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311 Celebrates 30 Years with Three “311 Day” Concerts

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LAS VEGAS – On March 11, 12 and 13, the band 311 played three marathon concerts, covering 102 songs, at the Park Theater in Las Vegas. The Park has an extremely high resolution projection mapping system on the proscenium along with a 80’ 4k video wall upstage.

Bobby Grey designed a supplemental rig to help the band make the most of the venue. He also created and curated all of the video content and live I-Mag effects.  The design consisted of 5 snub-nosed triangular pods on automated motors. He lined the pods with X4 bars, JDC1s, WW4 Blinders and CP Mythos2. Since the band has such an eclectic catalog of music, ranging from heavy rocking riffs to spacey smooth jams, it was important that the rig stay fresh throughout.

He mentions, “We gave a lot of focus to the opening segment. In years past, the fans would have entered an arena and spent the “walk in” time looking up at a big and complicated, yet dormant, lighting rig. For this year, we wanted to do something completely different. We flew the entire lighting rig up to the grid behind the proscenium. The backline crew set up everything on risers before soundcheck and rolled them off stage before doors. So the fans walked into a completely bare and swept stage, and empty theater. It literally looked like it did before load-in from the audience perspective.

At -15min to show, we blacked out house lights and filled the stage with low lying fog. I created a 15 minute countdown video, rendered from the perspective of looking out the front cockpit of a UFO. Complete with a countdown clock, and a “Heads up display” that utilized some of the band’s spacey artwork, occasionally overlaying the interface with “transmissions” that featured the band’s lyrics.”

Throughout the countdown, the earth slowly crept closer into view, and the projection system displayed a moving starfield. Meanwhile, the lighting crew was bringing the rig in to trim one piece at a time, and the backline crew assembled the band’s gear, while moving through UV-Lit low lying fog. It was like a launch, or landing pad, was being prepared. The audience got to see the entire rig and backline get “loaded in”. Needless to say this built excitement to the extreme. With cryo shooting from the corners of the pods, they slowly lowered in, “beaming” the band onto the stage to reveal them.

Other special moments included several songs that featured throwback content. “We found old camcorder footage of the band playing some of their first shows, and also assembled footage of them playing some of their early songs throughout their 30 year career. I “time stretched” these videos in aftereffects so they would all line up with the band’s timing as they play them today and synced them to timecode. The result was a wall of virtual TVs, featuring the band playing the songs live throughout the years, alongside a live Imag feed of them playing that night on the stage. This took a lot of time and detail, but REALLY worked in the room.”

Although many of their hits and songs regularly on the setlists are now timecoded, the majority of songs played for 311 day are deep cuts that are rarely played. For this Grey had a versatile punt page, and a deep library of visuals, content and Imag effects to give each song a unique feel and keep up with the band as they jam and freeform some of their older and more unique songs.

“We also used a system called “crowd glow” which with a transmitter allowed us to control the audience’s phone screens and flashlights. So the crowd could hold up their phones and their screens would change color along with the lighting rig, and their flashlights could be in sync with the strobes, making the whole house a canvas. It was really neat.”

On his  history with the band  Grey expands, “I finished growing up on tour with these guys as Joe Paradis’ apprentice and have gotten to know the entire band and crew as dear friends. I’m thankful to the band and their management for giving me so much trust and freedom to put together the aesthetic of their show for them.

The band’s tour manager, Yonnie, and production manager Dave, so supportive, working hard to pull all of the logistics together to get these pods, and the show “off the ground”. I have to give a great deal of credit and thanks to Alex Parayuelos, who was the assistant designer for the show and is an indispensable asset creatively. We’ve worked together for almost three years building the band’s content library and putting their summer tours and special events together. He worked tirelessly to help keep all the plates in the air, coordinate all departments, and make the show happen. He’s really a gifted creative.

Our crew chief was Chris Harshfield and his assistant was Jeremy Davidson. They worked extremely hard for long hours to get the rig put together and kept it in %100 working order across the three long shows. Felix Lighting was the lighting vendor and our rep, Ryan Herrera, bent over backwards to pull this together with us. Grant Sellars, with Strictly FX, and his crew, provided special effects, lasers and Cryo. They did an excellent job as always and made the whole thing very unique. PRG provided the automation motors. Thanks goes to Julian Edwards for assisting us with fitting automation into our budget. Seth Robinson with Sightline Design Group came in to wrangle key lights and interface with the video crew. He’s a master at his craft and a world authority on music for webcast key lighting. Also thanks to Christian Lind who spent some long hours with us getting all 12k of video raster talking between our server, the in house projection and D3 systems.”

Credits:

Production Design, Lighting Design and Video Content: Bobby Grey, Notan Creative

Assistant Designer, Lighting Director: Alex Parayuelos

Production Manager: Dave Bellis

Tour Manager: John “Yonnie” Mckeever

Crew Chief: Chris Harshfield

Technician: Jeremy Davidson

Video Tech: Christian Lind

Lasers/Special FX: Grand Sellars

Lasers/Special FX Asst.: Jackson Fraizer

Keylight Programmer: Seth Robinson

Automation Tech: Caleb Darling

CrowdGlow Tech: Nathaniel Lovett

Lighting Vendor: Felix Lighting

Special Effects: Strictly FX

Automation Vendor: PRG