Photo Archive
for

MUSIC ACTS
2004 through 2006


(Image Right: Musical Notes on a Staff)

Lighted by
RICHARD BONNER



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Events are in reverse chronolgical order.)




The Maritime Beatle Event

The Pub Venue
Maritime Beatle Event: Unplugged
Free Preview Night
Our Friends Pub
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
June, 2006


The Repeatles
(Image: The `Repeatles' from the Side)

The band is bathed in intense, but soft red from two sides to give an even wash to each performer. Blue back lighting gives form and separates them from the background. Fixtures used for both were 500-watt fresnels (frah-nell) sporting barndoors to control spill in the close quarters of the small performance area in this venue.

Behind, a blue cloth is used to hide a normally cluttered corner and present a cleaner stage. Two 500-watt PAR 56 fixtures flood the drop at acute angles, one from each side. This highlights its blue colour while providing additional contrast and form to musicians as illuminated by the front reds.



Hal Bruce
Since this was a static-look for the entire evening, Hal is seen under the same lighting as in the above photo.
More of the blue backdrop is visible from this angle. The apex of the corner is between the two back lights hanging to the right of Center Top. Note that where ever the backdrop lights are not focused appears black. While much of this is due to the excessive contrast of the photo not showing weaker blue lighting down lower on the drop, it is also because the blue colour of the drop does not reflect the front red as well, so it appears dark.


(Image: Hal Gives his All)

This style of lighting and set design is very conducive to confined spaces because it provides good separation of colours, background, and artists despite their close proximity.



The Main Venue
Maritime Beatle Event
Saint Antonio's
Olympic Community Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia
June, 2006


Here are two looks at Richard's venue lighting for the main show in Halifax. Four 1000-watt fresnels splash red on to the curved white-tile ceiling. Two of these lights are visible as over-exposed white spots above the girder at extreme Upper Left and Right. The indirect soft red flooded the entire venue to provide a pleasant atmosphere. Barndoors were placed on each fixture to shield patrons' eyes from direct light when walking along the balcony aisles.

(Image: Overview of the Olympic Community Centre)

The blue colour illuminating the central girders was not permanent. It only occurred when that particular look was used on the stage. The white rectangles above and to each side of the stage are video screens, while the white at Lower Right is daylight spilling in from an open stage door.
Further to the technical aspects of this show, behind the speaker stack at stage right (your left) is the monitor audio position, and just beyond that lies the dimmer setup and main stage power. Note at Lower Right the extreme left edge of the house audio board.




The crowd on the main floor near the hall's entrance views the show from a low angle. At extreme Upper Left is one of the venue fresnels focused toward the back of the venue and bouncing red light from the ceiling. The steel work surrounding it is being illuminated by another fresnel from out of frame left. It is focused toward the front.
Along the girder closest to the performers, front-of-house stage lights are silhouetted. These consist of rows at each side of short-throw, wide-angle PAR 64s for wash, and separated ellipsoidals for key lights on each individual musician. The two arcs of lights closer to the stage canopy are a special setup of PAR 46 marine-style lamps. (More on them in a later photo.)


Notice the range of colours across the venue ceiling. In the balcony on each side is red profiling the girders and curved ceiling, while the stage and above take on the colours of each scene. This provides a total atmosphere for the patrons as they enjoy the performances.

(Image: A Farther-Away Shot of the Venue)


Abbey Road

(Image: Abbey Road and Audience)

In this closer view, the band is lit generally in an orange wash provided by the red and amber wide-angle PAR 64s, and lit individually by ellipsoidals fitted with gold-tinted filters. These front key-lighting fixtures are silhouetted at the top of the image. Two of them can be seen left of Center Top pushing light toward the stage.
PAR 64 Ray Lights provide tubes of medium blue from behind as projected through a light mist. Two come from central, high-angle positions, while the outside fixtures are from a much lower angle. Utilising multiple lights from widely-separated angles in this manner, gives depth and a sense of space to the small, low-ceilinged stage.




