| Queen: The Show Goes On With Bandit |
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| Monday, 25 April 2005 19:29 | ||||||||
Bandit
Lites is supplying full lighting production and crew for one of the
most superlative live bands on the planet – Queen. They are currently
touring for the first time in 13 years, with Paul Rodgers on lead
vocals, to great acclaim and an ever broadening and loyal fan base. The
tour plays arenas across Europe before hitting the UK for a series of
summer stadium and outdoor shows. Once again, Bandit is working on the
project with Barry ‘Baz’ Halpin, one of the industry’s brightest young
lighting designers. Bandit’s Mark Powell says, “Working with Baz is always a fantastic experience; couple that with the legendary music of Queen and a massive lighting rig and the end result is amazing. Add to that some Free and Bad Company classics and it makes for a great show”. Queen
were renowned for having monstrous lighting rigs in the 1980s, but that
was before moving light technology really took off, so Halpin was in
the position of being able to make the show look massive, with fewer
fixtures and the application of some intelligent and lateral
programming. “It’s probably the most intensely cue-heavy show I’ve ever
done” says Halpin, “Each Queen song is like plotting a mini opera but
the end result is worth every minute” He
also approached Queen’s lighting with an organic outlook, primarily
because of the extremities of the show’s musical dynamics. Halpin has
no shortage of visual tricks up his sleeve. His show veers from very
simple, intimate stage looks for the acoustic numbers to massive ‘wall
of light’ mayhem for the pumping power rock anthems, with no shortage
of the traditional imaginative drama and pomp associated with Queen.
There’s
five 60 ft moving trusses over-stage, split in the middle to make a
‘roof’ of lights. Halpin wanted an architectural structure to the rig
that could change shape and redefine the nature of the stage
environment as the set progressed – and this was how he achieved it. The
workhorse fixtures on each of these 10 trusses are 120 Martin MAC 2Ks.
There’s a 60 ft rear truss that also moves and a static 60 ft front
truss. The moving trusses are all made up from James Thomas ‘Broadway’
truss, except that the lamps are not swung from the travel position.
The ‘wings’ are effectively left in the down position enabling Halpin
to turn the lights onto them, tone them and let them become a feature. Having
all the lighting and cabling travelling and ready in the trusses has
made a huge difference in terms of the daily rigging time. It means the
show can be back-to-backed with the crew still having a reasonable
schedule for the working day. Halpin is
using 143 MAC 2K washes, dotted all over the stage and set, at the
sides on flown bars and on the floor. They are used as the 21st
century equivalent of PAR cans! There’s also 6 side-drop trusses,
introduced to give some dynamic side lighting and perspective. “Much of
this show is about beams, timing and power” explains Halpin.
Thirteen 3K
Syncroilites - the four in the searchlights plus five on the back truss
and four on the side trusses– are a favourite Halpin lighting tool.
Here they’re used for specific epic moments in the show, their
razor-sharp beams elevating the likes of Rodgers and Queen originals
Brian May and Roger Taylor to a shimmering Godlike onstage status. The
antique elements of the lighting department are further buoyed with 21
bars of ACLs, ten 8-lite Molefeys and fifty-four 4-lite Moles,
scattered across all the trusses...
Halpin
is running the show himself from two WholeHog 2s MIDI’d together and
being over-driven to deal with the 10 lines of DMX and approximately
five thousand channels! Bandit are also
supplying a 5ft mirror ball, revealed, as if by magic for Brian’s
guitar solo, and some half mirror balls at the back of the stage.
There’s 8 follow spots – four onstage (Lycian 1200 Stark lights) and
four Lycian 2K Xenons FOH, all supplied by Bandit. The
lighting rig alone weighs 23.5 tonnes. Bandit have supplied all the
lighting trussing which is hung underneath an overall mother grid, with
motors and an IBEX control system supplied by Star Rigging. The show is
rigged by Phil Broad and Steve Armstrong.
Audio
is being supplied by Clair Brothers/Audio Rent. Monitor engineer is
Steve May and production manager is Des Jabir assisted by Jonie Conarty.
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