Skip to content

Features

Arched Video Wall for Bon Jovi’s “Circle” Tour

Bon Jovi's The Circle Tour needed a set design that was both practical and visually unique. Tait Towers credited Doug "Spike" Brant for coming up with the main visual concept: a video wall that looms skyward, beyond the stage, in the shape of a giant arch.

Choctaw Casino Synchronizes Lighting, Water and Flame Effects

Visitors to the Choctaw Casino Resort in Durant, Okla. can see a series of color-changing pylons that flank the boulevard on the way to the resort, and a circle of nine obelisks around an entry fountain attract attention with water effects, lighting and fire as they get closer. ETC Unison Mosaic show controllers are used to orchestrate both the synchronized scenic effects and exterior LED wash lighting.

Media-Savvy Church Chooses Video-Friendly Lighting Gear

Billing itself as a "church for people who don't like church," Real Life Church in Valencia, Calif. didn't follow a conventional path when it built its own facility after nearly a decade of holding services in, first, a movie theater and, most recently, a high school auditorium.

Jamie Cullum Tour Visuals Strike a Chord with Piano String Looks

Zig Zag Lighting is providing gear for jazz-pop singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Jamie Cullum, on tour in the U.K. and Europe to support his recent album, The Pursuit. The lighting design by Hadyn Thomas uses a rig that includes Robe fixtures for all the moving lights.

Havasi Symphony, Choir Lit with Moving Light Fixtures

Pianist Balázs Havasi and his symphony performed with a 40-voice choir for a corporate event at the Budapest Congress & World Trade Centre recently. Attila Lenzsér, who served as LD, programmer and operator, used a rig provided by Lajter Light Ltd. that included 80 Clay Paky fixtures.

LED Panels Reconfigured Mid-Tour for Christian Music Tour

For the Winter Jam 2010 Christian music tour, which featured acts like Third Day, Newsboys, Newsong and Sidewalk Prophets, Axxis, Inc. provided LC Series LED panels as the visual centerpiece – then changed that centerpiece by flipping the panels from a horizontal to vertical configuration as the tour was underway.