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2015 "Rock This Country" tour


Elijah Wood @elijahwoodmusic

th_shania-rockthiscountrytour-elijahwood111215.jpg

Holy sh*t! Look ma! I am in the December issue of Drum Magazine! And featured in 2 advertisements in the same issue (thanks @trxcymbals and @aheaddrumsticks). Just picked up my copy at Guitar Center. Go grab your copy to read the full feature. Kinda in shock right now.

7:21 PM ET - 12 Nov 15

http://twitter.com/elijahwoodmusic



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"Rock This Country" Ranked #9 Tour Of 2015!

According to Billboard, Shania's "Rock This Country" tour ranks #9 on the list of Top 25 Tours of 2015 based on gross sales. Here are the numbers. Total Gross Sales: $65,195,972 - Total Attendance: 687,216 - Number of Shows: 68 - Click HERE for the complete list of Top 25 Tours of 2015.

***The numbers are based on 68 out of a total of 72 concerts. There were 74 scheduled and Shania cancelled 2 = 72 concerts.



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I think she did pretty well.


Steve

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She spent all of her tour earnings on private chartered air service and hair dye jobs.

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Shania-related excerpts from a Derek Frank interview.

Shania Twain Bassist, Derek Frank, Shares... "The Ultimate Guide to Being a Pro Musician"

By Bri Blaire | That's My Gig | December 24, 2015

TMG: You recently completed Shania Twain’s 2015 tour. How did you land the gig with Shania? 
DEREK: Getting that gig was kind of a process… I’ll explain. With almost every major touring gig that I’ve gotten, I’ve found that multiple factors come into play which resulted in my getting the gig. Usually it’s based on referrals from more than one person, and this situation was no different. So in January I got a call from Shania’s guitarist, Joshua Ray Gooch, to fill in with his blues band at a hotel bar. I had known Josh a little bit from seeing him at jam sessions around town, but we didn’t know each other well and hadn’t played together at all beyond the occasional jam. Again, I tried to prepare as best as I could for the gig, even though it was just a cheap little bar gig: Learned the tunes, showed up on time with the appropriate gear, etc. Anyway, we ended up having a great time playing together… one of those gigs where things just gel, you know? So he mentioned that Shania might be making some band changes for her upcoming tour, and of course I told him I’d be interested in auditioning if the opportunity arose. He called me a week later, and said that he had recommended me to Cory Churko, Shania’s bandleader, and that he wanted me to send in some web links, videos, etc. So I did that, which then got passed to Shania for her consideration. About a month later I got an email from Will Hollis, who was Shania’s musical director… and also musical director on the Dancing With the Stars tours that I had done a few years back. I had no idea that Will was now Shania’s MD, but BAM! Now I had two sources vouching for me. From all the submissions she received, Shania narrowed it down to 4 bass players and 6 drummers that she wanted to see at a live audition. So a month later, I did the audition in LA, and about three weeks after that... ended up getting the call from Will that I had been hoping for. So from the time I first submitted links to Cory until getting the gig, three months had passed. A long stressful process! But during all that time, I had been listening to Shania almost constantly, getting as familiar with her music as I could. 

TMG: Shania has been touted the best selling female country artist in the history of country music. What has it been like touring with Shania and her camp?
DEREK: It’s been amazing… definitely the best tour I’ve ever had the privilege of playing on. Everyone... management, band, crew, etc., was extremely cool and great at their job. That makes a tour run like clockwork, and makes for such a positive experience all around. They’re not all like that! There’s usually at least one a$$hole on the tour.

Click Link Below For Full Interview.

http://www.thatsmygig.com/content/Derek_Frank_Interview/



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Wes Mack @WesMackMusic

Wanna know what touring with @ShaniaTwain was like? Check out my @countrifiedca (Countrified Canada) interview: http://issuu.com/countrified/docs/january_14_edition__1

2:13 PM ET - 2 Feb 16

http://twitter.com/WesMackMusic



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Rock This Country Tour DVD


Has there been any news as to whether there will be a DVD coming from the Rock This Country tour?



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RE: 2015 "Rock This Country" tour


j1234 wrote:

Has there been any news as to whether there will be a DVD coming from the Rock This Country tour?


