LAKELAND, FL – When it comes to the lights in his house of worship rig, Dominic Lopenzo is completely partial to beam fixtures, or more specifically the beam function in Chauvet Professional’s Rogue RH1 Hybrid. “Beams have become my favorite, because they add so much energy to a room,” he said. “I find myself going to them often.” Lopenzo is technical director of Grace City Church, a dynamic 750-seat house of worship that draws worshippers of all ages for its three contemporary Sunday services.
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“Many people have described our services as being like a concert, and to our worship team and me that’s a huge compliment,” said Lopenzo, who comes from a concert background and still works at the House of Blues in Orlando as well. “We pull a lot of ideas from concert lighting and apply them to a worship environment to create something that we feel is unique and engaging.”
Positioned on the stage deck, next to the drum and keyboard risers, the Rogue RH1 Hybrids in the church’s rig accent key moments on stage and to engage worshippers by directing crisp tight beams across the room. Between two and six fixtures are used, depending on the service or event.
“I used the beams extensively because of their impact,” said Lopenzo. “Our stage is approximately 60 feet wide, and the width of the room expands considerably as it goes out. The beams fill space beautifully. We only have one floor, so I am able to point a lot of the lights straight out at the back wall without worrying about them shining into a balcony. We also have a very large LED wall, but the RH1 hybrids cut through everything. For slower songs I’ll put on a gobo and use them to wash the whole room alongside my R3 Spots,” he continued. “Most of the time, I will use a slow to moderate spin rate with a wide zoom; but I’ve also programmed the gobo spin rate to increase as the song builds to a bigger section.”
There are four Rogue R3 Spot fixtures use at Grace City Church. Flown evenly on upstage and down stage truss, they are featured in virtually every song performed during services. “Typically I have the spots focused to a crisp beam at all times, but lately I’ve also been getting great results with them as a wash light by adding the frost and setting the focus to max,” said Lopenzo. “The colors in the wheel are the exact hues that I want. For slower songs I will usually add a gobo and use them to wash the walls or even the seating area. Another trick I learned with these is that if I lower the iris a lot and increase the focus until the beam becomes crisp again, they essentially become a beam fixture. I use this to try and match them with my RH1 Hybrids so that I have a nice even lighting look across different fixture types.”
Adding color to Lopenzo’s vivid designs are four Rogue R3 Wash, 10 Rogue R1 Wash and eight COLORado Batten 12 fixtures. In addition to washing the wide room with evocative hues, the Rogue R3 units are sometimes deployed as blinder effects. The Rogue R1 fixtures, which are divided evenly between two truss structures, also fill multiple roles beyond color washing, often being used to lend geometric structure to the stage.
“I like to point my R1 Washes straight out, increase the zoom to 100, and match them to my PR lights, which are also located around the stage,” said Lopenzo. “This gives me symmetrical looks across my designs. Despite their small size they still put out a lot of light and can easily light up our room. During low moments I’ll have the stage very dark, and then to build I bring in just the R1 washes with a tight beam. They are at a height where they are just above the heads of our frontline. When all 10 are lit up they add a massive look to the stage.”
As for the COLORado Batten 12 units, they’re flown upstage in a chevron pattern and used to create high-impact chases one moment, before being called upon to create bright white blinder effects the next. It’s an idea that Lopenzo says came from a Green Day concert he saw – another example of how this designer is reaching into the touring world to bring exciting new looks to services at his church.