Lighting Designer Travis Shirley was tasked this summer (his fifth year) with lighting the Main Stage at Electric Forest Festival. The idea was to enhance the music with a multi-sensory fan experience by locating art installations throughout the (actual) forest in which the fest takes place.
He knew he had an experience mission in completing this show: to offer an equal opportunity lighting rig for both daytime and nighttime artists. To do this, he designed and specified a lighting rig that would cut through daytime ambience and that would also do justice to light up embellishments of the stage design. Longtime festival vendor Christie Lites (rep Robert Roth) worked closely with Shirley to meet his equipment specifications.
Production Designer Tom McPhillips and his Atomic Design team designed the five stages, entrance and other event structures. McPhillips embellished the main Ranch Arena stage with detailed Steampunk ornamentation, a mashup of historic styles and cultural art that took on an “electric time machine vibe,” Shirley said. “For this I decided that a huge LED lighting rig would accent the fascia and coincide with the festival’s ‘electric’ theme.”
Shirley chose 165 Chroma Q Color Force 72 fixtures as the rig’s focal point. The LED batten colour changing fixtures washed the large areas of the stage with far-reaching saturated colour. “I went with LEDs because I was thinking about the name, Electric Forest, and thought it would be great to create an electric looking stage.”
The Color Force “wake up the entire rig,” he added. He describes the three horizontal arrays curved overhead expanding in width from upstage to downstage, to create a central focal point. “The bands perform in front of that, they get bigger in width,” he explained. “Then there are three vertical arrays. So, with three vertical on each side of the stage, and the three horizontal, you have nine arrays that creates a forced perspective picture box or performance space.”
The trussing is as unique as Travis’s design. He created a series of Arcs by using Christie Link bars and the components in the CL Type “B” (16”) trussing system. This truss design gave him an “incredible depth” and enhanced the performance space, he said.
With so many great acts on the bill, Shirley wanted to ensure each had an opportunity to look great. “Even in the daytime the Color Force had an impact. I didn’t want it to have a different feel from afternoon to nighttime transition and it worked. Many times you shine lights in the audience’s face and that’s all you can do in the daytime. Color Force allowed everyone to have a great show with the same tools no matter when they played.”
A self-confessed Color Force fan, Shirley has used them previously on Pentatonix’s tour, but not in such high quantity. “One thing unique we did was not only run them in RGBA mode, but we also pixel mapped them at times, so we had a low res visual up there, which really looked great.”
Along with the 165 Color Force, Christie Lites supplied 21 MAC Viper AirFX, 25 Martin MAC Quantums Washes, 24 Martin Atomic 3000 Strobes, 24 Elation Platinum Beam 5Rs and two grandMA Series 2 full consoles. Conventional fixtures, dimming, hazers, cable, rigging and trussing completed the package.
Typically with other festivals, the Main Stage rig is designed around the headliner’s rigs, and everyone else gets a “generic” look without use of the special equipment reserved for the headliners, Shirley noted. “This is the exact opposite and it’s a challenge. Festival owner Jeremy Stein wanted the fest to be its own. Every act would get to use the gear. Even some of the smaller bands got some great exposure to a lighting rig that they might not have played with before, from the novice to the most experienced.”
The challenge was lighting all the scenic elements, the materials covering the mechanics. “The fascia lighting was a big task in itself,” he says, pointing out the Martin MAC Quantum washes to uplight and downlight along with Color Forces.
Because each LD needs to reprogram their touring show for the festival, Shirley made sure to send them drawings well in advance. Shirley worked closely with the LD Andy Cass during the planning stages as The String Cheese Incident would headline three of the four nights. Cass had specific fixtures that Shirley spec’d in order to ensure a smooth transition into the fest not only for Cass, but for all touring LDS.
Shirley, who regularly tours with Enrique Iglesias, says each EFF performance stage is so different. It has grown from one Main Stage to five varying sizes, plus the lights with the installations throughout the forest. So the festival producers (Insomniac Events and festival owner Madison House) have begun splitting up the stages for other vendors and LDs to focus on. This year Shirley also designed the newer Jubilee EDM tent, which has run for the two previous years.
Christie Lites’ Robert Roth, who works with Shirley on other projects said “I was again excited to build a great team to support the creativity of Travis Shirley as we executed a stupendous design at this year’s Electric Forest Festival. Travis always takes the Main Stage up a level year after year.”