Baruch dramatizes Bataré tour with Chauvet
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After a meeting with Wylie of Testu Productions, Baruch got his wish. Designing for the current Bataré tour, he has conveyed the emotional flow of this multi-faceted acrobatic Taiko rock show with a colourful and flexible lighting design, using a collection of Chauvet Professional fixtures supplied by Kinetic Lighting.
“It’s a really fun production. There are many elements that feel typical to a modern rock show, but I get just as excited by the solo Taiko interstitial sequences, because they carry historical and traditional significance,” said Baruch. “The first time I stepped into a rehearsal room with all the drums, I quickly realized that each drum has a very distinct personality. I try to respect that in my design. From a lighting perspective, my design ricochets between high-octane rock-and-roll and subtler theatrical gestures that support the storytelling of the drums. So, my rig was put together with flexibility in mind.”
Baruch uses nine COLORado 1-Quad Tour fixtures, as well as four Rogue R1 Washes and three Rogue R2 Spots, in his rig. The quick colour changing capability of these fixtures plays a crucial role in his flexible design.
The Rogue R2 Spot fixtures in the Bataré tour rig are positioned 10’ above the stage and are used for architecture, aerial effects, and audience lighting. “For the rock elements of the performance, we put lights in the air and on the crowd,” said Baruch.
Baruch accents Bataré’s 800-pound Odaiko drum with pastel washes from the Rogue R1 Wash fixtures. He also highlights different performers with uplighting from Chauvet DJ SlimPAR 64 RGBA fixtures that are owned by the touring company.
“The SlimPARs are embedded under clear plexi panels distributed around the platforms of our stage,” he said. “They let me uplight and isolate individual musicians with saturated colours, and they also create excellent architectural columns when we pump the haze.”
Dramatic moments and their progressive revelation are at the heart of Baruch’s Bataré design. “The lighting slowly builds as the show grows,” he says. “I don’t even fire up the Rogues until we’re a few songs into the performance. They come to life when the Odaiko drum is played for the first time. The Bataré performance is about storytelling – and our lighting is part of the narrative.”
(Jim Evans)