I'm sure a DVD will be released. No news yet though. Probably waiting to see if Shania does an European leg. If she does, I'd assume they would wait until it's over and then release a DVD.



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I don't know about a DVD. The Vegas one didn't do very well on charts and on this tour there aren't new songs, except PFT. So another DVD with the same songs won't gain much attention in my opinion.
Instead, I wonder when we'll hear something about a new single, at least, if not a new album.



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matteotempo wrote:

I don't know about a DVD. The Vegas one didn't do very well on charts and on this tour there aren't new songs, except PFT. So another DVD with the same songs won't gain much attention in my opinion.
Instead, I wonder when we'll hear something about a new single, at least, if not a new album.


As far as a new single/album, that probably also depends on if Shania is going out on an European leg in the Spring/Summer. Whenever she releases new music, she'll have to do a promotional media tour in the 2 or 3 weeks leading up to the album release. Lead singles are usually released 6-8 weeks before the album comes out. 

And don't forget, Shania is STILL writing and recording...



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2015 "Rock This Country" tour


Chinese Editor Delivers Stage Screen Videos to World Class Music Events

Stage screen editor dazzles audiences at live events and concerts for Rascal Flatts, Shania Twain, Mariah Carey, Jason Aldean and more

LOS ANGELES, USA, March 17, 2016 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Award-winning editor Gina Hu has proven herself to be a master of the craft and a special talent at the apex of her field. Year after year, Hu’s editorial excellence has shined on some of the biggest stages, events and venues in the world.

Her understanding of pacing gives her work an atmosphere that brings out brewing excitement for audiences. This is perfect for the medium she typically edits for – on screen video for music artists during live events.

Her main focus is creating concert videos that kick start shows. She has cut together work for a wide variety of world-famous artists including Rascal Flatts, Shania Twain, Mariah Carey and many more.

Her work was exhibited in Shania Twain's “Rock This Country Tour” for five months. The tour had 72 shows and took in $69 million. This came from an astounding total of more than 700,000 fans in attendance.

Rascal Flatt’s “Riot Tour” brought in $18.7 million. The band's 43 performances allowed more than 380,000 people to view Hu's edits.

Mariah Carey's Number 1's Tour amassed $14.4 million. The 44 shows at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace made it possible for Hu's work to reach in excess of 97,000 people.

Much of her editing has been for the production company Allucinari, including her editing stage screens for “The Night that Changed America: A Grammy Salute to the Beatles” that televised on CBS, for “Sinatra 100: An All-Star Grammy Concert” that paid tribute to the late Frank Sinatra in primetime on CBS, the 2015 NBA All-Star Game and four American Idol Tours, among others.

Her style is what makes her videos stand apart. She tends to lean more to the experimental side of the spectrum. Her technique relies heavily on quick cuts, jump cuts and an overall grungy feel.

"For shows, there are the intros and the songs. I work for both,” said Hu. “The intro video is usually very strong and abstract. The purpose of it is to excite the people. For songs, the edit is usually three to five minutes. Sometimes you see a song as a story. Some parts you need to go easier or lighter. Some parts have a conflict that you need to make visually strong and create something new.”

Some of her most recent work was for country artist Jason Aldean. She cut together footage for his 2015 “Burn It Down Tour” and his current “We Were Here Tour” that has 27 shows traversing the U.S. and Australia. The show stopper from his latest tour was the footage Hu edited for Aldean’s platinum single, “My Kinda Party.”

Said Hu, “For the new tour, I edited “We Were Here” video and collaborated with the editing team on the intro. The idea was to make a very grungy video as the background. I also edited the on screen video played during “My Kinda Party,” as well as the opening video for the show. Country singers have huge audiences. I feel honored to be part of the show and when I see those videos, I feel really proud.”

Hu is a Shanghai, China native. Before parlaying her expertise to renowned music events in the U.S., Hu applied her editorial talents for Shanghai TV productions “Entertainment Online,” that broadcasts in more than 10 provinces throughout China, “One Song Makes You Famous,” a Chinese comparable to “American Idol,” and the celeb talk show, “Star Weekend.”

