technical shots with the cameras, revealing specific angles related to the instrument and players, so camera positioning – two upstage and two downstage on mic stands - was done with this in mind. Projection also fitted as an appropriate aesthetic for the overall look and a solution that was flexible enough to be fitted into the smaller venues.

Onstage in the full set up - were 10 x 2 metre wide super-light screens custom made by Hangman, arranged in two rows of five on two separate trusses. These were all rigged on Robe MediaSpinner 50 ATs, which proved a neat solution, with a Portman P1 retro lamp on the reverse side of the screen, chosen for complete contrast and for their way-cool, highly distinctive flower-like appearance and warm tungsten output. The projector was a single Barco 30K positioned at FOH and the four Robo-cam signals were fed into a Green Hippo Amba media server via a 4-in-1-out Quad-Split from Decimator Design, allowing any camera to be flexibly assigned to any screen.

Francis controlled them using a Panasonic AW-RP50 remote camera controller stationed at FOH, a compact unit which enables presets, live control and other functions. In terms of lighting, the brief was to make it big, sumptuous and exciting without being too poppy or ostentatious – but with musical intensity and flow of the show, there were plenty of massive moments. Francis approaches the inventive structure of the music with one basic signature lighting look for each piece of music, within which he has a number of pictures and effects to hand that can be added, subtracted or layered in a similarly fluid and musical way. This very rhythmic way of running lights requires a lot of concentration. When it came to lighting and architecture around the space he opted for four raked upstage/downstage finger trusses, with four towers at the back extending the line of the fingers down to the floor at the back.

Twenty Robe Pointes were rigged on the fingers and towers and provided a great diversity of aerial looks, prism effects, beams, frosts, colour flips and all the other things. The wash fixtures were 30 x Chauvet R2s, 16 rigged in the air and 14 placed on the floor, and their task was to wash the band and the stage and help highlight the soloists as well as facilitate and augment the various camera angles and ensure clarity for the more technical shots mentioned earlier. Some ETC Source Fours were added for key lighting, which was also important for the camera shots and eight Robe LEDWash 600s were available on the front truss for additional and support washes. A set of tungsten blinders highlighted the audience, all run from an Avo Quartz main console.

“It was essentially a bit of ‘back-to-basics’ approach to lighting” explained Francis, “defining areas of the stage, creating an ambience and mood throughout the set and underscoring some fantastic musicianship”. He says the biggest challenges were the expectations. “It’s a different audience to a rock, pop or dance crowd, very demanding, so it had to be an attractive yet thoughtful show that was totally cutting edge!” Zak Nicholson worked alongside Francis as a technician on the tour and they were joined by a Colour Sound crew of John Lahiffe (Afghan John) and Jasper Johns who ensured everything went together smoothly and efficiently for the popular tour which included a highly charged performance at London’s Brixton Academy.

Photos : Louise Stickland


Setlist (O2 Brixton Academy London)

Beep Box
Grown Folks
Ready Wednesday (Preceded by Bill Laurence Piano Solo)
Tarova
Palermo
Thing Of Gold
Big Ugly
What About Me?

Lingus


Tour Dates

20.04.2017 Budapest Spring Festival, H-Budapest
21.04.2017 Teatro Colosseo, I-Torino
22.04.2017 Auditorium Santa Chiara, I-Trento
23.04.2017 Palazzo Dei Congressi, I-Pisa
24.04.2017 Estragon Club, I-Bologna
26.04.2017 Casa Da Musica, POR-Porto
27.04.2017 LX Factory, POR-Lisbon
28.04.2017 Vicar Street, UK-Dublin
30.04.2017 Town Hall, UK-Cheltenham
02.05.2017 02 ABC, UK-Glasgow
03.05.2017 Sage, UK-Gateshead
04.05.2017 02 Apollo, UK-Manchester
05.05.2017 02 Academy, UK-London
06.05.2017 The Tramshed, UK-Cardiff
07.05.2017 The Lighthouse, UK-Poole
09.05.2017 AB, B-Brussels
10.05.2017 Rockhall, L-Luxembourg
16.05.2017 L'Aeronef, F-Lille
17.05.2017 Le Rocher De Palmer, F-Cenon
18.05.2017 L'Olympia, F-Paris
19.05.2017 La Coorperative De Mai, F-Clermont-Ferrand
20.05.2017 Palais Congres, F-Lyon
22.05.2017 Batschkapp, Frankfurt
23.05.2017 Substage, Karlsruhe
24.05.2017 Kaufleuten, CH-Zürich
25.05.2017 E-Werk Freiburg
26.05.2017 Zeppelin-Haus, Friedrichshafen
28.05.2017 National Forum of Music, P-Warschau
29.05.2017 Huxley's, Berlin
31.05.2017 Muffatwerk, München
01.06.2017 E-Werk, Köln
02.06.2017 Elbjazz Festival, Hamburg
03.06.2017 Vega, DK-Kopenhagen
04.06.2017 Train, DK-Aarhus
05.06.2017 Paradiso, NL-Amsterdam
06.06.2017 Paradiso, NL-Amsterdam
07.06.2017 Muziekgebouw, NL-Eindhoven

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