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Susanne Sasic, Jeff Ravitz Control Arcade Fire’s Looks with grandMA Consoles

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NEW YORK – Canadian rock band Arcade Fire's LD/production designer, Susanne Sasic, used a grandMA console for the band's summer tour dates, and for a concert webcast from Madison Square Garden, LD Jeff Ravitz also relied upon grandMA for control. Arcade Fire's stage set was designed to be "a literal interpretation of what you'd see in the suburbs: an overpass, billboard, stadium," Sasic noted.  "The initial directive was to have a highway overpass as the backdrop with a billboard onstage.  The video board was made into a billboard-like structure with a mini-beam surround similar to a movie marquee.  There are actual images on the highway backdrop, but when the show's video is projected, the printed image disappears.

 

"Four bars of four Wybron beam projectors are mounted on a 24-foot telescoping pole in the set to simulate stadium lights," she added.  "The color palette is sort of washed out and eerie with the orange and greenish shades you'd see in a mall parking lot."

 

Sasic continued, "I don't know how I'd do this tour without grandMA, since we're using different fixtures at different venues. The biggest advantage is that I can use OnPC which allows me to program in advance of having the fixtures: They send me a patch list and a fixture list and I can walk in with my show on a USB stick ready to go."

 

In addition, she programmed a lot of chases with LED fixtures for the tour and credited the grandMA's effects engine for making it "so easy to program a song."  Sasic also praised the grandMA's reliability "I have no worries about it crashing or malfunctioning – that's a wonderful thing."

 

When Arcade Fire performed at Madison Square Garden, a second set of lights was required for the show that feature film director Terry Gilliam captured for his "Unstaged" series, presented by American Express and streamed over the web in partnership with YouTube and VEVO.

 

"I was the lighting consultant for the webcast," Ravitz said. "My job was to come in and evaluate the show on the basis of how it would work at all levels; we wanted to preserve the creative aspects of the original show and find the best way to represent Susanne's lighting. We wanted to put viewers right in the Garden."

 

To do that, Ravitz needed to make some changes and additions.  "Susanne's backlights were programmed, of course, to raise and lower cue-by-cue. For the taping, there were many close ups that benefited from more constant backlighting. So we added some fixtures that weren't noticeable to the audience members but added highlight and dimension to the performers on camera," he said. "We also added lighting to better see crowd reactions and, for the webcast viewers, the MSG environment."

 

Ravitz brought in his own full-size grandMA for the webcast, along with programmer Cameron Yeary. "We couldn't lay the responsibility for our webcast lights on the show operator, in this case, Susanne, who needed to focus on the flow of the live concert," he said.

 

"The grandMA was the perfect console for what we were doing.  It allowed Cameron to constantly adjust levels and re-evaluate things on a camera-to-camera basis and execute things very quickly – a must for a live webcast."

 

The lighting package for the tour was supplied by Upstaging, and Scharff Weisberg supplied the television package.

 

For more information, please visit www.actlighting.com .