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Production Profile

Inside the 48th Annual Grammys

It was Super Bowl Sunday and the freeways of Los Angeles were surprisingly forgiving. While most citizens were settling in for a long day of chicken wings and clever commercials, I was tooling toward Ground Zero for the music industry: the Staples Center, home to the 48th Annual Grammy Awards.

Despite the tranquility of downtown L.A. that morning, as I approached the Staples/ Convention Center staging area, I could literally feel the hum of activity in the hive. It was the first of three days of rehearsals, the technical shakedown before Wednesday's live broadcast of "Music's Biggest Night."

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A Revolution of Sound and Spirit

As most people will acknowledge, we live in challenging times– fraught with obstacles that can cause even the most steadfast among us to stumble. In its ongoing effort to help today's youth "face and defeat the everyday 'giants' they encounter," Christian organization Dare 2 Share, in association with Focus on the Family, is sponsoring the Revolution tour–a 10-city circuit spanning the continental U.S. that includes motivational speakers, skits and musical performances by artists Danny Oertli and Starfield.

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The Sound of PartyLite 2005

For the fourth consecutive year, B&R Communications chose Orlando, Fla.-based LMG, Inc. to provide the audio and video for PartyLite's National Sales Conference. As audio services manager for LMG, and this being an audio trade publication, I will focus on those particular aspects that went into this challenging endeavor.

Challenges

When speaking of this show, the phrase about "pounds of unmentionables in a too-small bag" comes to mind. In previous years, this event was held in a football-size indoor stadium. For 2005, the show moved to Washington, D.C. and a basketball-size arena was chosen, offering a lack of space for the backstage areas. Prior to 2005, the stage was set up around the 50-yard line, leaving an extra 50 yards for the setup of audio, video, lighting and scenic. With the stage end on the court of a basketball arena, we were left with little to no space.

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Audio at the Alamo

After conquering the Great Wall of China, the producers of the Wonders of the World (WOW) concert video tour have settled in for some domestic scenery before going overseas again (to Russia's Gorky Park) sometime next year. This is good news for the audio pros who enjoy combining historical sightseeing with their work .

The WOW tour is the brainchild of Joyce & Associates partners Rob Joyce, Cary Floyd and Paul "Ringo" George, and is produced by their subsidiary, Doc Brown Entertainment. It is a special series of oneoff events showcasing renowned musical performers with historical backdrops, filmed in high-definition digital video for eventual broadcast and DVD distribution.

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Old School

The music on the current Robert Plant tour is a mix of different eras and vibes. Some covers, some tunes from the new record, some of the solo hits from the '80s and '90s and a whole bunch of Zep. Most of the band backing this rock and roll elder statesman consists of kids–what's left of the Brit trip-hop unit Portishead. Likewise, the production is a mix of state-of-the-art Meyer MILOs mixed with old-school stalwarts, including Midas H3000s at both FOH and monitors, and lots of screaming Turbosound wedges on stage.

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Bigfoot Found and Captured! French Array Avoids Radar!

Not a line array? A tangent array system? Maybe they should just call it French.

The new NEXO GEO T speakers are not boxes, as we would typically assume a speaker enclosure to be. They look more like something out of a futuristic Spielberg movie. They are small, very small, and shaped like a mini stealth fighter. The rigging looks weird, very weird, but extremely functional. Like stealth fighters, they are light and weigh less than 100 lbs, or 45 kilograms, as the French would have it (that's 99.2 lbs). Radar does not bounce off them, and they have been flying over the United States undetected now for sometime…

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Micromanagement on a Macro Scale

The sixth Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, held Saturday, April 30 and Sunday, May 1 at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, Calif., boasted nearly 100 acts and drew something in the neighborhood of 50,000 fans a day. Featured acts on the festival's five stages included chart-toppers like Coldplay, Nine Inch Nails, Weezer, Wilco and New Order.

To say that it requires a hands-on management style to tighten all the nuts and bolts on a spectacle like this is kind of like saying Bill Gates has a little cash. While the term "micromanagement" is often used as a pejorative these days, it's practically a requirement of a production manager's job for an event like this.

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Alicia Keys

Alicia Keys is out in style, with a tour whose vibe is '30s with a modern twist. With her band all dressed in white, the stage draped in curtains and Alicia's vocals smooth yet vibrant, her theater/arena tour is selling out everywhere. We spoke with FOH and monitor engineers Tony Blanc (pictured) and Chris Schutz about the show.

Tony Blanc: For Alicia's tour, we are out using Showco/Clair Bros. and their propriety cabinets, the Prism system. The venues have varied from theaters to arenas; hence the P.A. size has constantly varied in size. The basis of the system comes with sub-bass, and the "Gray" nearfill boxes.

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Mudslide Relief

The most dreaded three words a production professional ever hears are, "It's a benefit." However, there are those moments when gear, time and money take a second seat to a community in need. As the world turned their eyes to the devastating tsunami disaster halfway around the world, a small community in Ventura County–La Conchita–found itself victim to a devastating mudslide, the result of a 10-day torrential downpour in Southern California. Ten people lost their lives and 15 homes were destroyed in this beautiful surfing community just south of Santa Barbara.

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Carlson and Rat Sound Hit the Road with R.E.M.

How do you do audio justice to a rock legend whose career spans more than 25 years? Well, one of the first and most crucial steps is to surround yourself with people, companies and gear that have proven themselves time and time again. When it came to planning the U.S. leg of R.E.M.'s recently launched 2004/2005 World Tour supporting their latest CD, Around the Sun, this meant handing the ball to FOH engineer Brett Eliason, who in turn joined forces with Seattle-based Carlson Audio Systems to design the

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