Stageco Takes to the Road with the Stones' Latest Touring SpectacularSince building the support structure for Mark Fisher's iconic, fire-breathing cobra at every show on the 1994 - 95 Voodoo Lounge Tour, Stageco has been proud to have a close association with The Rolling Stones. And this year has seen them back on the road with No Filter -- yet another spectacular production milestone that has spanned outdoor stadiums and arenas around Europe with Stageco's expertise close to hand all the way. No Filter marks another victory for Rolling Stones production manager Dale 'Opie' Skjerseth who engaged what he referred to as "my A team" -- creative director Patrick Woodroffe and set designer Ray Winkler from Stufish Entertainment Architects, with Jeremy Lloyd of Wonder Works co-ordinating the technical design elements and working with Stageco's project manager Hedwig De Meyer and R&D engineers Tom Frederickx, Patrick Martens and Kai Eppinger, to create two complete steel, tower, and roof systems that have been leapfrogging around Europe since the start of September when the tour opened at Hamburg's Stadtpark Festwiese. From the outset, the band's main wish was for a tidy and streamlined production, with sleek contours but absolutely no hint of behind the scenes steelwork. Spreading 60m wide, the resulting set features four monolithic 22m high x 11m wide LED video screens, a 28m long T-shaped catwalk and B-stage, and a bespoke, cantilevered, transparent-skinned "roofette" that hovers above the band. Stefaan Vandenbosch, the leader of one of the two outdoor Stageco crews (Kevin De Meyer managed the other), comments: "Each system fills 17 trucks. Working with our own team of 14 along with 15 local climbers and 15 stage hands, it takes two and a half days to load in with six fork lifts and a pair of cranes, and we are averaging about 18 hours to pull it all down and put back into the trucks to head to the next venue." When planning began, Skjerseth invited Belgian engineering company Wicreations to team up on the project. "Hedwig and I went to the first meeting together, and advised on aspects of the design," says Wicreations founder Hans Willems, who gained his early industry experience as a Stageco employee. "There are only 14 shows in 12 cities, which is now fairly typical of the band's current touring pattern compared with the very long schedules of 10 years ago or more, and so because of Stageco's widespread commitments throughout the summer, we looked at what we could achieve in collaboration with each other." "It's a genuine collaboration with Wicreations and it works very well," observes Vandenbosch. "All the pieces came in and connected with our systems perfectly. Of course, it helps that Hans has worked for Stageco and knows our procedures so well. They developed and fabricated the aluminium-clad transparent band roof that has its own drainage system to cope with rainy conditions. It's formed from four curved 12m long steel roof beams that each break down into two sections. "The roof travels with us and we build it for each show, along with our towers, pulley beams, lifting cables, and the trussing support system for the video screens, while the wind bracing system and motion control hoists [connected to the black steel base of the towers] are provided by Wicreations. The way the screens are rigged means that any wind pressure on them is borne by their supporting black steel towers. Personally, I love the three-dimensional effect of the screens -- they give the impression that the band are playing in front of four tall buildings." Each of the roof's 12m sections accommodates nine Martin intelligent lights that are key to Woodroffe's lighting design and travel in custom-built beams. Interconnected to the black steel superstructure of two of the four central video towers, the band roof was flown on the indoor arena shows and continued to be a major part of the performance area, with modified construction. For these arena performances, Stageco assigned an additional crew led by Martin 'Tinus' Beckers. As usual with productions of this scale, Stageco handled all the scaffolding and stage decking requirements, and also supplied and built the spot/delay towers, platforms, and covered front of house risers -- for this tour, lighting/video control and sound each had their own riser. "Due to the way our two systems have been allocated to the overall touring schedule, I have been in charge of three of the seven outdoor dates, while Kevin De Meyer looked after the others," comments Vandenbosch. "For my crew, the run started with Munich's Olympic Stadium [September 12] and Zurich's Letzigrund [September 20], both of which I worked at earlier this year on the Robbie Williams tour and they are very easy stadiums from a load-in and building perspective. The Olympic Stadium in Barcelona is the last of my three shows and it's been a little more difficult because there is only one entrance and you have to unload everything outside, put it on small trucks and bring it in that way." In his role as technical design co-ordinator, Jeremy Lloyd was perfectly placed to appreciate the interaction of Skjerseth's chosen task force. "All around, it was a great collaboration," he says "We didn't spend a lot of time in meetings. A lot of it is about trust and knowing what can be done in the time. Because I know these people, I know what we can do." The Rolling Stones' No Filter European tour ends in Paris on October 25 when they will be the first band to perform live in the city's newly-opened U Arena.
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