“These three productions are jewels in the network’s broadcasting schedule, and the editors we hand select for them must be only the best for obvious reasons,” said producer Wuzhuan Yi. “Gina is studious, observant and very savvy with regards to editing. She understands the heart of the show’s footage and can bring it out without a lot of supervision or explanation. She understands what is needed without anyone having to tell her, and that’s a rare and valuable quality for any editor.”

Demonstrating her recognition in the field, Hu edited “How to Get a Hug,” an online video that received the Best Editing, Bronze Award at the 2013 Telly Awards. She received another Best Editing Bronze award at the 2013 Telly Awards for her work on the online video, “TamaChachi.” Hu was also the editor for “Marvin the Clown,” a short film from writer-director Bora Ozan that screened at the Epidemic Film Festival, the Festival de Cannes Court Metrage and the Newport Beach Film Festival.

Hu edited for a show in 2011 that played at the Chicago Royal George Theatre called “White Noise: A Cautionary Musical.” It was produced by Whoopi Goldberg and was a musical about a White Supremacy rock duo that rose to the top of the charts.

She went on to edit three episodes of “Bomb It,” a documentary series about graffiti artists from director Jon Reiss. Then, Hu went on to edit stage screen videos for Carrie Underwood’s “Blown Away Tour” that had 114 shows across North America, Europe and Australia. It is Underwood’s best career tour and grossed $52.8 million. Hu also assistant edited on Underwood’s video for “Something in the Water” that’s racked up more than 17 million YouTube views.

Hu can’t deny the influence television has had on her approach. It seems fitting that she would edit content for the Emmy’s—a celebration of the medium itself. In 2014, she cut together a segment that transitioned the ceremony into the announcement of Best Drama. Her piece featured images from major television shows like “Game of Thrones” and “House of Cards.”

For more information, visit: http://www.linkedin.com/in/gina-hu-b24b2320 and http://staffmeup.com/profile/ginaqing

http://www.einnews.com/pr_news/317021480/chinese-editor-delivers-stage-screen-videos-to-world-class-music-events



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Promo pic

th_shania-rockthiscountrytour-shoot7.jpg



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She's looking like Tina Turner.biggrin

 

Steve



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No No No! Sorry but I don't like this look on Mrs. Twain at all! Bring back the Brunette style please!

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2015 "Rock This Country" tour


Back on April 18, Wes Mack made a couple posts on Twitter and Instagram. It's hard to say if he is talking about going back on tour with Shania or just out on his own. Possibly the European tour Shania talked about in an interview last year? We'll see! Although you would think Shania would have announced it by now and have tickets on-sale.

Wes Mack @WesMackMusic

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Throwback to last summer Rocking this Country with @ShaniaTwain and all of you ||| can't wait for this summer!!!

9:04 PM ET - 18 Apr 16

http://twitter.com/WesMackMusic

---------------------------------

Wes Mack @WesMackMusic

th_shania-rockthiscountrytour-wesmack041816.jpg

Throwback to last summer on tour with @shaniatwain and the most fun I've ever had onstage ||| looking forward to getting out on the road with all of you again this summer ||| more announcements to come. Thx for continuing to give me this shot!!! #RockThisCountry

18 Apr 16

http://instagram.com/wesmackmusic



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Hint at possible new music? Tour? Return to Las Vegas? Who knows!

Shania Twain @ShaniaTwain

th_shania-rockthiscountrytour-tweet060516-seattle060515.jpg

1 year since the Rock This Country Tour kicked off in Seattle! Hope to see you all again soon… #RTCTour

9:06 AM ET - 5 Jun 16

http://twitter.com/ShaniaTwain



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According to a Billboard article, Shania's "Rock This Country" tour earned $65 Million last year.

Billboard's 2016 Nashville Power Players List Revealed: Who Rules Music City?

