Real Friends at home with Chauvet Professional
- Details
This set is meant to convey the honest connection that Real Friends has with their fans, rather than nostalgia or drowsy comfort. Although there are some gentle acoustic tunes in the tour’s set list, most of the time the band kicks things into raw punk gear with hard driving songs like Mess and the staccato Empty Picture Frames. Supporting the gentle set and the edgy music is a flexible Steve Kosiba designed lightshow that features Chauvet Professional fixtures supplied by Squeek Lights.
Kosiba’s rig performs a wide range of functions from backlighting and silhouetting the band during sing-a-longs, to warming the stage with side lighting, to creating aerial effects, to highlighting crowd surfers (a common sight at Real Friends concerts). This versatility is particularly impressive, given the compactness of his rig, most of which is set up on four pipes with tees.
“We have two 4’ pipes and two 6’ pipes,” said Kosiba. “Rogue R1 Spots are positioned on top of each pipe and a pair of Nexus 4x1 bars are mounted on the front of each pipe. Then we have a pair of Nexus units that we use for side lighting. We also use a Chauvet DJ DMX-4 Dimmer Pack to control the band's table and floor lamps that are part of their set. The rig is kept compact for transport purposes, but we get a lot of output and a variety of looks from it. For a compact LED mover, the Rogue is incredibly punchy. Plus we can create a lot of stunning aerials with is prism -- and we can shape its beams for variety.”
Also coming in for praise from Kosiba were the Nexus 4x1s in his rig. “The Nexus units give us some great moments silhouetting the band,” continued Kosiba. “They're so much better than a regular halogen blinder, because they allow for colors and chases, yet they can still create a big warm white moment with them when necessary.”
Another reason Kosiba kept his rig simple is that Real Friends is not carrying a lighting director for this tour. “Lighting is still fairly new to them, so they’re growing into it one step at a time,” he said. “They learned about us when they opened for Wonder Years. Now that they’re headlining their own tour, they want lighting.”
(Jim Evans)