TPi Magazine – August 2019

(Nora) #1

GLASTONBURY 2019 HIGHLIGHTS


Following its fallow year, the world’s largest greenfield festival was back with a vengeance.
Hitting the site for the first time, TPi’s Stew and Jacob loaded up the car and headed down
to Worthy Farm to meet some of the industry’s finest, battling the heat to put on a show for
more than 200,000 festival goers...

I’m usually a bit of a last-minute packer when it comes to festivals and work
trips. But as Jacob and I were setting out on our first ever Glastonbur y
weekend, I thought preparation was going to be key. However, as I was
setting up our tent in over 30° heat, my over provisions of wellies, several
coats and hand warmers suddenly seemed fairly redundant.
For those on-site, or at home viewing the BBC coverage, this year’s
Glastonbur y was indeed a scorcher in many ways, with endless highlights
and standout performances that are still being talked about months after


the event. As is the annual tradition, the UK’s biggest festival saw some of
the industr y’s best known suppliers, manufacturers and crew members
come together for one almighty gathering. With water bottle in hand, we
ventured out to visit the various stages, tents and cranes – yes you read that
correctly – to meet some of the teams that collectively create one of the
most talked about cultural experiences of the year.
TPi
http://www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk

PYRAMID
Where better to start our Glastonbur y journey than the iconic Pyramid
Stage. This year hosting headline performances from The Killers, The
Cure and Stormzy, with many of the biggest names in the world of live
touring making a home at FOH and on the stage. Once again, technical
infrastructure of the stage was overseen by Neg Earth, Creative
Technology and RG Jones.
To kick-off the conversation about the main stage, it seemed only
natural to speak to the team responsible for one of the most talked about
performances of the year – Stormzy’s Friday night headline set. Fresh from
his success with the Spice Girls, Lighting Designer, Tim Routledge was
one of the main creatives alongside Creative Directors, Amber Rimmel
and Bronski from Ta w b o x behind the grime star’s set. Routledge has
been involved with the artist since his 2018 Wireless Festival headline


performance. “We got the green light in the Autumn and started in earnest
in Februar y with Production Manager, Joel Stanley and Misty Buckley
completing the team.” The main goal for this collection of creatives was, in
the words of Routledge, to bring “South London to the farm,” and going by
the mainstream reports, it seems they succeeded.
The build for the show was certainly a logistical challenge, and
Routledge was quick to complement the work of Crew Chief, Keith Duncan.
“All the fixtures we brought in were from Neg Earth – as is Duncan – which
made the process slightly easier as they were the house supplier for the rig.
We were certainly pushing the capabilities of what the Pyramid Stage could
handle in terms of weight loads and the time available.”
The LD explained that to fit the impressive structure required a two-
stage build process that involved hanging the top-tier balcony while
loading in the lower tier and band structure, before joining it all together. All
of which couldn’t be completed until the festival’s back lighting truss and
half the house screen had been removed. “It was pushing the limits of what
could be created during a 45-minute turnaround, but Duncan was the man
for the job as we have done many major turnarounds together.”
Supplementing Stormzy’s rig were 116 GLP JDC1s, 47 impressions X4

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