By Billboard Staff | July 28, 2016

...Boasting the most diverse roster of any major Nashville agency -- ­including Carrie Underwood, Darius Rucker, Dixie Chicks, Keith Urban, Tori Kelly, Zac Brown Band, Kacey Musgraves, Sam Hunt, Dead & Company, Twenty One Pilots, The Chainsmokers and electronic act Pretty Lights -- Creative Artists Agency's Music City division booked $500 million in ­touring revenue in 2015 and, thanks to the breadth of its client list, steered clear of what Co-head Marc Dennis calls the "standardization" of the ­bro-country ­format. "It's all about the party right now, and I think we're missing some really amazing music being made here in Nashville," he says. Among CAA's big scores during the past year was Shania Twain's Rock This Country Tour, her first in 11 years, which grossed more than $65 million and was second only to Kenny Chesney among 2015 country tours. The agency also delivered in other ­mediums. CMT picked up the CAA-packaged Nashville from ABC, and Tim McGraw's Humble & Kind, a book that grew out of his song of the same name, was a New York Times best-seller.

http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/country/7453261/2016-billboard-nashville-power-players-list



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Hi! I'm new here but long time lurker but just decided now to sign up! So I have a question. With the news of Shania switching management could explain why the Rock This Country tour was never extended as was first talked about last year and why we never got a dvd out of it? It always puzzled me especially since it may very well be her last tour (as she claims it is) The most "pro" footage we saw was from the Toronto show during the ACC special. The rest of the footage was just the nightly footage given to media I'm sure of that or even from the in house cameras The show could very well have been filmed but we just had no prior knowledge of it. I did alot of research on this apparently alot of venues have it written in their policies that by entering the arena/stadium you hereby allow them to film you and use it for commercial use if the artist desires to. Apparently this is how it is for example at Rogers Centre in Toronto and at Manchester Arena in Manchester, England. My friend who lives in Greece says with them it's written on their concert ticket. Also my friend who knows alot about this told me that alot of artists nowadays just use the in house footage since most cameras used nowadays are HD. I apologize if this is the wrong place to discuss this but I contemplated for a long time where to post this. I just really wanted to get someone else's opinion on this matter because again it's just puzzled me since the end of the tour and especially since I saw the footage from the ACC special. I had hoped it would be filmed in Europe had the tour been extended but of course that never happened.

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Yeah, I've been wondering why there wasn't a "RTC" tour DVD too. I really have know idea why one hasn't been released considering this was supposedly her last tour. Shania had to have some kind of management team during the tour. If management even has anything to do with DVD releases. I just don't know.

Welcome to the message board!



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Tommy wrote:

Yeah, I've been wondering why there wasn't a "RTC" tour DVD too. I really have know idea why one hasn't been released considering this was supposedly her last tour. Shania had to have some kind of management team during the tour. If management even has anything to do with DVD releases. I just don't know.

Welcome to the message board!


 Yeah nor do I. I suppose if she were to have released something for the RTC tour she would need to do promo of some sort so I'm guessing she'd need management there to set up that promo (?) or is that the label that sets up the promo? I've tried asking her a few times on twitter but unlike when she was in Vegas now she hardly responds to anyone. Wish she would do a Q&A again I'd love to ask her. *sigh* maybe we'll get some sort of answer when the album is released and then she has to do promo. Thank you! Happy to be here! 



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An article from last year detailing the production of Shania's "Rock This Country" tour...

Shania Twain's "Rock This Country" Tour

By Nook Schoenfeld | Production, Lights and Staging News | October 15, 2015

It’s been a dozen years since Shania Twain has hit the road on tour. She picked up right where she left off with a gorgeous production design for her current “Rock This Country” tour. In 2004, she stopped singing to heal her throat and stayed silent up until she took up residency at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas in 2012. Ten months before that run of 105 shows, the artist met with show director Raj Kapoor to come up with a production for those distinct shows. A good relationship was formed and, once again, the singer looked to him and his company for a vision on this tour, which launched in June and wraps later this month.

Shania’s original thought was to take the basic look of her Vegas show, along with some of the physical elements, and take it on the road. But as Raj was keen to point out, it’s a whole different crowd at a casino show than at an arena show. Raj explains, “I went into our first meeting for this tour and told her I had planned the tour and wanted to throw everything away. She had played it for two years and deciding not to renew her contract at Caesars. I thought we needed something totally different, totally fresh.” Kapoor went on to explain that it wasn’t just for the audience; it’s also for her. He wanted her to feel excited, that there was a sense of newness to it.

“To me, that meant surrounding her with some different people and changing the members of the team.” Raj adds, “We were getting rid of the dancers, we weren’t doing the live horses, we cut the string section and ended up replacing half the members of the band. It was about creating new energy around her, and that was the goal of the show.”