Abbey Road
Deep blue smothers the band from front wide-angle PARs. This is enhanced on the small stage by the use of a blue backdrop as was explained in the `Our Friends Pub' photos farther back.
At stage right (your left), the bass player is highlighted by a single front key light provided by a gold-tinted ellipsoidal. It looks more orange here because it has been dimmed in intensity to match the deep blue mood.
The mauve beams from behind come from PAR 64 Ray Lights and provide contrast to the front blue and gold.


(Image: A Closer Photo of `Abbey Road')

Realise the excellent separation of colours that this setup provides - even on such a small stage. This focuses the audience's attention on the most prominent musician during each section of a given song.



Ticket 2 Ride

A soft pink wash produced by combining red and blue front lights blankets the stage, while downstage center is lit from two angles by ellipsoidals using a gold tint. The angles of these key lights may be discerned from the shadows cast upon the stage behind guitarist Hal Bruce. Blue Ray Lights from rear upper and lower positions create atmosphere in a slight haze.


The magentas and purples surrounding the stage are achieved by high-angle side wash lights attached to a balcony railing on each side of the stage. As with the front wash, wide-angle PAR 64 short-throw fixtures were used, but with the lamps rotated to give a vertical oval pattern that slashes completely across the front. In this scene, side-wash blue is used to combine with the front pink in order to create those alternate-colour casts.


(Image: A High-Angle Shot of `Ticket 2 Ride')

Note the blue highlights where the "Beatle Event" sign wrinkles. No alternate colours occur here because the wrinkles are face-on to the blue side lights, but are side-on to the front pink. Being shadowed from that pink, they `see' only the blue side colour.
Although no pink light shines directly on the underside of the stage canopy, there is reflected pink from the white vertical surface below it. It weakly combines with the side blue and achieves a nice violet tinge at its darkest. This usage of light & shadow and direct & reflected light makes for a graduated-fill style of colouring, giving more form and dimension than direct light alone can achieve.
At Center Left is the audio monitor console. Above it hang posterboard images of George Harrision and Paul McCartney.




Jay Goeppner
Backed by
The Repeatles and Ticket 2 Ride


A bright scene is captured from behind the stage-left speaker stack. It consists of a red front colour coupled with several ellipsoidals that dilute the red into a light, bright wash. At Upper Left are two of three side lights that occupy the balcony rail position above stage right. The green and red there combine to give a yellow side wash, further brightening the scene. With all these lights combined, it is now so bright that the back turquoise appears to be lost as viewed from this angle but can be seen reflecting off the ceiling, some of the stage instruments, and on the back of guest guitarist Mark Rashotte from the Beatle tribute group All You Need is Love.

A blurred Jay is all anyone will see of this performer; he is that energetic.

(Image: Jay Fronts an All-Star Band)

The low angle of this photo affords a look at the underside of the stage canopy. Its curvature and white-coloured tiles make for a good surface from which to bounce light. The photos in the "Canopy" section after the next image show the effect of light reflected from there.
Note at Lower Right the Showmist fog generator that provided the mist, haze and fog for this show. The fan seen in front of the unit directed the fog across the stage.




Jay Goeppner
Backed by
The Repeatles and Ticket 2 Ride


This view uses PAR 46 aircraft landing lights fitted with ultra-blue gel. One floor mount with four fixtures is placed behind each of the two drum kits. This provides four beams per colour, two from each mount. (Green is the other colour; it may be seen in a later photo.) The blue beams here are punctuated via five individual pinspots with a light pink gel. These pinspots are positioned with the three central fixtures at higher points than the two side ones in order to give dimension.

(Image: Jay Fronts an All-Star Band)

The only front lighting in this scene is provided by two central key lights which are ellipsoidals with gold-tinted gel. Note that part of this scene is depicted on the video screens at Upper Left and Upper Right.



