Mountain Jam has become a musical force in its own right
USA - A radio station that includes the name of the most iconic music festival in history in its own moniker has got to be steeped in rock tradition. Such is the case with WDST/Radio Woodstock. Located just a few miles from Max Yasgur's farm where the original Woodstock festival took place, the station has been at the forefront of progressive rock music for over 30 years, an accomplishment that has earned it three Billboard Magazine Station of the Year awards.

In 2005, the station celebrated its anniversary by creating its own festival, Mountain Jam. Though not nearly as big as Woodstock, Mountain Jam has become a musical force in its own right, drawing enthusiastic crowds to hear groups like Michael Franti and Spearhead, Widespread Panic, The Black Keys, The Allman Brothers Band, Gov't Mule, and more. This year, the four-day festival continued to roll with virtual nonstop music on three stages, one of which, the late night Healy Hall Stage, was energized with a collection of Rogue moving fixtures from Chauvet Professional.

Kyle Rose of KTR Lighting, who was working for AudionX at the festival, used a collection of eight Rogue R1 Spots to create an added sense of depth on the 28' x 20' Healy Hall Stage for artists that included The Movement, Upstate Rubdown, Madaila, Con Brio, Lettuce, and New Mastersounds.

Healy Hall is the only stage at the festival with a roof. Although the roof offers some protection against the late night elements, it can make the stage look closed in. Rose addressed this issue and opened up the stage by having bright intense colour beams shoot across it from every direction.

"I had four of the Rogues flying on 14' high horizontal truss that ran across the stage," he said. "There were four additional R1s on upstage road cases to give the bands some really powerful backlighting and/or aerial looks. Taken together, the Rogues gave our stage some nice punch."

In addition to the Rogue R1 Spots, Rose's rig, which he controlled with a grandMA 2 on a PC, featured four Amhaze II water-based haze machines, as well as a collection of Chauvet DJ products, including 12 SlimPAR Tri 7 IRC low-profile RGB par-style fixtures positioned upstage, and six SlimPAR Tri 12 IRC units positioned downstage.

"The fixtures gave me some great colour palettes," said Rose. "We used a variety of colours, particularly darker hues for washing to capture the mood of the show. I complemented these wash colours with the spots to punch through the haze."

(Jim Evans)


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