Archive for theatre

Show Control

QLab IconI have just finished working on the Brisbane Festival‘s debut performance of Beautiful Noise. It brought together multitrack audio, timecode syncronised vision and tight lighting cues.

The obvious heart of all this automation was Figure53‘s QLab.
The intent was to deliver timecode to the vision playback system, midi show control (MSC) to the audio desk and either timecode or MSC to lighting.

I was most nervous about vision for this show – to present well to the audience the timing of the visuals need to be frame perfect in synchronisation with audio. We first turned to Humatic‘s ChainGang. There were some teething issues so we tried several other packages, but after some very terse and unhelpful emails back and forth from Humatic support – we got it working.

Screenshot of ChainGangThere are several bugs with ChainGang the most critical of which is that when switching to full screen you loose all indication that the application is working and following timecode. On the other hand it will accept almost any type of major known form of network midi timecode (MTC) from ipMIDI to Apple’s network MIDI.

I simply created an network MIDI port and then created a timecode cue in QLab that sent timecode to that port. this was picked up and followed brilliantly by ChainGang. Every show we had frame accurate visuals perfectly in sync with the audio.

Multi-channel audio playback in QLab has always been super easy. Given the nature of this production and the sound design calling for surround sound we ended up with multitrack uncompressed wave files. The first two tracks were front of house (FOH) left and right and the next two audio tracks the two audience surround sends.

As the show budget was tight we used a Tascam US-1641 for the outputs. The FOH channels were delivered to the audio console, an Avid Venue SC48, via AES/EBU and the two surrounds delivered via the Tascam’s analogue outputs.

It was my intent to deliver MSC commands to the desk to load different scenes to allow changes based on show elements. There are several scenes making use of a hanging mic with varying degrees of echo in the audience surround for example.

In the end time got away from us, so we delivered MTC to the desk – and the operator used this to follow his own cue sheet and made the scene changes manually.

Lighting control was my only technical disappointment with the show. Again, because time got away – my intention of having the lighting desk (a HighEnd Road Hog) follow timecode never became a reality.

If we were to re-mount the production – it really would be critical to ensure that the amazing lighting design was done justice by having the cue’s (at least the tight ones) automatically called by the desk.

iPhone – Error Sending SMS

[UPDATE]

It seems that is is most assuredly a network fault. There are now regular times of the day (that I would assume are peak times for the carrier) that I still experience this error. Optus are still refusing to investigate further, or even admit that there may be problems with their network. If you are experiencing this fault, please use the “Feedback” link on the side of this page to leave your details and we can see how many people are affected. (Add your details to the existing question here).

[END UPDATE]

This afternoon completely out of the blue my iPhone running 2.2 software has just started saying “Error Sending Message”.

Unfortunately – I am with Optus, which means that I have to call either 133 713 and deal with one of the most idiotic voice response and prompt systems ever, or call 1300 307 937 to get straight on to Optus Technical Support (erm… that’s what they call it) and then ask for the iPhone support team.

When you eventually get the iPhone support team – its a 70 / 30 chance that you will get the Philippines or Australia. Officially Optus says that the teams in Australia and the Philippines are the same size, and it is merely the operator that has been waiting the longest for the call that gets assigned the call, but – from a customer perspective… (and keep in mind this customer has called the iPhone support line about 214 times… not that I am counting) it seems to route offshore first, then to Australia.

Firstly, I will explain why so many calls to the support line. The primary issue is access to information. I have found that the offshore call center doesn’t understand some fundamental pre-requisites that somebody taking accounts or technical support calls needs to know. We recently added another 3G card with Optus, and for some reason my personal Credit File had the entry put on it. The Accounts / Customer Service people that I was dealing with initially didn’t even know what a Credit File was, until I spent a great deal of time explaining it.

However, i digress…

I am unable to send messages with my 2.2 iPhone. Connected to the 3G network or 2G network, there is no difference, I just get the progress bar appear, move slightly then the phones response is “Error Sending Message”.

I can put my SIM in a $5 nokia phone, and it can send fine… just not the iPhone.

The wizards of technical support wanted me to reset my network settings, done – no joy. So I had to erase my phone (that takes two hours) then restore the software (another 45 min). That still doesn’t work.

I have wasted a fair amount of time on this already, and now I have no idea what to do. There is no apparent fix online, and Optus has “no idea” (yes that is a quote from their technical support people). If anybody who reads my inane rants has a fix – let me know… comment comment comment – or email me directly.

Also, if the person from Optus who reads my blogs (yeah, I check my stats) would care to respond to the abhorent disregard with which your customers are treated – please feel free also… I would love to hear your reasoning behind it all…

Raw Dance Appearance in South America

Audio Mixer app for OSX

I have been searching for some time for an application that will run on OSX (on a Mac) that can act as a virtual sound desk (audio control surface). I have a heap of audio input and ouput devices including a Tascam US-1641. I also have a MIDI based control surface with faders and pots.

All I really want to do is be able to map inputs to busses and then map those busses to outputs. Thus – ending up with a virtual sound desk.

It didn’t seem like it was too difficult a task, but – as it turns out – it is. I even purchased Logic Pro 8 to use it as the mixer – because it gave the impression it did that sort of thing – but no… nothing. It has a “live performance” mode… but that mode doesn’t work with control surfaces… strange.

I would love to hear from anybody with ideas about how to get around this. Ideally it would be midi controlled so I could use it as part of our existing MIDI Show Control (MSC) system (including the CueServer, MegaSeg and QLab).

I am also a little annoyed by the number of app’s that are called “Audio Mixers” that are just playback applications. Yes, it can play back more then one audio tracks and “mix” them I guess – but that isn’t what I would call a mixer.

Online Event Ticketing

I am pleased to announce the beta release of the Purple Oranges Event Ticketing System.

There is not a lot to look at right now, because we don’t really have any events in there. For those that are interested – it is based on the FusionTicket engine.

FusionTicket is a resurection of the phpMyTicket system which ended life quite a while ago.

As we are only beta testing this at the moment, it is not available for productions that are not being managed by Purple Oranges. Once the system is ready to be hammererd, I will make another update and hopefully include some pricing information.

Please feel free to comment here with any feedback about the site (tickets.purpleoranges.com), and importantly – please don’t buy tickets to test it out. It has gone through testing – and the site is launched… you will be charged.

electronique stage


I have been able to recover from the last fee weeks. For those interested, this is the stage that was built on the roof of Indooroopilly mall.

Posted by ShoZu

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