Corey Easterbrook and ChamSys Flow With Neon Trees
ORLANDO – Corey Easterbrook likes to go with the flow, whether it’s busking light shows or jumping on new, unexpected opportunities. The affable owner of Hot House AV has gotten to do both during the past 18 months by running a steady series of one-offs by pop/rockers Neon Trees.
Coming out of the COVID lockdown, The Billboard Music Award winning quartet was in need of a LD to work the festival shows they had lined up. There was one overriding criteria they had in mind: whoever they brought on board had to be comfortable busking big, bold looks without a lot of repetition – or prep time! This ultimately led them, in round about fashion, to Easterbrook and his ChamSys MagicQ MQ80 console.
“My good friend Myles Mangino learned what Neon Trees was looking for, and recommended me,” said Easterbrook. “We haven’t looked back since. It’s been a blast for me, doing about a show with them a month, all of them one-offs. I have a very busy schedule outside this band, so it’s really convenient taking my MQ80 as carry-on and doing my preprogramming on the plane, in a hotel room, or bar.
“The cloning and morphing with this console are a breeze,” continued Easterbrook. “Plus, being able to reorganize the in-built Visualiser and update makes from wherever I find myself makes things go smoother. Given that the house rigs we come across are so different, I really appreciate ChamSys’ Fixture Library as well as their support team – great stress busters! Then there are the Executor Buttons and the networking capabilities. All of this makes my life easier, so I can concentrate on busking the kinds of shows I like.”
Stylistically, Neon Trees and Easterbrook’s busked shows are an ideal fit. Described by one critic as a “refreshing blast of timeless rock energy,” the band exudes a spontaneous, playful spirit on stage, bounding around, bantering, and obviously relishing the chance to perform for the crowd.

These exact qualities are also plain to see in Easterbrook’s lightshows for the band, as he conjures up one bright, colorful, free-flowing look after another, never seeming to repeat himself, busking all the time.
“I love tasty dynamic looks for my shows, and they have a place in the set, but this band and their music require bold and fun looks,” said Easterbrook. “I try to get the crowd amped anyway I can. I also want to show Tyler (lead singer Tyler Glenn) the crowd, so he can feed off their energy, and vice versa.”
When all is said and done, says Easterbrook, he wants the fans at a Neon Trees show to feel “it was the most fun they had in a long time.” That’s a goal the band he’s running with endorses 100-percent.















Towler, of Nineteen Sixtyone Ltd., began working on Outlander when it debuted in 2013 at the invitation of its HOD Gaffer Scott Napier, and has been with the program for all six seasons since. In that time, the show has made a major transition from tungsten and HMI heavy lighting into a rig consisting mostly of LED fixtures.

For the Arsenal Festival, Birsa called on his
Given the complexities of his Dubioza Kolektiv show, Birsa said time coding was essential to his plans. “I could not have done things quite this way without timecoding,” he said. “The show would have to be built with much less to it if I had to run everything 100-percent manually. Happily for me, the MQ80 does a great job receiving timecode.”


Despite this issue, Hyra was able to create a captivating lighting design that engrossed the large crowd gathered in Byton’s historic Market Square as well as those watching the livestream of one of the most important events in Poland. Dynamic and deftly executed, his smooth color changes and seamless transitions flowed naturally with the traditional Polish folk dancers on stage. Later in the evening, when the initial performers were replaced by a rock band, he created a tour-like show.
Hyra credits his console’s “easy on the fly cue editing,” with helping him adapt. He notes that thanks to this capability he was able to change looks quickly to reflect the vision of his director. The user-friendly intuitive interface of the 
Building on the energy of the band’s performance and driving the intensity level ever higher was a 40-universe Niller Bjerregaard light and video show powered by the designer’s two
“The broadcast was as original as it gets,” said Bjerregaard. “All elements and features were as they happened that night and nothing was added or changed to enhance the viewer experience. The Stuttgart recordings were part of numerous recordings on that tour, but no elements were used from other shows, so what fans saw was exactly what happened. This video is a close as possible to that night, which is pretty cool.”
Bjerregaard used the M-Box Media Server. “Michael Austin Smalley, a renowned Light/Media Designer from Las Vegas and great friend, helped me in setting up,” said Bjerregaard. “My MQ500 controlled the media server with special designed video content, including movie clips with matching sound effects through the PA, as well as all camera live feeds.
Their bows feverishly jumping off the strings of their instruments, Luka Šulić and Stjepan Hauser, the Croatian cellists who make up the group, mange to push the oft-played rock classic to new levels of intensity. Reflecting the driving force of their performance visually throughout the 4 minute and 21 second video is a dynamic and intricately layered light show by Crt Birsa of Slovenia-based Blackout Lighting Design.
“I didn’t want to go multicolor,” he said. “Basic palettes were the most well-suited for this venue. Patterns and movement were what I relied on to visualize the music in a way that stood out.
Birsa notes that the Time Code and Cue Editing features his
“The MQ80 is a compact unit, but its powerful enough for elaborate jobs, and it’s a straight forward console to run,” he said. “For me, it’s the perfect console to take it on the field when I have a pre-programmed show and all I have to do is make some corrections. It also has UPS inside, which is most useful when you run the whole system by generator. If it runs out of fuel or something else happens, you have the chance to save the show and shut down securely. Really, this console has never let me down.”

Drawing on the brooding aura of its physical setting, Babenhausen Kasserne, an abandoned and desolate former military base that was built 120 years ago, the video evokes a haunting air of mystery. This quality is accentuated by Adrian Schmidt’s riveting lighting design that he powered with his ChamSys
Throughout the video, Schmidt creates wave after wave of lighting intensity that includes towering aerial effects, brilliant white flashes, and cascading “waterfalls” of light. Helping him navigate his way through this vortex of looks was his trusty console.
“All the features of the ChamSys helped me in this project, as we had limited infrastructure, a huge (113m x 85m) area, and long cables for data transmission via ArtNet,” said Schmidt. “We also had very little time for setting everything up, as the sun went down at 5 pm. My console performed flawlessly through it all.”





















As the top chefs and their assistants met in secret that morning,
A ChamSys user for ten years, Luhaäär only recently moved up to the MQ500M. He found the transition seamless. “I had used this console a few times before, so I was familiar with it,” he said. “The 


“We programmed the cues with a
“The stage lights are actually not real light but volumetric shaders that were animated by Victor Pukhov to mimic my ChamSys programmed lighting cues,” said Morandi. “Most importantly, Vincent Masson created the 3D animations that made the show look stunning. He used our 2D content as starting point, and with a lot of passion and talent created the 3D versions of it.”