Raj had a good idea of what he wanted for a set and knew he needed to incorporate lots of elements into her performance, especially some things like video, that the artist had never utilized on any previous tour. He reiterates what he told Shania. “I want to use lighting in a big way, I wanted to use video in a big way, Things we couldn’t do in a Vegas theater setting, like big pyrotechnics, I wanted to incorporate them. Let’s make it a big rock ‘n’ roll show.” Most of the elements in today’s shows are exactly what Raj pitched to her in that first meeting. Kapoor then turned to Mark Butts to team up for the production design. They had worked together on several projects in the past that had gone well, and Raj asked him for a large lighting design and concept that would go with his vision of the show. Mark rose to the occasion with his concepts and was awarded the design. Raj says of the LD, “I love Mark’s lighting aesthetic. We have a great back-and-forth dialogue, and I’m learning so much. I want to get more involved with the production design of the show as well, so I’m really loving co-designing shows with a lighting director.”

The Lighting

Last November at LDI, Kapoor stopped by the Clay Paky booth and got a look at the new A.Leda B-EYE K20 wash fixture. He envisioned having a big block of these fixtures for Shania’s show. This worked out perfectly for Butts, already a fan of the fixture. He designed six large square truss pods containing 16 fixtures each. These Pods stretched across the mid stage of the roof and moved on programmable winches. The B-Eyes were certainly put through every function one could use in a wide variety of cool effects and chases. I never saw the same look twice with them. The pods were moved at opportune times — sometimes live, sometimes resetting their position in darkness. During the acoustic part of the show, when the band gathered downstage on stools, the pods flipped over backwards and lowered to the stage. Mounted on the back were various sized vintage Skypans. Old Mole Richardson scoop lights normally reserved for film shoots were set in a warm glow to accent the softness of the music. It created an industrial accent while the video wall upstage added to the scene by displaying what looked like an old train station or abandoned building.

Butts stayed with a design that called for huge blocks of the same type of fixture. Upstage and downstage he placed 10 identical 8-foot sections of Tyler GT truss in a row that contained alternating Sharpy washes and Mythos fixtures from Clay Paky. These trusses were cantilevered, and the air looked like a symmetrical wall of lights from below. The stage deck had more Clay Paky Sharpy fixtures lining the side perimeters as well.

Upstage was the true pièce de résistance of the lighting rig, the mammoth wall of Sharpys. Twelve individual vertical columns (torms) held 10 Sharpys each. These 30-foot torms hung in a row across a slightly curved overhead truss. In all, 120 of these Clay Paky fixtures made for a zillion different cool looks. The Sharpy torms were mounted to a structure that hung from SGPS/ShowRig Whirlygigs. These are special designed robotic winches that travel along a slightly curved truss and have the ability to move sideways, up and down or pivot 180°. On the back of each torm were 30-foot-high 5mm video tiles. The torms could spin around to become a video wall at any time. The Whirlygigs gave Raj and Mark a plethora of choices for each look in the show. At times there would be wall of video in the center and rows of Sharpys fixtures offstage of them. At other times, the video would split into halves with the light fixtures in the center being utilized.

Butts had two weeks of previz time prior to the actual two weeks of full band rehearsals. He locked himself in a room at the VER complex with David Mollner, another programmer, to start work on the grandMA2 full size console utilizing an MA 3D visualizer setup. VER supplied the entire lighting package for this tour as well as the audio and video. Mark explained the process. “Before we programmed a single cue on the grandMA2, Raj gave us a full storybook that contained his ideas for every scene/song in the set. He had control over the video screen positioning, truss trims, color schemes for songs. There was no guesswork on my end, he had a definitive plan, and we were able to dive right into work.” Raj adds to this by saying, “It was important to have everyone on the same page and for Mark to know what video content was being created and the colors we were thinking of, since this whole show has ebbs and flows surrounding certain highlights. I like to be super-efficient when I’m working and give everyone basically a map to work from.” This worked out perfectly for Butts, because he was able to program all of the video, riser and lighting truss moves directly into his visualizer, up to the seconds it took for the set piece to move.

