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Claypaky Lighting Fixtures and grandMA2 Consoles Support the Four Stages of Moonrise 2017 in Baltimore

Moonrise 2017 Festival

Although the recent total eclipse of the sun dominated headlines, another celestial-themed event also attracted crowds in August. Moonrise, the annual EDM festival held at Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course, drew fans to its four stages where an array of Claypaky luminaires and MA Lighting grandMA2 consoles supported a lineup of DJs, bands, and rappers.

Moonrise 2017, which grew out of the Starscape rave in Baltimore, marked its fourth year at the Pimlico location. It ran from 12:00 to 11:00pm on August 12 and 13. David Hauss, of Denver, Colorado-based Hauss Collective, served as production designer and production coordinator designing the festival and handling production management for the fan-filled weekend. Light Action Productions in New Castle, Delaware was the lighting vendor.

Hauss tailored the lighting rigs to meet the needs of each of the four stages. The Stellar Stage exclusively hosted DJs in a giant structure custom designed by Hauss. He selected 56 Claypaky Mythos 2 for the stage placing eight each on the decks atop seven towers whose height varied from 40' to low platforms. The towers also featured flame units and lasers. Custom plexiglass rain hoods "saved the day for the Mythos" when the weekend weather turned inclement, says Hauss.

A longtime Claypaky user, he chose Mythos 2 for the Stellar Stage for the "hybrid nature" of the fixture. "It's the best of both worlds," Hauss says. "I could use it as a beam light and as a profile. As a festival designer you want that flexibility to deal with the individual artists who might want either or both looks. And with only DJs playing on this stage I also wanted to make the experience as all-encompassing and overwhelming for the audience as possible from the design of the structure to the pyro and lighting."

Hauss says the Mythos 2 delivered exactly what he expected. "Claypaky lights are solid fixtures that work consistently and hold their position. They can take the stress of an EDM festival, which is way harder on fixtures than traditional music festivals. The really fast tempos and aggressive sound pushed the fixtures for two almost 12-hour days."

The Lunar Stage featured more traditional EDM bands, such as Pretty Lights Live, and had a more conventional theatrical stage design, says Hauss. He opted for 28 Claypaky Sharpys "scattered all over the stage, in the air and on the deck." Hauss calls Sharpy "my go-to tool when I want to add beam fixtures to my design."

The Solar Stage, which showcased DJs and rappers under a tent structure, included 14 Claypaky A.leda B-EYE K20s in its rig. "I've been using B-EYES since they came out," Hauss reports. "They're very versatile: an effects light, which you can run in shapes mode or in extended mode to create a ton of looks easily, and a wash light to simply wash the stage."

The smallest stage, dubbed Celestial Garden, hosted both DJs and bands. Hauss chose eight silver Sharpys to add beams to the design and noted that the fixtures' silver housings "looked great from their position downstage."

Hauss tapped a number of grandMA2 consoles to control lighting on all four stages. He deployed two full-size units and two NPUs for the Stellar Stage; one full-size, one grandMA2 light and one NPU for Lunar; two lights for Solar; and two more lights for Celestial Garden. On the latter stage, one system drove the lighting while the other drove an abstract configuration of LED tiles.

Doug Mekanik, eastern regional sales for A.C.T Lighting, adds, "David is a great designer who we have worked with on some of our own product demos. It's no surprise that this show looks so good and we're proud that he has chosen Claypaky and MA for it. Light Action is also a great company who is very supportive of our industry and a pleasure to work with."

WWWwww.actlighting.com


(7 September 2017)

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