DiGiCo ecosystem helps tackle climate change
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“The concert grew organically into a much larger event with performances by Brian May, Rob Brydon, Nathan Evans, Kerry Ellis, Janie Dee and Wayne Sleep, and many more along with the ENO Orchestra and choir,” says Smith. “Brian May and Kerry Ellis were only confirmed a few days before the show.”
The concert was filmed over three days at an audience-absent London Coliseum, both on stage and in other areas of this storied London venue. The atmospheric theatre hosts the English National Opera as well as being the London home of the English National Ballet. The film was directed by Emmy-winner Ross MacGibbon. The show itself was conceived by Dominic Dromgoole, former artistic director of Shakespeare's Globe, and directed by Bill Buckhurst (Sweeney Todd, Ghost Quartet).
Smith's first audio challenge was to find a somewhat isolated area to use as a temporary control room: “As we were primarily recording the concert, I set up the DiGiCo SD10 in a room just off the royal box, and sharing an SD-Rack on an optical loop, we placed a DiGiCo SD12 as a monitor console, positioned stage left.”
While personal or IEM monitoring is not conventionally a part of orchestral concert recording workflow, the pandemic has changed everything, as instrumental sections find themselves having to manage internal balance at an increased physical distance. “Dylan Custance mixed monitors for the artistes, while having to observe the COVID-secure spacing, providing support for the large orchestras and choirs who normally would be performing much closer to each other,” explains Smith.
Performances included a duet from Queen frontman Brian May and West End star Kerry Ellis, Rob Brydon singing Lullaby with the English National Opera orchestra, as well as dance sections from Akram Khan and a solo performance by Royal Ballet principal Marcelino Sambé.
Unlike a normal concert recording, the climate change messaging added additional challenges for audio continuity. There were several recitals of environmental texts spoken by David Suchet, Sheila Atim, Michelle Terry and Jonah Hauer King, as well as contributions from leading environmental activists.
“We mixed live to video, but as the schedule was tight, we multi-tracked the concert via a UB MADI so as to be able to fine tune the orchestra mix later in post,” Smith reveals. The UB MADI add-on box from DiGiCo Solutions allows playback and recording of 48 audio tracks at 48kHz over MADI simultaneously, via a USB 2.0 interface together with any computer.
“In charge of the multitrack was Zachary Woodman,” Smith adds. “To 'belt and brace' the session we additionally recorded direct to a hardware recorder and also took another multitrack backup from the DiGiCo SD12 console. In order to facilitate later editing, all recordings were synced to timecode from a standalone SMPTE generator. The main thing in the live set up was redundancy and back up recordings, so using the two DiGiCo consoles was a key part of that.”
The London Climate Change Festival was founded by the two-time Olivier Award-winning actress Janie Dee who stated, “We have all, no doubt, realised the value and preciousness of life. To this end this concert, filmed, in place of a live event, displays a collection of great artists compelled to do what they can to focus on mending the Earth.”