Programming with a Media Server
So, we’ve got our content ready, and we’ve loaded all of it into our media server. What do we do next? Here are a few things to get us started.
Read More »So, we’ve got our content ready, and we’ve loaded all of it into our media server. What do we do next? Here are a few things to get us started.
Read More »Live music is already a challenge in the modern world of multimedia concerts. Dealing with changing venues, multiple crews, gear issues and the requirements of different artists is certainly not easy. Envision touring with the Black Eyed Peas, a hot hip-hop crossover group that features four singers, four live musicians, backing tracks, samples and a variety of instruments. Then imagine that there are no production rehearsals—ever. In fact, they never had any prior to the tour.
Read More »Though Italian entertainment lighting manufacturer Clay Paky has been around since 1976, it was about 10 years later when they became one of the first to offer an automated luminaire that you could purchase instead of rent. The Golden Scan was an innovative product for its time, featuring stepper motors and crisp optics with a uniform beam and a sharp focus. After many years of partnering with Group One, their former U.S. distributor, Clay Paky has recently set up Clay Paky America with managing director Francesco Romagnoli and former High End Systems account rep Eric Mueller. This article is part of the ongoing series of automated lighting manufacturer profiles leading up to the 25th anniversary of the launch of the Vari-Lite.
Read More »In the past decade, the use of drafting software has become rote for designers in this industry, and the available offerings have increased dramatically, with each software package offering various industry-specific tools and an eye toward ease of use, much to the delight of those of us without engineering or CAD degrees. (see PLSN Product Gallery, February 2006 – ed.)
Read More »You may know Steve Cohen’s work through some of the mega tours that he’s designed lately – Britney Spears, Mariah Carey, Justin Timberlake… But you may not know that inside the business-savvy exterior of the man beats the heart of an artist who sees his craft as an extension of the music, who approaches the console like a band instrument and his job like performance art. After running the gamut from the early days with Billy Joel to the over-the-top productions of late, Cohen is settling back into the groove of a pure lighting show and loving every minute of it. He’s currently on the road with Billy Joel again, running the console and getting back to his roots. We caught up to the tour at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas where we spoke with Cohen.
Read More »America saw one of its most difficult economic eras in the 1930s. In the wake of the stock market crash of 1929, the Great Depression put an effective halt to the boom-time spending of the previous two decades. Oddly, the movie industry was one of few to not only survive, but flourish, during the thirties. Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org), the online encyclopedia, has this to say about the trend:
“The emergence of sound films in the late 1920s, combined with the escapism that film provided to a nation down on its luck, made the film industry one of the few that succeeded in profits and in setting a national mood.”
So it should come as no surprise that some of the most beautiful and ornate theaters were built during an otherwise pennywise period.
Read More »As vampire musicals come and go on Broadway, they leave very little by which to remember them. This spring promises a new kind of vampire story in Lestat, based on the best selling books by novelist Anne Rice. Lighting designer Kenneth Posner, projection coordinator Howard Werner and visual concept designer Dave McKean, who have been involved with the project for the past two years, have brought a unique and powerful visual aesthetic to this dark dramatization, which has come of age on Broadway at the Palace Theatre.
Read More »The true context to globalization is the intellectual property (IP) debate. As industries redistribute their sales and manufacturing throughout the world in search of both new markets and increased productivity, it’s inevitable that cultures are going to clash. That’s at the heart of the IP issue: from a Western perspective the need for IP protection is a no-brainer—the ability to protect ideas enables companies to move forward in developing and capitalizing them in anticipation of a return on that investment.
Read More »Zzyzx Inc. of Las Vegas has recently released version 2 of their ESP Vision visualization software program designed for programming lighting cues outside of the venue without using a lighting system. With this program, a lighting designer can make beautiful photo realistic renderings that depict what a show will look like, and convert these drawings to a video presentation of the event.
Read More »Often it can be very useful to adjust the default pan and tilt position of your fixtures. For instance, if we have some moving head… Read More »Building Positions with Moving Head Fixtures
Read More »If a lamp tests good and the plug tests good (you might not know for sure until you open things up) the problem is in… Read More »Light Trouble-Shooting
Read More »If a known good light doesn’t light in a circuit, that proves it’s not the light, so we go the other way; we start troubleshooting… Read More »The Mystery of the Lost Light, part 2
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