Butts, a world-renowned lighting programmer for years, has certainly designed his share of shows. Designing a show of this magnitude wasn’t a problem at all, but stepping away from the console and having someone else program while he dictates took a while to get used to. He states, “I’ve been in the programmer seat when an LD starts instructing me how to program the cues he wants to see. It’s uncomfortable. I instinctively knew that I did not want to be that guy, so I chose to sit back and let the programmers set up the console and program their own way.” Butts had brought in lighting director Andre Petrus, a Nashville programmer, to program and direct the lighting for the tour. Unavailable for the initial programming, he took over programming duties from Mollner once full production rehearsals started up. Andre concurs, “Here I am, sitting in front of a great programmer, wondering if my own chops were good enough for Mark. I would be doing something, and he would jump up and say ‘Hey, wait a sec,’ and I would stop in my tracks, thinking I wasn’t programming what he wanted to see. It turned out that he wasn’t trying to tell me how to program a cue; he was just interested in seeing the keystrokes I used to get the look he just requested. Then, at times, he would subtly reach out and do something himself on the console that would just blow me away. On occasion, he would offer tips, and I learned a ton programming this show.”

"Learning to speak to programmers in a language they would understand was something new to me,” Butts declared. “Andre stepped up in a big way this time. His programming and directing skills are quite evident in this show. He’s just killing it. But it took me some time to develop a vocabulary to communicate my desires. I’m used to looking down and up constantly while I program, and never had to concentrate on explaining what I envisioned in words that someone else would understand.”

The lighting rig is composed of 97 percent Clay Paky fixtures. We asked Butts to explain how that decision came about. “I did not start out the design process thinking solely Clay Paky fixtures were what I wanted, but I can’t say I’m upset with the choice. I wanted big banks of the same type of fixture. We went with the B-Eyes as our wash/special-effects kind of fixture, because there are so many uses for them. What can I say about the Mythos, they are just fantastic fixtures. For the upstage wall of light, the Sharpys made the most sense. They are small and economically perfect for this application. The Sharpy washes fill holes, light scenery and could be used as key lights.” I will note that Mark had eight ColorBlaze 72 strip lights from Philips Color Kinetics on the floor working as a front wash.

Several vendors were contacted to get potential bids for their production services. In the end, VER was awarded the contract as they came up with a good, solid price for the lighting, video and audio needs. One of the things Mark requested was the final say in choosing the touring crew. VER offered up some names of people that were available. Angelo Viacava was chosen to assume the role of crew chief, and everyone is satisfied with the crew out on tour.

The Video

Kapoor is the producer of the show and chose to utilize his own company, Raj Kapoor Productions, to build the media content. He collaborates with Mark Allen, who works for him full-time, and is the art director for this show. Anything content-wise basically runs through Allen, but he never has to deal with the client. “All the creative ideas, budgeting, meetings I look after, but Mark deals with the day-to-day back-and-forth between the artists creating content. We do everything on a forum, so as the art progresses, the director, the artists and me are all on the same page and viewing the same comments. So everyone knows what the plan of attack is moving forward.”

All of the content was played back through the use of three d3 4x2 media servers. These were chosen because of the quick, easy way in which they could spit out multiple 4K media files into different video wall layouts seamlessly. Once Jackson Gallagher loaded the servers, he programmed them to be run from the same timecode the lighting guys utilized. This freed Jackson to be the video director, calling the camera positions and cutting the live shots. Besides having a couple of FOH camera positions, Gallagher made use of two roving handhelds, a jib and multiple robocams to capture the I-Mag images. He cut the camera shots through the use of a Ross Carbonite switcher.

The video wall itself made up a 40-by-30-foot (WxH) wall when all the tiles were together in one solid configuration. VER has exclusive usage of the new 5mm Revolution RS5 Outdoor/Indoor LED Display Modules designed to handle the rigors of outdoor and indoor use.

While the artist was occasionally displayed on the upstage video tiles, the camera images Gallagher cut were prominently displayed on three screens located high above the trussing downstage center. Angled directionally towards the audience the images were front-projected from Barco 20k projectors set up on platforms in the arena.

