Country music star Eric Church played, last spring, his first stadium headlining performance. With 56,521 fans at Nissan Stadium in Nashville, he broke Taylor Swift’s previous venue record. Lighting and production designer Butch Allen specified 135 Elation Professional IP65 Proteus Hybrids™ to fill the stadium in beams.
The last date of an extended spring run on the artist’s “Double Down” tour, lighting and production designer Butch Allen specified 135 Elation Professional IP65 Proteus Hybrids™ to fill the stadium in beams and effects. The multi-functional IP65 lights were an addition to a large lighting package that also included some 420 Elation ACL 360i™ moving heads.
“We chose the fixture as it was the last show of the spring leg, outdoors and a completely different show than we normally do,” Allen said of the Proteus. “Because we couldn’t predict what was going to go on weather wise, the search for an appropriately rated fixture to be in the unprotected part of the stadium was a pretty big task. Once we discovered the Proteus though, it solved all our problems.”
With the help of Robert Roth at Christie Lites, a large number of Proteus fixtures were sourced from a number of different companies. “The Christie team did a great job. Robert Roth found enough fixtures for the stadium” Allen said, adding that he finds it stunning that with so many festivals now on the calendar across the U.S. that Proteus fixtures aren’t absolutely everywhere. “I really didn’t want 135 floor lights wrapped in those big plastic balloon domes so I’m glad we found enough Proteus.”
“Double Down” is the fourth Eric Church tour in which Butch Allen has served as lighting designer. “Choosing to use Proteus was really about being responsible. If the weather turned, I didn’t want my client to absorb a huge claim for damaged gear.
We’ve all done a ton of outdoor shows and have had to fill out the insurance paperwork,” Allen commented while reminiscing about a show years ago in Fenway Park where 150 lights went down and were unrepairable after a downpour. “Both myself and Eric’s production team didn’t want to put anybody in that position. There’s no excuse now.”
Taking the stage without an opening act, Church played a characteristically long set: 37 songs across three-and-a-half hours. The setup featured a center runway extending to about the 50-yard line and side runways stretching to about the 30-yard line. The 135 Proteus fixtures lined the hundreds of feet of unprotected runway, everything past the downstage edge where the entertainer spent much of the show. From the beginning to the end of the show, they were used to light the audience, provide big beam looks and light the staging.
Allen explains: “Our biggest challenge was to find enough different angles for audience lighting and enough different moving heads types so it’s not too fatiguing on the crowd. The floor-based angles to light the audience with was really efficient and far from obtrusive.
Proteus is a fantastic fixture and they performed flawlessly. If you’re doing a lot of festivals in sheds or spend a lot of time outside doing shows like we do more and more, it’s an arrow to have in the quiver.”
Lighting director Gavin Lake was equally satisfied with this choice: “When selecting a fixture, the Proteus quickly rose to the top of the list. We needed a large format fixture with huge amounts of light output, yet versatile, fast, and safe for outdoor use.
The Proteus performed beautifully. Once they were up and running we didn’t have to worry; they did exactly what we needed, rain or shine.” In the end, the Proteus fixtures didn’t get rained on. “I like to think that in some odd way our diligence in finding these fixtures played a small karmic role in the evening’s beautiful weather,” Allen contemplated.
There were of course many other fixtures on the show, including 420 Elation ACL 360i™ single beam compact RGBW beam moving heads – an integral part of Church’s touring package – were housed in ten upstage pods, sometimes stacked to form five rectangles, and added a massive backdrop look to a show that requires a huge number of looks. The “Double Down” tour kicked off again in September with dates scheduled through November.
More information, on the Elation website