HSL project manager Mike Oates comments, "You can rely on Massive Attack shows being provocative, different and innovative ... and this was no exception. It's almost like a piece of installation art - a production and a team with whom we are always happy to collaborate."
Lighting was designed by Tim Oliver who has worked with Massive Attack for several years, the last three as lighting designer. His starting point for lighting was the visuals set up with is vital to any Massive Attack live performance, which for this tour comprised a set of upstage rotating horizontal screens, a concept developed by Video Designer Icarus Wilson-Wright and United Visual Artists (UVA).
The overall visual design included having lights in front of and behind the screens, and the rig was also designed to be ultimately transportable and quick and easy to set up in festival scenarios. As always with any Massive Attack show, back-lighting was an underpinning aesthetic, all part of retaining a sense of mystery and a bit of magic.
There were two levels of lighting upstage of the screen - on the top level were 12 x Clay Paky Sharpy Washes, five 2-lites and four Atomic Colours.
On the lower level, just underneath the bottom row of screens, were another five Atomic Colours and four 2-lites.
On the floor directly underneath the screens were 12 x Clay Paky A.leda K20 B-Eyes which were used for back lighting through the band. They played a dual role - as a standard lighting fixture, and also pixel mapped source fed video via a grandMA VPU server. (Completely separate to the d3 server used to feed content to the main screens).
On the same plane were three 8-lites with scrollers.
There were six Atomic strobes with scrollers upstage one 8-lite carefully sited behind each of the three screen dollies for back lighting the whole screen structure.
Side lighting was dealt with by three Sharpy Washes each side of stage plus another two Atomic Colours.
Oliver operated the show using a grandMA light size which was part of the touring package from HSL, with two VPUs and two NPUs the latter merged and running ArtNet. HSL also supplied John Slevin as the tech.
Beforehand HSL's massive warehouse facility in Blackburn was utilised to do a technical rehearsal for the floor package which facilitated a full and thorough prep and saved time and stress at the first show.
(Jim Evans)