The Canopy
Maritime Beatle Event
Saint Antonio's
Olympic Community Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia
June, 2006


The usage of this venue's stage canopy will be featured in the next few
views. PAR 64 narrow spots on tripod stands beam pink or orange from
off stage up on to the underside of the stage canopy. There is one
fixture per colour, per side for a total of four. Their actual focus
points are hidden from most audience members because of the `fretwork'
valance on the canopy's front. However, their reflections illuminate the
"Beatle Event" sign and provide top lighting for the musicians from an
otherwise impossible angle in this venue. This indirect technique was
used because the canopy itself is in the way of any lights that might
ordinarily be hung for the purpose of top lighting.


Abbey Road

(Image: Bounced Canopy Light Provides Pink Top Light)

In this shot, no front lighting is used at all. Blue back lights are contrasted by a soft pink from above. From a distance, as seen here, the canopy nicely frames a bright area above the stage and also shows off the "Beatle Event" sign.



Here is a closer shot of a similar scene except that the rear blue is coming from low-angle PAR 46 aircraft landing lights and it is deeper in colour.


Abbey Road

(Image: Bounced Canopy Light Provides Pink Top Light)



The Repeatles

(Image: Bounced Canopy Light Provides Orange Top Light)

Bass player Arne Leirnes gazes at the orange reflecting from the canopy. The source for one of the beams may be see at Lower Right. As you can see, it is fairly low in height but not down at floor level. This gives the best angle to hit the curved tile surface above. This scene also uses front red and rear turquoise.



Green hovers in the air over the performers. It is achieved by PAR 46 aircraft landing lights shot from a low angle into fog over top of the drum kits. The central area is lit by front ellipsoidals dimmed to take on an orange look, although here the camera shows it as red.

The Finale

(Image: Musicians from Several Bands Performing)



The Finale
(Image: Musicians from Several Bands Performing)

This close-in shot shows musicians from several of the acts on the bill bathed in red. Fog swirls around their feet and up behind their backs where it takes on the colour of the rear turquoise lights. The front red is from the PAR 64 wide floods and gives a very soft and even wash. Once again, the back beams are provided by close-proximity PAR 64 Ray Lights.

Note at Center Bottom where the fog takes on a yellow tint despite there being no lights of that colour in this scene. This is achieved where the red front wash combines with the green component of the rear turquoise to produce a third colour: yellow.



Show's End

For the very end, some lights behind the band shoot rays through thick fog while other lights are brought up dimly to simply make their presence known. The canopy lights colour it and the "Beatle Event" sign in orange. Red washes the stage from front positions.

(Image: Beams Radiate Downward into the Crowd)

Out above the dance floor in front of the canopy are the curved fixtures with the marine-style lamps, as mentioned earlier. Five PAR 46 lamps are arranged in an arc within each enclosure so as to fan out the beams across the audience. When viewed directly, the unshielded filaments give a glistening effect; yet at the same time, crisp, slender beams are projected into the crowd from parabolic reflectors behind those same filaments.




Ladder Boy

The audience views Richard as he reaches up to nearly five metres above the main floor to focus an errant light that had drooped shortly after the show's opening. An Ellipsoidal is a heavy stage light that requires extra tightening of its adjustment hardware. This is due to the 1000-watt light source's extreme heat causing tolerances to increase. The effect is one of slightly loosening this hardware so the front-heavy fixture tends to pivot downward. Richard had failed to secure this one well enough during the final preshow focus, so after heating up during the opening act, it drooped slightly.


(Image: Richard Focuses from a Ladder)

Although only a bit off the mark, rather than suffer with it for the remaining eleven-plus hours of the event, and also take the chance that it would not droop further, he waited till announcements were being made between acts and quickly left the lighting director's position, at extreme Center Left in the balcony.
Grabbing his trestle ladder stored next to the stage, he quickly brought it out under the light, set it up, climbed to near the top, refocused and tightened the light, climbed back down and closed and removed the ladder. This entire operation was done in under 90 seconds.


