Shania Twain Sets Out to Rock This Country on Farewell Tour Featuring Clay Paky and grandMAHer farewell tour is called Rock This Country, and country icon Shania Twain is doing just that as she bids good-bye to her fans from coast to coast. More than 300 Clay Paky lighting fixtures and two MA Lighting grandMA2 consoles are along for the ride, selected by lighting designer Mark Butts who also serves as the tour's coproduction designer with Raj Kapoor. A.C.T Lighting, Inc. is the exclusive distributor of both brands in North America. Last year when Twain was in her residency at Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas, where Kapoor was her show director, Butts conceived a "big, edgy, modern rock 'n roll look" for her farewell tour. "I wanted a big lighting rig, big pyro, lots of automation -- the biggest possible system that we could easily move around the country," he says. "And that led me to Clay Paky." According to Butts, "the only way to implement a rig of this size was to use super efficient small, high-power lights with a ton of features. There was no way I could have done this without Clay Paky gear, especially Mythos -- I couldn't have done the show with standard, giant 1,500W hard-edged fixtures. So I designed the show around the gear." Video Equipment Rentals supplied the lighting to Butts's specifications. Fifty-six of Clay Paky's new Mythos fixtures are touring with Twain. Butts had evaluated Mythos demo units last year and used a large number of them on Kenny Chesney's current Big Revival tour. "I had a lot of experience with them and knew they would work for Shania," he says. Most of the Mythos fixtures are mounted on ten upstage and ten downstage truss fingers, which run perpendicular to the primary lighting truss, notes Nashville-based lighting director and programmer Andre Petrus. "The Mythos are great -- super bright and with low power consumption," he says. "They act as beam or profile fixtures with color mixing optics and animation wheels." Ninety-six A.leda B-EYE K20s are housed in six big automated aluminum pods, which can rise in the air or descend to the stage deck. Each pod contains 16 B-EYEs in a 4x4 configuration. "I knew that having big banks of them would be a major element of the show," says Butts. "I like their individual pixel control and organic shape." Butts devised a unique way to showcase 120 Sharpy fixtures: He integrated them into 12 30' high moving set pieces. "I didn't wanted to be locked into a giant upstage videowall," he says. "So we designed chunks of wall that could spin and move on a track. Each piece has a 5-mil LED wall on one side and a vertical row of ten Sharpys on the other. The pieces can spread out or come together in any configuration. I picked Sharpys because I wanted to pack a lot of lightweight, low-power fixtures with a lot of punch into a small space. They were the perfect choice." Petrus says the possible combinations for the modular moving LED/light walls are "almost endless. They can create a different look for every song." He notes that, "the band risers also track stage right to stage left so the band is constantly on the move, too." Seventy-two Sharpy Washes are also mounted in the truss fingers where they wash the stage and band and deliver "big, cool aerial beam effects," says Petrus. "I love how small and efficient they are while having a narrow, bright beam almost like Sharpy," adds Butts. "They're pretty versatile." Two full-size grandMA2 consoles, one active and one redundant back up, plus six NPUs and 10 eight-port nodes are used to control the show's lighting. "A show of this size wouldn't be possible without grandMA," says Petrus. "We have so many fixtures and so many parameters. Each B-EYE has 183 channels of DMX; multiply that by 96 fixtures and you have quite a lot!" Previs programmer David Mollner spent two weeks previsualizing the show on a full-size grandMA2 before rehearsals began in Las Vegas. He took full advantage of MA 3D v. 3.005, which enabled him to visualize stage layouts in three dimensions. "With MA 3D I was able to deal with all the automated set pieces and lights. I could manipulate them within the program I built more easily than with any other system out there," he explains. Mollner has been a grandMA user since 2001. "I've been using MA 3D more and more," he reports. "Even during a show I have MA 3D running on my laptop as I'm working with the live rig. For free software it's amazing what it can do! It's always hard to ask software to move things on an arc path; MA 3D not only moved the set pieces on an arc path but also rotated each of the pieces individually. No other software could do both of these things." Butts concurs that MA 3D has been a "really valuable" component of the show. "It's great to have it available as native to the console," he says. Butts gives kudos to the continuing support he gets from A.C.T Lighting and its staff members, especially for big projects like the tour. "A.C.T is the gold standard in product support, so when they started to represent Clay Paky that told me all I needed to know about the products," he says. "I haven't been disappointed."
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