Cate Carter helps frame Elbow with GLP impression FR10 Bars

Elbow’s stage presence is boosted by GLP impression FR10 Bars' footlight feel around the risers. Photo: Matthew Eachus (The Manc Photographer)

Elbow’s recent UK tour – the band’s most comprehensive in years – was brought to life by longstanding Lighting Designer, Cate Carter, who harnessed GLP impression FR10 Bars among the key fixtures on the rig.

A massive fan of GLP’s innovative battens, Carter believes that while GLP impression X4 Bar 20s have been “confirmed favourites that have featured on all our designs”, she took the decision to step up to the more powerful FR10 Bar after originally seeing it at the LDI Show in the United States. With 10 separate sources of 60W RGBW LED among its feature set, the impression FR10 Bar is becoming increasingly popular with live events creatives.

“We started designing at the end of 2019 for a tour that was due out March 2020. But when COVID-19 hit, it was the last tour to be shut down and the first to start up again,” she explained.

The brief had been for a strident light show – incorporating lasers, but without video – in a package that would be “large enough to sit in an arena, look impressive in a theatre,” and at the same time be able to be shoehorned into a club. “The band are very into their lighting,” she continued, “and as lovers of the X4 Bars I thought this time I’d give [the FR10s] a try.”

Carter could see a unique opportunity to use these fixtures as a scenic element on the risers, she added: “They were built into the stage set, and although they were on a curve, it really worked.”

The designer had immediately been impressed with the fixture’s large aperture. “I also love the individual zoom and colour control, and they produce immense light,” she said. “The aperture around the risers gave an almost footlight feel and was a nod back to the days when shows had banks of par cans.” This harmonised perfectly with an album that the band felt would suit lasers, in deference to the earlier prog idiom of the early ‘70s.

And the FR10 certainly stood up to the task. “We edged the risers in low intensity light – using the FR10s in their widest focus, as the beam effect can sometimes be a little too intense – and then we used the tighter focus options to create a frame and full-beam effects.”

Carter says everything she had hoped for from the FR10 Bars had come to fruition during pre-visualisation. This took place at the HQ of Lite Alternative, which also the designer’s preferred, long-term vendor.

“The first night at rehearsals lighting programmer [Franki McDade] and I did a bit of wrangling and the result was absolutely what we had been hoping for in a dynamic, multi-effect, multi-head fixture,” she continued. “What I like about these is the light curtain feel it creates… [which is] quite architectural when it comes to framing the band.”

The band also voiced their approval, according to Carter. “They said [the FR10 Bars] looked fantastic – guitarist Mark Potter in particular,” she concluded.

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