This close-up view also provides a better look at the spaced row of ellipsoidals used for individual key lights, and at the right, the close series of six wide-angle, short-throw PAR 64s used for general washes. Another set of them hangs out of frame to the left.




November Nite
Brightwood Golf and Country Club
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
November, 2005

The band is lit in a wide-angle, soft red from the front. The guitarist is profiled by a single ellipsoidal spot from his front right. Behind, green washes emanate from side positions, while turquoise PAR 64 Ray lights beam down to the two outside guitar positions. Each one is hit from a near, high angle and a far, low angle in mirror-image symmetry.

Donna Scaglione
backed by
The Time Bandits


(Image: Donna Scaglione with the `Time Bandits')


Hal Bruce and Donna Scaglione
backed by
The Time Bandits

(Image: Musicians on stage at `November Nite')
This scene is lit from the front by a wide-angle red wash with white highlights provided by the camera flash. From behind, intense red and orange pierce through fog to provide backlighting on the musicians. At the far left is a "Snowflake" pattern projected on the side wall as part of the venue atmosphere.



Here is a closeup of Donna. She is highlighted from behind by a deep blue projected from rear stage right, while the same from farther away stage left provides soft blue fill. A single key light from front stage right profiles her from one side while allowing deep shadow on the other. This key light has a warming tint and is reduced to a low intensity to create a sombre mood.

Donna Scaglione

(Image: Donna in Closeup)


Time Bandits
with Hal Bruce


The band here is lit with a front soft red wash. This is contrasted by wide green washes from two rear side positions and narrow turquoises located closer to center. Only the stage-right fixtures are visible here.

(Image: `Time Bandits' and Hal Bruce)

The back greens illuminate all the front-line performers while the turquoises only hit the stage-right singer and stage-left guitarist. Being brighter, they over power the green on those two from that angle only. However, they blend with it as one moves farther away from the intensity of the turquoise beams.



Time Bandits

(Image: Closeup of `Time Bandits' Stage Left Guitar Player)



Here is a closer view of the same lighting look as above. It shows the colour separation on an individual musician. The soft front red is contrasted by green from stage left and turquoise from stage right. The colours are kept apart by paying attention to the location and angle of each lighting fixture. This gives form and dimensionality to the performer, especially when viewed from a distance.

Note the blending of the top turquoise and lower-angle green as they follow the form of the top & back of guitarist Gerry Albert's hair, yet still staying separate from the red on his face, ear and neck.



Time Bandits
with Donna Scaglione

Deep blue surrounds the band for a soft look from front and rear side angles, while contrastingly lighter blues hit the drum kit from steeper rear angles. A single spot with a warming tint highlights the stage-right guitar player from a front, right side position.

(Image: `Time Bandits')

In this wide-angle photo, the "Snowflake" pattern is evident once again. Note the shadow of one of the venue's chandelier lighting fixtures near the upper right of the projected image. The angle could not be adjusted to pass by the chandelier and still have the pattern be on a relatively clear wall space with minimal keystoning. Out from the wall, the missing part of the image may be seen shining on the offending ceiling fixture.



Time Bandits

(Image: Dancers are Silhouetted by the Band and Stage Lighting)
Dancers are silhouetted against two-tone blue band lighting coupled with narrow pink highlights. The pink beams are produced by four PAR 64 Ray lights from central high and low positions. The back lights are reflected in the venue's polished wooden floor, and thick fog adds a misty haze to the stage scene.




Jimmy Jam
Saint Antonio's
Olympic Community Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia
October, 2005

Ticket 2 Ride

This look is achieved with a colour-corrected spot from the front giving a warm incandescent feel to the guitarist. At the rear are two PAR 64 ray lights bathing the drums in lavender.

