Meyer Sound enhances Van Gogh experience
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Immersive Van Gogh is produced by Toronto-based Lighthouse Immersive, with the company’s director of production Sean Richards charged with supervision of technical systems at all locations. Richards notes that while the importance of visuals is obvious, the role of audio often is overlooked.
“No film since the 1920s has been silent, and even prior to ‘talkies’, live music accompanied the silent films - for good reason,” he observes. “The effect of well-designed music is inseparable from the visuals. That is why we spare no cost in offering the best possible audio experience for our patrons.”
“I was assigned by PRG to take the lead in audio design for all the new systems starting from April of this year,” says Douglas Plander, audio technical coordinator for the company. “As the number of cities expanded rapidly, the producers stressed the critical importance of making sure the technical quality was consistently high at all locations. I needed a flexible tool set based on loudspeakers with consistently predictable response. Also, a self-powered solution was important as we don’t want to deal with massive amplifier racks up in the server room. Both of these requirements pointed to a Meyer Sound self-powered solution.”
“We typically work in large, acoustically challenging spaces,” adds Richards. “With Meyer Sound, the combination of continually improved versions of enclosure designs, excellent mapping and space design software, and acoustically flat speakers makes it possible to avoid many difficulties that we would expect in our venues. This consistency and ease of implementation has greatly benefited our nationwide rollout, making these systems a great investment.”
Plander expects a combined total of nearly 600 loudspeakers to be installed in the various exhibitions by year’s end. The leased venues in each city vary in size and layout, with the 45-minute show running sometimes in a single room but usually in multiple galleries, up to four simultaneously.
“While the shows are the same everywhere, each venue is different,” says Plander. “The size of the rooms, height of speaker locations and number of speakers all factor into the design for each venue. We usually have 16 to 24 speakers per room, but we have only ten in one of the small rooms in Dallas and 40 in one very large room in Phoenix.”
The recently opened Dallas venue, a former Masonic Temple, provides an example of how the Immersive Van Gogh experience scales to different room sizes, offering visitors an alternate experience of the same content. The show is presented in a large middle gallery (95’ x 105’ with 28’ ceiling) as well as two identical smaller galleries (60’ square with 16’ ceiling). The smaller galleries each utilize nine Ultra‑X20 loudspeakers with one USW‑112P for low frequency extension, while the large gallery deploys 12 Ultra‑X40 loudspeakers, two ULTRA-X20 loudspeakers for the mezzanine viewing area, and four USW-112P subwoofers.
Playback for both audio and video is through PRG’s proprietary Mbox media server. As currently configured, the networked audio systems are in stereo, with loudspeakers paired as L-R-L-R across a room. However, as stipulated by the producers, the systems may require upgrading to multichannel formats on short notice.
PRG’s project manager for Immersive Van Gogh is Branden Charlton while Bobby Klimuszko is the supervising account executive. On-site installation is supervised by Alan Henig and Paul Cotton, usually working simultaneously with crews at different sites.
Immersive Van Gogh was originally designed and conceived in Europe by Massimiliano Siccardi with original music soundtrack by Luca Longobardi.