Alberta Celebrates a Canadian Century with Meyer Sound
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When the government of Alberta was deciding how to celebrate their 100th year as a Canadian province, they wanted to include as many of their citizens as possible. For a province of more than 255,000 square miles, this presented a huge challenge. The result was AlbertaSpirit — The Party Of The Century, a multi-community birthday bash held in ten cities throughout the province. With the help of broadcast and Webcast technologies, festivals and centennial concerts were produced simultaneously in the celebration's 14 venues.The celebrations featured concerts by k.d. lang, Paul Brandt and Ian Tyson, Jann Arden, and the Calgary Symphony Orchestra to name a few, and were linked through large-screen video displays at each site. At the end of the night, the celebration climaxed with a huge fireworks display in all ten cities choreographed to music by the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra & Alberta's Centennial Jazz Band. With a total of 14 concert venues, there was a lot of sound reinforcement to be done. With offices in Edmonton and Calgary, Allstar Show Industries was a natural choice to be the primary audio supplier. After considering the sheer immensity of the task at hand and the variety and quality of artists involved, Allstar turned to their large stock of Meyer Sound products to meet the celebration's logistical, coverage and sound quality demands. Danny Bracken in Allstar's Edmonton office coordinated the massive undertaking of planning and logistics for the outdoor venues (only two of the events took place in traditional indoor venues). "We used every piece of gear we had," he stated. "Basically, it was a Meyer Sound festival in virtually every city." The main outdoor venue was in front of Alberta's capitol building at the Edmonton Legislative Grounds Primary reinforcement was provided by left and right arrays of six MILO high-power curvilinear array loudspeakers each, augmented by four M3D-Sub directional subwoofers groundstacked on each side. Four MSL-4 horn-loaded long-throw loudspeakers provided delay coverage, and four legacy, conventionally powered UPA-1C loudspeakers, powered by QSC amplifiers, were used for frontfill. Four CQ-1 wide coverage main loudspeakers were stacked on top of the subwoofers as sidefill monitors for the stage. "The MILOs just give you so much power," marveled Bracken. "They sound incredible and have amazing headroom." Most of the venues required coverage for 3,000 to 5,000 people. For the celebrations in Banff, Fort McMurray, Wainwright, and Edmonton's Churchill Square, the FOH systems consisted exclusively of MSL-4 cabinets. In Lethbridge, UPA-1C units provided sound reinforcement to accompany the video screens. The centennial celebration also marked the re-opening of the twin Jubilee Auditoriums, located in Calgary and Edmonton, after a major refurbishing. Both venues now sport Meyer Sound line array systems, with main left and right arrays of M2D compact curvilinear array loudspeakers and M2D-Sub compact subwoofers, plus a center cluster constituted of M1D ultra-compact curvilinear array loudspeakers paired with M2D cabinets. For this occasion, both venues required extra attention to logistical management for the video displays and broadcast equipment. Clive Alcock, general manager of the Allstar Show Industries location in Vancouver, was enlisted to coordinate activities at these venues. With so many venues to cover, Allstar's stock was stretched beyond its limits. "Our Alberta warehouses were barren of equipment on September first," reports Allstar's Bob Gregory . Other Meyer Sound products used include UPA-1P compact wide coverage loudspeakers, UM-1P narrow coverage and UM-100P wide coverage stage monitors and legacy products UM-1C UltraMonitors and USW-1 compact subwoofers. Consoles used included four Midas Heritage 3000s, six Yamaha PM5D digital desks, and several Soundcraft analog consoles – MH4s and MH3s out front, SM24s and SM16s for monitors. Effects included units from Drawmer, BSS, Focusr ite, Klark-Teknik and others. All the local celebrations included music, with headliners scheduled during the final two hours. During this time, the entire celebration was broadcast live on Citytv and ACCESS television, switching coverage among the headline artists in all ten cities. The live broadcast was shown on large-screen video at the various sites, and made available as streaming video on the Internet. November, 2005 |
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