(Image: `Ticket 2 Ride' from a High Angle)

The white fingers are done by using triangle-configuration splitter patterns, one in each of four ellipsoidal spots having 37-degree spreads. This produces a total of 12 beams. There is one on either side of the drum kit on floor bases, and one each on vertical pipes at extreme stage left and right. A slight haze allows the beams to be visible.
(The not-seen stage-right light is out of frame to the left, while the floor one to the drummer's immediate left is pointing away from the camera, so its beams are less noticible in this picture.)




Canadian Primos

(Image: `Canadian Primos' Horn Players)
A saxophone player is knifed from the blue in this photo. This is achived by deep blue front and side washes along with a sharply-focused ellipsodial on the main player from an almost straight-on, but medium-high angle. Note how precisely he is separated from his fellow players despite their close proximity. A colour correction filter gives him a warm look to contrast the cold blue.



Garfield and Arlene

(Image: Garfield and Arlene Guard the Lighting Console)

This is the upstairs front-of house lighting director's position. Garfield and Arlene stand watch over the lighting console, which for this show is a Leprecon LP-900. To our left of them is a Hewlett-Packard N3438 Pavilion Notebook. Normally used for lighting cue purposes, here a 1-2-3 spreadsheet displays the artist lineup for the evening.




Sham*Rocks
CD Release
Brightwood Golf and Country Club
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
March, 2005


(Image: `Sham*Rocks' from the Front)
Three of the band members seen here are lit with a red front wash. Pink spots highlight from behind while a green top wash adds form. Bubbles compliment the scene and reflect the colours used.



Sham*Rocks
Brightwood Golf and Country Club
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
March, 2005


A similar scene to the above is shown here, but from a side angle. Once again, a red front wash with pink back lighting illuminates the band and bounces colour off the bubbles.

Iridescent shamrock cutouts by set designer, Carol Cunningham, hang above and behind. They also reflect the scene's colours.


(Image: `Sham*Rocks' from the Side)




Saltwater Roses
Holiday Inn, City Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia
February, 2005


(Image: `Saltwater Roses' from the Front)


A production shot of Saltwater Roses (minus the horn players and one guitarist) shows them lit from the front in a pink, and from the rear in blue. At the top of the image is a bar of Lighting & Elecctronics short-throw PAR 64 fixtures. Its red and blue lights are on in order to produce the front pink colour.


Note at the wall/ceiling boundary behind the band the blending of colours toward the violet end of the spectrum. Due to fixture positions and focusing, the red happend to have had less effect near the left ceiling for this particular light setup. However, it still tints the blue enough to produce a purple cast. This colour change may be seen by following the blue above the far left fixture across the ceiling and down the back wall. It changes from blue to violet to purple, back to violet and then to pink as the blending takes place.
 


Here are several members of the band lit from the front in thick red and from acute side angles in deep blue. An additional gold tint from an ellipsoidal highlights the front guitarist/vocalist.

Saltwater Roses
Holiday Inn, City Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia
February, 2005


(Image: `Saltwater Roses' from the Side)


Bluesmith at Bonn-Ami
Monte's Bar & Grill
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
September, 2004


(Image: `Bluesmith' at Bonn-Ami)
The band members are lit with a soft, wide-angle pink from the front. It is achieved by combining red and blue lights - one red and one blue from each of two side positions. A clue to the usage of this technique may be seen in the colour shadows of the railing on the center guitarist's pants. There is one shadow for each of the red and blue colours.

In areas where the colours combine to a lesser extent, such as extreme left & right upstage, the stronger red colour overtakes the blue. This may be seen on the faces of the keyboard and bass players.

Intense lime greens wash from rear corner angles to achieve dimension on the small stage. The back lights in this venue hang low because of the ceiling height. The wide-angle ones, three at each side, are barndoored to shield the audience from glare due to their shallow angle. The center lights above the drum kit (which are not on in this scene) are in long-throw fixtures and are focused further upstage. Thus, they require no additional shielding.


 



    Thanks to photographers Babs Walker, Colin Conrad, Shirley Robb, and Ully Bleil of the Halifax-Dartmouth, Nova Scotia area for usage of their photos.




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