The Stage

The stage itself is 60 by 44 feet (WxD) and contains plenty of bells and whistles. Assembled at the far end of the arena during load in, it rolls into place approximately four hours after the initial trucks are dumped and the lights, video and PA are flown out of the way. Supplied by SGPS/ShowRig (Show Group Production Services) out of Los Angeles and Las Vegas, the stage has trap doors for various stunts from the lift utilized in the center of the stage, to the holes that open to reveal pyro elements to shoot out of. Both of these are utilized for the opening of the show as Shania enters the stage under some pods of light that were lowered almost to the ground.

One walks into the arena to see a giant red Austrian drape masking the downstage edge. Shania’s logo is projected on the front via a single Vari*Lite VL3000 spot. The only non-Clay Paky moving light fixture utilized on the show. As the opening music starts and the drape ascends, flashes of light accent the rhythmic beat. After a minute or so, the pods start rising out of a cloud of low-lying fog with lights emitting from the Clay Paky B-Eye-equipped pods. As they rise, a ribbon lift under the center raises the performer up simultaneously until she is a good 10 feet above the stage.

Downstage left and right are circular structures that allow the performer to get close to the side audiences. A long thrust extends out from center, with another circular platform at the end. The platform is made of Plexiglas, with eight Sharpy lights mounted directly underneath it. The outside perimeter of the circular platform spins while the artist stays in the center. Shania spends a large part of her set working the runway, and the crowd eats it up. Speaking of being out in front of her people, Shania spends a song being driven around the arena floor in an LED lit, Plexiglas shrouded chariot. Nicknamed the “Pope Mobile” by the crew, this elevated cart allows Shania to be seen and often touched by her audience as the seemingly invisible crew members and polite security usher the vehicle from downstage right to downstage left, via the front of house mix position. I watch as the crowd almost lifts the artist from her ride in desperate attempts to get a selfie taken with her. To my eyes, it borders on a harrowing experience, but the performer seems perfectly comfortable being close and personable with her public.

Speaking of getting closer to the audience, a visual highlight of the show happens when, out of darkness, the spotlights illuminate Shania as she is straddling a saddle downstage center. I watch as the downstage thrust transforms itself into a crane of sorts. As she starts her monologue, the arm of the crane raises her up high and starts to slowly take her on a 360° ride over the audience’s head. Butts chooses to let the lasers shroud the stage in all their splendor. As the only light source other than the spots and audience light (so the artist can view her fans while singing from the perch). Raj points out that, while he had the idea for the crane gag, it was Shania herself who asked “If I can’t have my horses on stage this time, maybe I can ride in a saddle?” Raj loved the idea and turned to Eric Pearce at SGPS/ShowRig who, after a lot of back and forth, made it all happen. The custom saddle was fabricated by Skyhorse Saddles out of Durango, CO.

The band themselves work on a series of different sized risers whose configuration changes effortlessly between songs. Driven by SGPS mobilators, the risers move robotically into pre-assigned positions on stage. The risers themselves are outlined with sexy LED tape, which is bright enough to make out the musicians’ shapes on the riser without fully illuminating them.

The Whirlygigs move the video and rear lighting wall into different configurations, forming a nonstop sequence of different looks on the stage. The video elements seamlessly take a new form of shapes, sizes and location for every song. At the same time, the midstage B-Eye Lighting pods have the ability to move into place. SGPS/ShowRig supplied the cable drum system that enabled the pods to move during the show. Each of the pods were connected by four points, so the programmers could manipulate the truss structure in any angle they could imagine. While the lighting and video are all synced together and controlled by intricate timecode, the moving elements are all controlled via computers by highly trained techs. They utilize the Raynok control system to operate and control the parameters of every move. Raynok Software is scalable and can be programmed to control a virtually unlimited number of axes while also monitoring all related I/O’s and the Emergency Stop System in real time. Christina Cohan mans the controls from FOH so she has a clean sightline to all the action as well as the emergency stop button that can be pushed at any time to halt all movement — something she has never felt the need to do on this show. She takes her commands from stage manager Steve Nimmer, who calls the show cues from his lair under the stage.

Effects

Special effects duties were handled by Pyrotek Special Effects’ Las Vegas location. Pyro played a predominant role from start to finish. Propane dragons were mounted under the stage decks, billowing out flame balls high into the air. Fluid operated flame projectors spit five-way streaks of flame in the air at times. Several perfectly timed gerb effects were shot from holes in the stage as well as the front of the band risers. Multiple confetti machines ensured the audience was pelted with the material at the end of the show. Low laying fog appeared at key moments in the show to add a mystical element to the stage look. At one point, the upstage video wall was closed in a solid configuration and the video content displayed rolling fog cascading down behind the performer to match the real life stage fog.

