McFly Makes a Robe Pointe of Celebrating 10 Years at the Royal Albert HallChart topping, award winning and enduringly popular UK pop rockers McFly celebrated 10 years at the forefront of the music industry with great panache and some help from Robe's latest technology ... in four sold-out shows at London's Royal Albert Hall. The Royal Albert Hall's lighting department was appointed as lighting contractors and senior technical manager Ollie Jeffery contacted award-winning international lighting designer Tim Routledge to create a design using their own extensive house rig -- featuring 130 moving lights -- plus a large quantity of 'specials' including 24 Robe Robin Pointes and 40 Robe Robin LEDBeam 100s. These were supplied by Brighton-based TSL. Project manager Frankie Du Toit organized WYSIWYG, patch and systems liaising with Routledge directly on behalf of the Hall. Jeffery comments, "TSL didn't just provide us with a dry-hire service, it was a complete managed package backed up by a first class service." The brief to Routledge from McFly's management was to craft a stunning looking, memorable show fitting to the occasion which embraced and included the visual attributes of the Royal Albert Hall, including its grand organ. The venue has recently taken delivery of a quantity of architectural LED lights to illuminate unique elements like the organ and the roof. Routledge's design was therefore based on "high and wide" structural dimensions to show off the hall's spatiality and the Victorian splendor of the stage area in front of the organ. Six flown vertical trusses made a chevron either side of the organ pipework and four vertical trusses on floor bases, left and right of the organ completed the pictures. The 24 Pointes were all deployed in multiples of four in the six flown trusses and at the bottom of each one was a Patten 2013, a custom vintage dish light designed and developed by Routledge. The LEDBeam 100s crowned a low level wall of Jarags curving around behind the band's backline. It was the first time that Routledge had used Robe's new Pointe fixture, which was launched at Prolight + Sound 2013 in Frankfurt and has quickly became Robe's fastest-ever selling product. He did not start using them until about half way through the high energy show and once he did, they had a profound impact on the look and feel of the lighting. Features that Routledge especially likes include the lenticular prism and the rotating prism, both of which enable some unique and different laser-like effects that can have colors zapped through them. He also likes the snapping frosts and a number of other cool high-speed effects. Routledge used them for big wide-fan beam looks into the audience, which could then instantly be snapped back to stage Due to the speed and manoeuvrability of the Pointe. "They are super bright and quick, really robust and have loads of useful tools," he comments. The LEDBeams were used for back-effects and beams and for filling gaps in the camera shots. In addition to those around the back wall, another 16 framed the front arch of the stage. Saturday night's show was shot for a commemorative DVD and also streamed live on the internet. "They are very flexible -- an excellent 'flash-and-bash' tool on one hand and also excellent for making up simple, bold architectural looks. The LEDBeam 100 is absolutely the favorite in my toolbox at the moment," he declares. Routledge programmed and ran lighting for the McFly shows on the house grandMA2 console and before this, he used WYSIWYG in his own studio in south west London. Routledge has just won the "Philips Entertainment Award for Outstanding Achievement in Lighting," which was presented by the Theatre's Trust at the first ever Technical Theatre Awards (TTAs) during the 2013 PLASA lighting & sound exhibition in London. See Robe at PLASA Focus: Nashville, February 18-19, 2014.
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