Robe joins Marillion convention in Berlin
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Lighting designer Yenz Nyholm’s specification for the 2023 Marillion ‘convention tour’ included nearly 100 Robe moving lights - 31 Robe Esprites, 22 LEDBeam 150s, 16 MegaPointes and 30 Spiider LED wash beams.
Conventions were staged in the UK, the Netherlands (twice), Germany, Italy, and Canada. For the shows at Berlin Tempodrom, Leipzig-based rental company Konteg supplied the full Robe package. It was also a completely new lighting design for this year.
Marillion treat the conventions as a chance to up the production values and have a larger show than they might necessarily carry on a standard tour, seizing the moment to present an ideal stage and production design suited to their music.
Over the past five years, the band has veered away from having prominent video surfaces onstage, but this year a striking upstage LED screen was back, which provided a major starting point for Yenz’s lighting design. For obvious reasons, output was central when choosing lighting fixtures.
“I always start with Robe MegaPointes if I can fit them into the design,” he explained. “They are always on the plot somewhere as one of my must-haves.” For the Berlin show, half the MegaPointes were hanging from the back truss and the other eight were positioned on the floor.
These were used for all the potent beams, fast movement, and funky effects for which they are known and loved, and for creating some spectacular mirror ball moments, a look which has crept increasingly into the set. “MegaPointes shooting onto mirror balls look simply amazing,” enthuses Yenz, adding that just eight MegaPointes and multiple mirror balls unlock a massive range of looks to match the dynamics of a Marillion set.
Next on the plot were the LEDBeam 150s. “They are brilliant - small, light and very powerful,” commented Yenz, noting that any weight saving was a bonus for some of the gigs when the lighting was being ground supported, although that was not the case in Berlin.
The LEDBeam 150s were utilised for audience lighting, rigged on the front truss in Berlin where they beamed out and enveloped the crowds, also providing nice tight beams back onto the band and some even key lighting. “They are just so versatile!” he commented.
The 31 Esprites were at the core of the convention tour design. Like the LEDBeam 150s, Yenz thinks they are “amazing luminaires”, and appreciates the brightness, clarity, mid-air effects, etc., “every feature hits the spot!” and they have become his main workhorse.
For some larger UK shows, Yenz has started spec’ing RoboSpots, usually with BMFL WashBeams. When possible, he specs 3 RoboSpot systems to cover the three main artists.
He enjoys lighting the conventions where there are multiple levels of palpable energy and the genuine interest of everyone attending is invigorating. He also likes Marillion’s music, and being able to get some fantastic looks out of the rig, from moody solos with a single light source to classic anthemic big arena rock scenes.
He programmed and ran the convention tour shows using an Avolites Titan Mobile console running the latest software, which he also loves.
Challenges included having to programme lighting for between 55 and 60 songs as each convention live show features a different set. A few favourites are always played, but with 20 albums to date, there is a massive back catalogue, and no one is quite sure what might pop up.
All this keeps Yenz on his toes whilst designing, operating, and enjoying being part of the Marillion family. He lit his first Marillion convention back in 2004 and has seen the phenomenon grow steadily ever since.