Catalyst
on James Blunt
AV
Product News Published: 7 April 2008
A Catalyst V 4 digital media server is at the core of Paul Normandale’s
visual design for the 2008 James Blunt world tour.
It’s the first time Catalyst has been used
on James Blunt. It replaces a previous digital media server
and is being operated on tour by lighting director Glen Johnson,
who is also running lights and overseeing all the design aspects
of the show.
Normandale and Johnson have created interesting
and meticulously thought-out set of visual content which runs
throughout the set, produced from a variety of sources including
the Catalyst library, websites and selected and re-cut James
Blunt videos, some of which have never been shown in public.
Catalyst is proving a highly flexible option,
both for setting the tour up and for its ongoing evolution.
“Using Catalyst allows daily onsite editing and scaling,
and also the development of images for colour palette and the
various media surfaces” says Normandale – which
include ColorWeb LED and screens
The tour was conceived for American arenas and
has been scaled accordingly for the European section. The design
had a regal theme using Blunt’s family coat of arms, along
with the monkey symbolism of the album and the desire to progress
the show in a series of scenes. These involve cyc projection,
red stripes and the 108 square metres of 250 mm ColorWeb LED,
all of which play a part in a series of reveals, adding depth
and dimension to the stage.
In addition to the Catalyst, they have a PixelMAD
system also supplied by UK Catalyst dealer Projected Image Digital
running as a stand alone machine, which is supplying content
– via 13 DMX universes – to the ColorWeb which flies
in and out during the show. Being transparent, this is also
utilised for some leftfield 3D effects with video running on
the surface and lighting punching through from behind.
Also feeding into the Catalyst at FOH - via two
LFG Input cards with 4 composite inputs on each card - are 8
lipstick cameras positioned around the stage focussed on the
band members plus one robotic camera, operated by Richard Jewell.
A;; of these are split out into widescreen format and scaled,
treated and affected in the Catalyst.
The set changes every 3 or 4 songs, with drapes,
screens and LED dropping in or being flown out, revealing different
sized projection surfaces. The first projections in the show
are run at 16 x 9 ft and by the end, the area has expanded to
56 x 30ft.
The scaling and compression facilities of both
Catalyst and PixelMAD have been instrumental to making it possible
to run the show in the manner, and images have to be sized and
re-sized constantly and consistently through the set.
Catalyst generally gives them a massive amount
of flexibility for running video and images for the show.
The first song has all 8 cameras projected across
the screen – for a very clean camera mix - via 2 Barco
FLM projectors supplied by XL Video – while on the 9th
layer Johnson uses one feed to overlay Blunt’s head across
the whole area.
For “Carry Me Home”, he runs one layer
of water effect, with the second layer a camera source shooting
into a dark spot of the stage with Blunt in the middle. This
is then set to transparent black, letting the water effect flow
all around Blunt.
For the final section and the anthemic disco song
“1973” the footage is a funky psychedelisation of
unseen off-cuts from the promo video which have been solarised
and negatived in the Catalyst, with fluorescent retro colours
applied
On the practical side, Johnson comments, “Both
Catalyst and PixelMAD are excellent and reliable and have obviously
been built for touring”
Johnson us using a WholeHog 3 console for control,
and all lighting hardware for the tour is supplied by Lite Alternative.
Sound is supplied by Skan, and the James Blunt tour is scheduled
to continue into early 2009.