Kinesys
On Kylie
Stage
Product Stories Published: 25 January 2006
A 22-way Kinesys Elevation motion control system was in action
on the final leg of Kylie’s epic “Showgirl Homecoming”
tour – using an additional 10 Kinesys motors over and
above the 12 on the original tour.
The system was specified by lighting designer
Vince Foster as an essential part of his visual tool kit.
The 10 new motors – a mix of half and one
tonne Liftkets - were used to control four extra high resolution
video screens, two punchbags that dropped in for one song, plus
the tips of a massive pair of wings that opened out at the end
of the second encore.
The 10 original Kinesys 500kg 400mm/s vari-speed
motors were utilised to suspend five lighting trusses, supplied
as part of the lighting rental package from Neg Earth Lights.
The other two 1 tonne Kinesys hoists flew the centre hi res
Barco I-12 screen that was in the original show.
For the updated “Homecoming” tour,
all five video screens glided into and out of view at strategic
moments during the set.
The flown lighting trusses also moved to different
positions throughout the show, maximising their role of forming
striking architectural shapes across the stage – from
arches to zig zags to staggered asymmetric looks. They were
clad with scuffed metal fascias that lit extremely well, accentuating
their form.
Kinesys’ flexible proprietary Vector software
was used to control the system, in the capable hands of operator
Barry Branford. He has now used the system on several different
tours including The Darkness and Muse and states, “It’s
the best moving motor system I have ever encountered …
and I’ve seen and dealt with a few!”.
He adds, “It’s also been really reliable
and so I have great confidence in it, Coming out on tour with
a system that can run any motor at any speed is an extremely
versatile effect”.
The initial “Showgirl” tour was also
the first time that Foster had used a Kinesys system, which
he’s since gone on to use again, including for George
Michaels’s acclaimed 25 Live tour in Autumn 2006. He comments,
“It’s definitely the best – it does everything
I want it to do and more” adding yet more scope to his
creative horizons.
“Showgirl’s” head rigger was
Dave Rowe, who’d initially used the Kinesys kit on a Duran
Duran tour in 2004. This is where Foster first saw it in action,
and was impressed by its smoothness and accuracy.
In conjunction with set builders Total Fabrications
and Chris Cronin, Kinesys were also involved in devising a control
system for the contra-rotating ‘wedding cake’ double
revolve that concluded the spectacular Busby Berkeley section
of the show.