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LD Marc Janowitz Specs GLP X4s on My Morning Jacket Tour

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LOS ANGELES – Production Designer/LD Marc Janowitz specified 50 GLP impression X4s on My Morning Jacket’s US tour. The tour is using a festoon-like hanging system. There are 10 soft, swooped hanging positions suspended between the trusses in the overhead grid, with five of the X4s on each.  These festoons travel pre-rigged and cabled, and once the grid is hung, they can be fully deployed in about 10 minutes.

More details from GLP (http://www.glp.de):

LOS ANGELES – Marc Janowitz, long time lighting and production designer for Kentucky psychedelic rock band My Morning Jacket, has kept up his tradition of using the evolving series of GLP impression LED heads by specifying 50 of the latest impression X4s on the band’s current US tour.

The LD admits to having been a fan of the GLP impression since the first impression 90 and later the 120RZ zoom. But he says that by embracing new technology, the X4 provides a higher level of functionality entirely.

Incorporating 19 quad color RGBW LEDs, each rated at 15 Watts, the X4 offers a single homogenized color output from its unique looking front lens across a wide color spectrum and with high output. Janowitz could immediately see how he could put this feature set, with its 7:1 (7°-50°) zoom ratio, to good use.

Given a free hand with the band’s lighting he admits, “There is a tremendous amount of mutual trust — but I have a pretty good sense of the type of visual landscape they are comfortable performing within.”

He had planned to put the 120RZ into the new MMJ design until coming across GLP’s latest solution by accident … and in the nick of time. “By chance, my associate, Ben Price, was prepping another one of our shows [also serviced by VER of Glendale] when [GLP Inc president] Mark Ravenhill stopped by to show him the X4 back in May. I was in Europe and Ben called me in the middle of the night to tell me about the fixture — he was so excited that he forgot about the time difference.”

The timing was perfect as Janowitz was finalizing the set design with the MMJ crew. “We managed to get the new fixture into the discussions just in time for everything to fall into place.”

On returning from Europe Janowitz got to review the fixture at close quarters. “I could see right away what the potential was and didn’t need to compare the X4 with other washlights.  I needed to see that they were at least as bright and feature packed as previous impression fixtures and no bigger or heavier.

“Seeing the addition of the white LED and how it created an even better option for high transmission pastel colors, plus the overall homogenized output, sold me immediately.  No more looking at red/green pixels when mixing ambers and oranges!”

The creative element is designed around a festoon-like hanging system, fabricated out of a modified truss ladder, which forms the architectural centerpiece.  These consist of 10 soft, swooped hanging positions suspended between the trusses in the overhead grid, with five of the X4s on each.  These festoons travel pre-rigged and cabled, and once the grid is hung, are fully deployed in about 10 minutes.

Janowitz describes the new X4s as “bright, lightweight, diverse” and the zoom as “remarkable.” He qualifies this by saying, “It enables me to use these fixtures for an overhead beamy washlight plus a groundrow cyc light … the zoom is outstanding.”

One particular feature that is working well within the MMJ design is the macro effects channel.  “I utilize the center cluster only and point all the fixtures out to the audience.  Since the architectural structure of the design was meant to emulate strings of festoon lights, I was able to create the look of bare bulbs hanging over the stage with the X4.  I would go to this look during the set break and then stay in it for the first few songs out of the encore (typically ballads or solo acoustic songs).”

Speaking of the impression footprint in general, Janowitz relates, “Since many of my clients require designs that will tour well in restricted logistical situations, such as bus trailers, and rock clubs, the combination of minimum size, weight and power consumption is perfect.  But they also pack an excellent punch. These are not just club fixtures — they hold their own just as well at 30ft trim as they do at 12 ft.”

The lighting designer has already underpinned his commitment to the new fixture by promptly deploying a further 28 X4s in a different context on the fall tour with Trey Anastasio Band. “I imagine I’ll be logging quite a few ‘lamp-hours’ on this line and its offshoots in the coming months, so it’s a good thing they are LED!”

Photo: www.breekristelclarke.com