Meyer Sound powers Roskilde 2019
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The Roskilde Festival, now in its 49th year, took place over eight days from 29 June to 6 July and showcased nearly 180 acts on eight stages, from big-name headliners Cardi B, Bob Dylan, Travis Scott, Janelle Monáe, Robert Plant, and Wu-Tang Clan to Scandinavian superstars Robyn and MØ, to emerging regional artists, performing to daily crowds topping 130,000.
The festival, which operates as a non-profit foundation, is a celebration of community and solidarity, ideals fostered year-round through support of humanitarian and cultural organisations in Denmark and beyond. (Since its inception, the Roskilde Festival Charity Society has generated more than $58m for charities around the globe.)
It’s these values that make the event an ideal partner in the pursuit of providing a better festival experience, according to Meyer Sound executive vice-president Helen Meyer. “This is a festival with a heart. They really care about what it feels like for everyone and they’re willing to really do things differently than anyone else, and for us that’s very, very exciting.”
The partnership is a year-round collaboration focusing on education initiatives, R&D, and large-scale festival management. For partners steeped in common traditions of creativity and innovation, this multifaceted approach provides an unprecedented opportunity to innovate and inform, with the event serving as both a technology showcase and a living laboratory where research efforts focus on sound propagation and management techniques.
With a total area stretching more than 2,500,000sq.m - the equivalent of 350 football fields - there’s a lot of ground to cover at Roskilde, and a lot of potential cross-talk between stages that needs to be controlled. Nearly 1,000 Meyer Sound loudspeakers, supplied by European AVL integrator Bright Group, were deployed across all festival stages and performance spaces, from the 1,000-capacity Gloria stage to the iconic Orange main stage, with its staggering 60,000 capacity.
Leo Family systems provided seamless solutions for the event, thanks to their clarity, linearity, reliability, and ease of use. “The Leo Family was developed to create an idea that linear theory applied to systems like these would mean that you could do a variety of stages with different kinds and sizes of equipment and keep the same sound,” says Meyer Sound president and CEO John Meyer. “This allows people to understand you don’t have to run it so loud all the time. What we’re trying to show here is that the sound system should be transparent.”
The Roskilde stages were powered by the entire Leo Family, including Lina, Leopard, Leo and Lyon arrays and 750-LFC, 900-LFC, and 1100-LFC low-frequency control elements, with VLFC very low-frequency control elements adding bone-shaking low-end impact. Numerous point source loudspeakers including UPA-1P and the new Ultra-X40 - which was also used as main field monitors at FOH - provided delay and front-fill support, while MJF-210s served as stage monitors. Network processing was handled by Galileo Galaxy processors.
Technical teams from Meyer Sound, Bright, and the Roskilde Festival collaborated on sound system design and deployment, drawing from previous successes to improve overall performance. This year, advancements ranged from enhanced AVB control to inventive new PA configurations. “All the lessons learned from 2018, we’ve taken directly into 2019,” says Roskilde production head Lars Liliengren. “We are actually kicking off at a much higher level, even from the beginning.”
Other new tech initiatives included implementing an innovative subwoofer array at the Orange stage and significantly reducing leakage at Gloria. “We were able to apply our learnings from last year to make meaningful strides going into year two. Last year, we had the normal end-fire subwoofer array flown,” says Dennis Tholema, Meyer Sound senior technical European support.
Ensuring a seamless festival experience for visiting engineers starts with providing personalized support onsite. To that end, Meyer Sound embedded a crew of 22, working alongside 32 Roskilde sound staff members, to work hand in hand with artists’ technical teams throughout the event.
“It’s really good to know when you’re coming into a situation like this that you are coming in to familiar situation with Meyer Sound and Meyer Sound technicians,” says Icelandic engineer Ingvar Jónsson, who mixed front-of-house for Robyn. “A real comfort is to know the system and know that you have well-trained technicians who take good care of you.”
“This year is Meyer Sound’s 40th anniversary and next year is Roskilde’s 50th anniversary,” says Helen Meyer. “So we’re very, very excited about building on everything this year, making it even better next year, and helping Roskilde celebrate their 50th in great style.”
(Jim Evans)