Celebrating the Pink Floyd experience in New Zealand
New Zealand - Pink Floyd's legacy of bright, visually powerful stage productions lives on today in New Zealand, thanks to a tribute band formed (quite fittingly) by a lighting designer who uses the colour and intenstity of Chauvet Professional fixtures to create lightshows that do the group's legacy proud.

"We want to celebrate the Pink Floyd experience, not just with music but with lights and the entire stage presentation," said Anthony Macdonald, the LD who created the show. "Lighting was essential to the original Pink Floyd experience, so we try to replicate that feeling, but with the efficiency and intensity of today's fixtures."

Mcdonald has two STRIKE 4 multi-formatted LED fixtures in his band's road rig along with 12 Rogue R1 Spots, two Rogue RH1 Hybrids and five COLORado Zoom WW Tour fixtures. The fixtures were provided by Mcdonald's own company, MDR Sound and Lighting.

"I incorporated the STRIKE 4 fixtures into the show primarily as audience blinders. They evoke the same warm white look as the old incandescent blinders of earlier decades," commented Macdonald, who positioned two STRIKE 4 fixtures on front arched truss. "The brightness of these fixtures is pretty astonishing and gives great emphasis to certain climactic moments during the set."

Although Macdonald specified the STRIKE 4 primarily as a form of blinder, there are moments in the set where its other features come to the fore. "The warm white tungsten effect of the LEDs is also ideal to be used as a soft wash when required," he said. "This certainly gives us a few different options with regards to looks."

Macdonald also specified five COLORado Zoom WW Tour fixtures to complement the warm white looks of the STRIKE 4. "I specified the COLORados for their zoomable dedicated white," he said. "These things really glow - not your typical LED source."

The acceptance that Eclipse with Pink Floyd is enjoying throughout New Zealand is especially gratifying for Macdonald. "This is more than just business," he said. "It's a pleasure to play these songs on stage, and, thanks in part to our lighting rig, it's even more of a pleasure to know that we're creating a visually stimulating atmosphere for the fans. That's what Pink Floyd was all about."

(Jim Evans)


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