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Production Profile

Photos by Todd Kaplan

Game of Thrones

Not exactly your “typical” tour, the Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience wrapped up last month, with the show’s composer Ramin Djawadi bringing the music of the wildly popular HBO series Game of Thrones off the screen and onto an in-the-round, 360-degree live immersive stage concert experience featuring 807 linear feet of jumbotrons and 3-D designs that rise from the stage floor. Oh, and sound — lots of sound.

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Ann Wilson of Heart 2017 tour photo by Steve Jennings

Ann Wilson Rocks Solo

With sister Nancy tied up with another project, Ann Wilson has hit the road with her appropriately named “Ann Wilson of Heart” tour. The first leg included 20 shows that kicked off March 8 at the Moore Theatre in Wilson’s hometown of Seattle and wrapped up on April 7 at the Park Theatre PAC in Providence, RI. The second leg, including 23 concerts, is slated to launch May 19 at Indio, CA’s Fantasy Springs Casino. It continues through early July, wrapping up in Anaheim, CA.

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Greensky Bluegrass photo by Kevin M. Mitchell

Greensky Bluegrass: Mixing it Like a Rock Act

Lots of pedals, lots of gain— definitely not your daddy’s bluegrass band

“This is not a traditional bluegrass band — it’s a rock ‘n’ roll show,” FOH engineer Greg Burns declares. “Traditional bluegrass tends to be mixed ‘crispy,’ but [Greensky Bluegrass] can be dark and messy, and you’ll hear more songs in minor keys than major.”

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The audio crew, from left - Dave Shatto, system engineer; Cameron Whaley, audio crew chief; Matt Garrett, P.A. tech; Brad Galvin, monitor engineer; Marc Estrin, P.A. tech and FOH engineer/system designer Josh Osmond. Photo by Andrew Kelly.

The Lumineers ‘Cleopatra’ Tour

Keeping That Open Mic Night Vibe in Arena Shows

During the course of The Lumineers’ Cleopatra Tour, the box count has tripled. “This tour started on a smaller scale on purpose, because they weren’t sure how people would respond to the new album,” says FOH engineer and system designer Josh Osmond. So in the early Spring of 2016, they went off to play the club circuit and a few 3,000-plus venues before heading to Europe, just as the album exploded worldwide. Signs of what was to come could not be ignored as that month-long European tour sold out in a single day. Fortunately, Osmond was prepared, having already worked out on a spreadsheet exactly which system he’d need from supplier Sound Image at each step on the tour.

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Switchfoot at the House of Blues, Dallas. Photo by Christopher Townsend.

Mixing Switchfoot’s ‘Looking for America’ Tour

Like so many rock bands, the Switchfoot story started off as guitarist Jon Foreman, his bassist brother Tim Foreman and drummer Chad Butler began rocking out in their San Diego garage. Armed with surfboards and cheap electric guitars, the plan was to finish college at the University of California San Diego, but tempted with an indie record deal from RE:Think records, they set out on the road — and never looked back.

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Kid Rock's NYE Bash in St. Louis. All photos by Kevin M. Mitchell

Kid Rock’s NYE Bash in St. Louis

“Though we’re a big band with a large input list, we’re simplified in many respects,” Kid Rock’s FOH engineer Steve Cross says. The one-off Rock put on at the Scottrade Center arena on New Year’s Eve was certainly big (Lasers! Pyro galore! Balloon drop!) And, simply put, the audio team made it sound great, despite no real rehearsals and the audience hearing it all through a new console. The show was at this town’s home of the NHL Blues hockey team and, as a room, it’s pretty neutral, says Cross. “We had to put up quite a tall array to get the coverage we needed, but it worked out well. It’s always fun to take a large P.A. into a sold-out arena and have a great show. Couldn’t think of a better way to start the New Year… unless palm trees and sand were involved!”

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Sturgill Simpson's 'A Sailor's Guide to Earth' tour photo by Steve Jennings

Mixing Sturgill Simpson’s ‘A Sailor’s Guide to Earth’ Tour

Sturgill Simpson is one of those artists who transcends a simple label or tag that defines his music. By his own admission, he is, and always will be, a country artist, but mixes his country influence with a blend of Americana, soul, funk and roots rock to create a sound that is distinctly Sturgill Simpson. And for his recently completed tour, supporting his first major label release, 2016’s critically acclaimed A Sailor’s Guide to Earth album on Atlantic Records, Simpson has broken new artistic grounds as well. Besides himself on guitar and vocals, this time he’s incorporating a three-piece brass section into his band, in addition to his more familiar touring lineup of keys, bass, drums, slide and electric guitar.

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The tour achieves a big sound with a minimalist approach to staging. Photo by Vic Wagner

On Tour with Sia

[caption id="attachment_126004" align="alignnone" width="800"]The tour achieves a big sound with a minimalist approach to staging. Photo by Vic Wagner[/caption]

Sia Kate Isobelle Furler, known mononymously as Sia, recently set attendance records for her “Nostalgic for the Present” tour, which crisscrossed North America in support of her seventh studio album, This Is Acting. The artist is quickly redefining performance art while simultaneously setting the bar for those following in her wake. Special guests Miguel and AlunaGeorge accompanied the singer on the 22-city jaunt that kicked off at the end of September at Seattle’s Key Arena and wrapped up with a Nov. 6 show at Frank Erwin Center in Austin, TX.

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Main P.A., shown here during the Cage the Elephant set. No elaborate sets here – the emphasis was 100% on providing great sound. Photo by Steve Jennings

2016 Bridge School Benefit

Not Just Another Day at the Office for Sound on Stage

In 1986, rocker Neil Young called in some industry friends to help him create a fundraiser for The Bridge School, an innovative organization based just north of San Jose, on the San Francisco peninsula and dedicated to educating children with severe speech and physical impairments through the use of creative approaches to education and communication. The reaction to that first event was an overwhelming outpouring of support from both fans and musical performers alike, and now it continues, after three decades of success and sold-out venues.

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Celine Dion 2016 tour photo by Ralph Larmann

Céline Dion’s Return to Touring

Solotech Supports Céline Dion’s Return to the Road

With an enormously successful recording and live performance career spanning more than three decades, with legions of fans worldwide and some 200 million albums (in English and French) sold to date, pop singer Céline Dion is nothing less than a phenomenon.

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Rob Zombie and Korn 2016 Return of the Dreads tour photos by Steve Jennings

Rob Zombie and Korn: Return of the Dreads Tour

The Korn/Rob Zombie Tour might just be the best-kept secret of the summer. “It’s selling really well,” says Zombie’s FOH engineer Mark Woodcock. “Besides the Guns N’ Roses tour, it’s the #1 rock act of the summer. The reviews have been great — both bands sound great, and the lighting and staging on both shows are spectacular. And it really is two different shows. At first, the way they look together might seem like a bizarre combination, but it totally works.”

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Twenty One Pilots tour photo by Jay Blakesberg

Twenty One Pilots

Emotional Roadshow World Tour
Like many original bands, Twenty Øne Piløts (TØP) have a distinctive and unique musical style that defies pigeonholing them into any easily defined genre, but has oft been described as “schizophrenic pop.” But whatever you call it, this Columbus, OH-based duo of vocalist/keyboardist/bassist Tyler Joseph and drummer Josh Dun offers a sound that has increasingly caught on, and now grown to include legions of fans in nearly every country worldwide.

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