Lighting Designer Steven Bewley selected the Claypaky Mythos2 luminaire to support his high-impact lighting design for the UK tour of British grime artist, Stormzy.
“I worked closely with Stormzy’s production managers Bronski and Trevor Williams to design two sets of shows for the debut album tour Gang Signs & Prayer, said Bewley. “One design was larger and for a series of three one-off performances at the Brixton O2 Academy. The other design was what we used for the main bulk of the tour in smaller venues.”
The larger show design saw an expanded visual package of 14 independently moving screens and 20 x Mythos2 supplied by the tour’s rental partner, Neg Earth.
“For the one-off shows we placed the Mythos2 behind the screens and above head on a series of moving trusses,” explained Bewley. “The fixtures shone through the architecture on stage, creating big, stadium-like looks for crowds. We used the Mythos2 because we knew the fixtures were bright enough to punch through the light emitted from high-output video screens and had a zoom range that could create this stadium feel.”
The Mythos2 relies on an advanced optical engine that allows the fixture to operate in spot, wash or beam mode. In spot mode, the fixture has an electronic zoom range of 4°- 50°. If a wide beam is used in conjunction with the frost filter, it can be used as a wash light, while in beam mode it produces a 2.5° fixed beam angle for a dense ‘pipe’ effect.
“As a hybrid light, the Mythos2 is the perfect solution,” said Bewley. “It saved us having to hire twice as many fixtures, which, given the size of the venues that we are playing in, we wouldn’t have managed to rig! We really utilised the fixture’s optics: one moment we would have very tight beams, then we would snap into wide looks combined with an intense moment of colour from behind the onstage screens and from above.”
As a designer, Bewley is known for his clever manipulation of colour to create memorable shows. The Mythos2’s colour engine, with CMY colour mixing and 14 special colour filters across three separate wheels, allowed Bewley the freedom to experiment with his palettes. Colour became especially important for the tour’s final show at Brixton’s O2 Academy which was live streamed to audiences of tens of thousands across the globe via Stormzy’s YouTube channel.
“There’s a lot of edgy looking colour palettes in the Stormzy show,” said Bewley. “A lot of red and blue in different or unexpected shades. I used pastel colours for the love songs such as pinks and lavenders, and combined this with a lot of gentle fade-ins and fade-outs. At the last show of the tour at Brixton O2 Academy, which was live-streamed, the Mythos2 highlighted everything on stage really nicely for the cameras.”