Robe Puts On Its Colours for You Me At Six

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Acclaimed UK rockers You Me At Six celebrated the
conclusion of their 2014 “Cavalier
Youth” album campaign with a
UK arena double-headliner with US pop punk band All Time Low, bringing an
interesting fusion of genres and uniting thousands of enthusiastic young fans
equally into both of them.  

Lighting and visuals designer Louis Oliver from
creative practice Okulus specified 18 x Robe BMFL Spots and 40 x Robe LEDWash
600s among other fixtures for this final leg of the tour which were supplied by
lighting contractor Zig Zag Lighting from Leeds.  

Zig Zag was the second rental company in the UK to
commit to purchasing BMFLs, and the lights have been working hard ever since on
a variety of shows.   

The You Me At Six design evolved and was developed
over the year according to the venues and the format of the shows, and for
these final arena dates, there was a general up-scaling of the original concept
to maximise the additional stage space and headroom. The largest venues included
London’s O2 Arena and
Manchester’s MEN Arena.  

Louis and Jeff Maker, All Time Low’s LD, decided that the BMFLs would be
perfect for the job, and were definitely versatile enough to help facilitate
two completely different looking shows which shared the same overhead fixtures.  

Upstage was a very wide 18mm Winvision LED screen, and
video was central to both shows so any fixtures had to hold their own against
this.  

The 18 x BMFLs were rigged on six upstage / downstage
orientated ‘spine’ trusses which moved up and down on a
Kinesys system adding plenty of extra dynamics to You Me At Six’s show, which was raw and hard hitting to
match the darker, edgier sounds of the band.   

Joining the BMFLs on the six spines were 18 of the
LEDWash 600s, 18 x 2-lite Moles and 18 strobes.  

On the floor, six LEDWash 600s per
side (12 in total) were spread over six scaff poles (three per side) with tank
trap bases, and another 12 x
LEDWash 600s at the back – upstage of the screen – illuminated the set and
risers from behind and blasted powerful sheets of light and colour into the
performance space.  

It was Louis’ first time using BMFLs, and he was immediately struck by their
brightness.   

“They are punchy and reliable,” he commented, “The gobos are really nice and the colour mixing is
perfect”. He is impressed
generally with the colour matching between the BMFLs and the LEDWashes, an
opinion echoed by many who are using fixtures across Robe’s ROBIN range, which also includes the full
LEDWash family, the popular Pointes and 
LEDBeam 100s as well as the MMX Spots and WashBeams.  

He used the BMFLs for their potent beam looks which
bring effortless attitude to the picture accentuating the band’s stark, powerful live aesthetic.  

LEDWash 600 is now frequently his key light of choice
because of the authentic range of CT whites, which IMAG video director, Richard
Shipman also liked. 

Louis ran lighting from a grandMA2 light, which also
triggered the playback video cues which were timecoded and run from a
Hippotizer media server… A completely new set of bespoke video content was
commissioned for the arena tour by Louis and produced by Pablo Beckett from
Bryte Design, and the lighting was also completely re-programmed.  

Okulus is a new creative collaboration and business
venture between Louis and lighting and visuals designer James Scott, both part
of a new wave of mixed media designers whose imagination and style are breaking
new ground.  

Okulus’ other
clients include Chvrches, Temper Trap and the Zac Brown Band, and James has
just finished the latest leg of Passenger’s Australian tour, which also featured BMFLs. 

http://www.robe.cz

 

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