Pyrotek were also called upon for their expertise in the laser department. A total of 18 units were used on the show. Six high power 20W Kvant full-color lasers were placed around the corners of the stage. These shot major beams up into the rafters, avoiding the public’s eyes. The overhead trusses held 16 Pyrotek LDP10-AS series audience scanning full color laser projectors. Each laser projector incorporates the Pangolin Professional Audience Safety System (P.A.S.S.) controller to monitor and control all audience scanning effects as well as full diverging lens. This, along with their meticulous calibration and field measurement procedures, ensures both a safe and legal audience scanning show. PASS is recognized in the U.S. by FDA CDRH and throughout the world as a solid safety system for audience scanning. Pyrotek is one of a few special effects companies worldwide that can legally perform audience-scanning shows with an FDA CDRH Audience Scanning variance

Soft Goods

The Austrian Drape is spectacular in that it is made up of three sections. This allows the rag to take on a shape of its own at times. For the acoustic numbers, the designers use the drape to transform the arena into a theater-like setting with a proscenium opening. The side drapes act like curtain legs, while the main drape across the apron is set at various heights to form a curved opening reminiscent of Radio City Music Hall’s grand drape. At one point, the rear video wall also displays the image of a well-lit curtain during a portion of the show. They cleverly have media that shows the faux fabric appearing to draw open to reveal another scene at the start of a new song.

In conclusion, the whole show never got stagnant. Each change in song brought about a fresh, often exotic look to the production. A talented staff of technicians, ensuring that there was never a dull moment to the show, tightly executed the stage transitions between numbers. The U.S. tour continues through this October, and it appears that everyone out there, from the artist on down, is having a great time on this show.

Shania Twain’s “Rock This Country” Tour

Crew

Show Director/Production Designer: Raj Kapoor

Lighting Designer: Mark Butts

Programmer: Mark Butts, David Mollner

Lighting Director: Andre Petrus

Video Director: Jackson Gallagher

Lighting Co: VER

Lighting Crew: Angelo Viacava (crew chief), Tyler Trofatter, Eric Marshall, Chris Lanning, Zach Svoboba

Video Co: VER

Video Crew: Patrick Eaton (crew chief), Michael Muscato, Eric “Austin” Stengle, Sean Green, Michael Boggs

Staging/Automation: SGPS/ShowRig

Staging/Automation Crew: Chris Lohden, Shane Bandy, Andrew Johnstone, Will Gurski, Jake Murray, Christina Cohan, Mike Burgess, Tim “Squid” Fincannon

Pyro/Lasers: Pyrotek Special Effects

Pyro/Laser Crew: Gregg Pearson, Nick Zangari, Mark Jones, Brian Van Trigt, Amanda Pindus

Tour Manager: Chris Littleton

Production/Stage Managers: John “Bugzhee” Hougdahl, Steve Nimmer, Sean Robinson

Riggers: Danny Machado, Bob Powers, Rick Wilmot

Electrician: Carlos Oldigs

Gear

2 grandMA2 Full consoles

96 Clay Paky B-EYE K20s

 52 Clay Paky Mythos

130 Clay Paky Sharpys

68 Clay Paky Sharpy Washes

1 Vari*Lite VL3500 Spot

8 Chroma-Q Color Charge Plus

8 Color Kinetics ColorBlaze 72s

8 4-lite Moles

4 DF-50 hazers

1 VER Revolution RS5 5mm LED display (40’ x 30’)

3 d3 Technologies 4x2 media servers

3 Barco 20K projectors

4 Barco ImagePRO II

1 Lightware DVI matrix (16x16)

1 Ross Carbonite switcher

1 tvOne multiviewer

1 Brainstorm SR-112

1 Evertz multi-frame unit

http://plsn.com/current-issue/41-production-profile/17931-shania-twains-qrock-this-countryq-tour.html



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Is that Shania?


2-a-b.png



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or just photoshoped by someguy

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Yes, it's Shania's photo for Rock This Country Tour:



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