XL Video
in Fast Lane with REM
AV
Product Stories Published: 10 January 2009
XL Video is supplying MiTrix and SoftLED video surfaces, cameras,
control and crew for video director Blue Leach on the current
REM “Accelerate” tour.
XL Video UK’s project manager Des Fallon
says “It’s great to be working with production managed
Bill Rahmy and his team, and, as always, Blue’s show is
dynamic, different and imaginatively daring”.
Leach is well known as one of the most creative
video designer/directors in the business with a real penchant
for experimental and inventive ideas. Nothing is ever predictable
- and this show is no exception!
REM’s lead singer Michael Stipe was integrally
involved in the initial ideas for the show aesthetic, and he
wanted video as a centrepiece. Leach also collaborated very
closely with lighting designer Susanne Sasic on the visual evolution
of the show, a creative process he really enjoyed.
They came up with the ‘set’ which
consists of 5 upstage columns of Barco MiTrix, all 5 ft wide,
measuring between 12 and 20 ft tall, and then two 30ft long
by 8 ft deep horizontal strips of SoftLED behind this, offset
from one another by a 2ft gap. The MiTrix blocks reference back
to the album’s city skyline artwork, and Stipe was very
keen for the content and visuals to have an unrefined, raw texture
and a bit of an Op Art feel which uses a lot of black and white.
Leach and Sasic’s research for the project
included examining and taking inspiration from several ‘Optical
art’ practitioners and the idea of ‘perceptual experience’
related to how vision functions.
The screen content is split 80/20 percent between
cameras and playback. The jittery, fast cut camera mix meshed
with Sasic’s intelligent and complimentary lighting design,
Stipe’s graceful almost mime-like movements, and the band’s
rocky sound and meaningful lyrics is a memorable collage of
visual literacy.
Sasic and graphic designer Chris Bilheimer produced
a lot of the show’s playback video footage which is stored
on a combination of 2 Doremi hard drives and a Catalyst. Other
sources include some band promo videos which have been re-edited
and mashed by Leach, plus other clips he made for the show.
Leach designed the camera set up and specified
a control system based around a Ross 3 ME switcher, chosen for
maximum flexibility, fast access to lots of buttons and the
ability to produce the all-action, high contrast high energy
show which is run completely live, ‘freestyle’ each
night.
Dotted around the stage are 3 Sony Robo-cams and
8 Sony Minicams, fitted with a variety of lenses and magic arms
allowing some serious experimentation. They are joined by 4
of XL’s Sony D50 operated cameras – two in the pit,
one hand-held and one on track and dolly, and the third at FOH
…. and a Pole Cam.
Leach also has a mini-cam pointing at his bank
of monitors in the control area, for a bit of additional mayhem,
plus a pure feed into the mixer from the Vectorscope waveform
monitor used by engineer Seth Sharpless which gives a nice radar
effect. For additional eye candy and some truly wacky Leachesque
effects, he also has an LCD monitor laid flat with another minicam
shooting directly down onto it which he uses as a lightbox table.
This can be fed with any camera source and 3D objects of every
imaginable type can then be added over the top of these.
All the cameras are fed into a second specially
hot-rodded Catalyst media server which was initially spec’d
and programmed by High Davies-Webb. This is operated by Clarke
Anderson via 2 Medialon touch screens, giving instant accessibility
to a myriad of effects.
The show is one of the most visually striking
of the year. Following the Op Art theme, a lot of the camerawork
and playback material is monochrome, or duo tone, suddenly bursting
into fast fusions of “lollipops and sunshine” colour
and chromatic energies.
XL’s crew (in addition to those already
mentioned) are Rob Wick (Head of Cameras), Danny Sheldon (Robo-cam
operator), Sean Harper (MiTrix tech and hand-held operator)
and Kyle Brinkman (SoftLED tech).
For the larger outdoor UK shows, XL is sending
an additional team, crew chiefed by Carl Martin, to install
two portrait format Lighthouse R16 side LED screens each measuring
4 x 12 modules.