Springsteen
Unlimited
Visibility Lighting Design’s
(UVLD) visual media developer Cameron Yeary lent his programming
expertise and creative input to the big-screen video content for the 2009 world
tour of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.
Supporting
the band’s latest album, “Working on a Dream,” the tour previewed in Asbury
Park, New Jersey’s Convention Hall in March, officially launched in San Jose,
California in April and played US dates through May. The band is now in Europe but will return to the states in
mid-August and conclude the tour at New Jersey’s Giants Stadium in the fall.
Yeary was
initially contacted by Pete’s Big TV, which needed a Hippo programmer for the
band’s Asbury Park rehearsals.
Video content for the giant 1700x600 Lighthouse LED wall was still
undetermined at the time, but the production team wanted to interface the Hippo
with grandMA, grandMA Lite and AVO Diamond One consoles.
“We started
using Hippo very sparingly on a few shows last year,” notes Guy Benjamin of
Pete’s Big TV. “This year they
wanted to expand its use, but we’re a video company and don’t have a tremendous
amount of experience with servers and
their interface of lighting console control. Cameron came highly recommended, so we
asked him to come to Asbury Park.
He helped us put the system together efficiently and took the initiative
to help create the content, program it and train all of our people to run the
Hippo.”
Benjamin
points out that, “Bruce has historically eased into video, adopting it more
with each tour. We’ve been working
with him about 10 years now, and his lighting designer, Jeff Ravitz, is great
to work with. The tour is lit
almost like a TV show and, in fact, it has the same look as the Bruce’s Super
Bowl halftime performance. The
addition is that we’re using Hippo and G-Lux screens—later in the tour—a lot
more.”
For the
big-screen’s HD content Yeary sourced stock footage, added photos taken by
Danielle Briggs and himself, and crafted Ken Burns-style animations featuring
pictures of the band and vintage musical instruments.
“It was
thematic content that wasn’t literally about a particular song,” he
explains. “I tried to create an
environment, a mood or an atmosphere rather than a literal interpretation of a
song.” Yeary programmed the
content to the band’s playlist, getting feedback from Springsteen as he honed
the visuals. Yeary also took
direction from the lighting designer and lighting directors as content was
finalized. During shows video from
live cameras is also fed to the Hippo for display on the big screen.
“As
visual media developer I answer to everyone: production, lighting, the show’s
director,” Yeary points out. “I
was the newbie on the show but was given a lot of creative control. Everyone really helped me to understand
the music.”
Guy
Benjamin notes that while “Cameron was originally brought in to help put the
system together and train our operators, he really jumped in and became part of
the team. He’s not just a hired
gun. I couldn’t have been happier
with his contributions.”
Mike
Appel was the lighting programmer. Russ Hochstedler
is the tour Hippo programmer. The Lighting
Director is Todd
Ricci and the Lighting MA Operator is John Hoffman.