Siège Social
Filliales
Business Development
Slovenian singer, songwriter, and superstar Nina Pušlar rocked her picturesque hometown of Ivančna Gorica, 40 kilometres out of Ljubljana, for a showstopping homecoming concert at the football stadium, celebrating 20 years of success in the music industry. Her career, like so many, started via a talent competition, and her energising, broad-based appeal and bubbly blend of dancey folk and pop has made her the hottest artist in Slovenia right now.
It's important to get your head around how big a deal this was for Slovenia, a small and beautiful European nation that has a bit of everything, to get 10,000 people into a stadium outside the capital for one local singer on one special night!
Lighting designer Crt Birsa of design studio Blackout produced a carefully sculpted, curated and delivered lightshow crafted for the scale and importance of the occasion, stoked with so much anticipation. He utilised nearly 200 Robe moving lights among his 500-plus fixtures to impress Nina’s friendly, loyal, and enthusiastic fanbase, which included Slovenia’s President, Nataša Pirc Musar, who sat unobtrusively in one of the VIP areas.
Crt and his team at design studio Blackout have been working with the artist for around 15 years, looking after the lighting and visuals since her early career, which has skyrocketed in that time and given them a unique perspective and window into her professional achievements.
A major starting point for lighting this show was the venue – which had never staged anything this huge or complex before. In fact, productions of this magnitude are rarely seen in Slovenia at all! Crt also had plenty of input from Nina herself, who wanted to create something truly spectacular!
He worked with regular collaborators set designer Greta Godnič and production manager Rok Lozar. An early suggestion was having a Ferris wheel behind the stage which could also help facilitate lighting positions.
After much discussion, with unpredictable weather in mind, this morphed into inspiring Crt and Greta to create the circular trussing architecture that defined the performance space, which was based around a large 12 metre diameter trussing circle giving a max height of 22 metres, with spikes connecting it to a smaller 6 metre diameter inner circle.
Two angled truss pieces either side formed triangles descending from the central point in the middle of the circle.
Two side IMAG screens were rigged to two front Layher towers flanking the stage, together with the main PA hangs, with another two single span truss towers either side of the FOH position providing positions for front lighting fixtures and follow spots.
Robe is a brand that is constantly appearing on Crt’s designs, so it was a go-to for this one, especially as rental company Intralite – which supplied the full technical production – has a large inventory, supplied over the years by Robe’s Slovenian distributor, MK Light Sound.
A critical element of the design was that there was no upstage centre video screen – just the two portrait left and right IMAGs – so a lot of visual emphasis was on the lighting design. It had to provide a cool backdrop as well as effects and practical lighting.
“I needed all the moving lights to be as multi-functional as possible, so Robe was the way to go,” he commented.
The first fixtures on the plot were 58 x MegaPointes, positioned all over the four towers and triangular trusses. MegaPointe is one of Crt’s all-time favourites, “It’s a great fixture, has everything I need and is simple to operate,” he stated.
32 x Pointes outlined both sides of the thrust stage / runway, which were used in conjunction with the MegaPointes for primary and augmenting beams. The structural form of the trussing naturally lent itself to producing numerous big and dramatic beamy looks.
14 x FORTES were positioned on the upstage edge of the stage and used for strong backlight.
Crt chose 32 x Spiider LED wash beams for the main onstage wash coverage, dotted all over the Layher scaffolding of the side towers – another of his regular picks.
8 x iFORTE LTXs rigged on the delay towers were used for front and key lighting.
For this show, Crt was running three RoboSpot systems each controlling two lights at a time.
Two of these key light RoboSpot base stations were positioned at the bottom of the delay towers, and the third was backstage.
The backstage one controlled an iFORTE LTX rigged right at the top of the large circle and a FORTE at the apex of the larger triangle, both used for highly effective backlight when the artist was working along and at the end of the thrust.
Two fixtures a side of the eight iFORTE LTXs on the front towers were also RoboSpot controlled for key lighting and specials on the band, and for guests – of which there were several – including the Stična Quartet, who have accompanied Nina since the start. The Stična Elementary School children’s choir, under the direction of her first singing teacher, who also made an appearance.
Crt used 32 x Robe ParFect 100s as the truss toners for both circles and their connecting trusses.
Sixteen LEDBeam 150s were deployed along the front of the stage, providing low-angle key light for the band, helping eliminate shadows which was important as the show was recorded live by Digital 3 Production.
“This rig was a great combination of both classic and contemporary Robe fixtures,” noted Crt, adding that “while it’s a brand that moves with the times, it’s still good that products like MegaPointe and Pointe are so robustly built that they are readily available!”
Overall production challenges for creating a colourful and vibey show that riffed with the energy of the evening included the fact that – with no stage roof (which was another aesthetic decision) – all the lighting had to be ground supported. On top of that were considerations in case of bad weather, which luckily weren’t needed.
Starting in daylight and the show being a one-off, it was also vital to make an impression in the first few numbers, so Crt did not hold back on revealing a series of stunning lighting looks, each time drawing audience reactions!
The design also had to look cool in differing natural lighting states – daylight through dusk and into darkness – staged a day before the midsummer solstice, there was more daylight than darkness in the equation! On top of all these requirements, it had to look great on camera as well as live!
As Crt also works on many television productions, these factors were seamlessly integrated into the design from the outset, together with the architectural look and feel, which apart from being one of Crt’s aesthetic trademarks, looked fantastic for all the back-of-shot looks and cable-cam swoop ins.
Haze management was galvanising and is always an unknown in an outdoor environment. Despite copious expertise and 15 haze machines at his disposal with strategically calculated fanning devices all over the stage … he thinks there could have been more!
Programming time on site was very limited. For some of the songs, Crt developed an extended update to the existing programming from his Blackout colleague Amadej Superger – who looked after lighting on Nina’s last arena show, and for the new material presented in Ivančna Gorica he programmed from scratch, consuming around 18 days of pre-vizz followed by two half nights on site with the full rig. Blackout’s Klemen Krajnc took care of key lighting programming throughout this process, leaving Crt free to focus on developing the big picture looks, effects and overall aesthetic.
Creatively the show was filled with big, beautiful lighting and visual moments as Nina Pušlar delivered a personal, memorable and at times highly emotional show that will forever be etched in the memories of those enjoying a balmy mid-summer night’s madness in Ivančna Gorica.
Photo Credit: Louise Stickland
Précédent
Suivant
Production lighting for the vibrant and diverse Park Stage at the 2025 Glastonbury Festival was once again supplied by Bristol, UK-based SWG Events. A design by Mat Spencer – also Chief LX for the project – which included nearly 70 Robe moving lights, helped deliver great lighting for a blistering lineup including Anohni and the Johnsons, Haim, Caribou, Beth Gibbons, The Maccabees, Gary Numan and many, many more who delighted audiences throughout the three-day event.
The Rock For People music festival celebrated its 30th anniversary in style with an impressive 5-day event, an all-star lineup and an expanded capacity of 50,000 which saw a fully sold-out audience flock to the Park 360 site in Hradec Králové, Czech Republic – a former military airfield dating back to the 1930s – approximately 100 kilometres east of Prague.
Lady Gaga is an artist who excels at delivering unique, ambitious visual live extravaganzas that engage the eyes, brain and heart in an intricate mix of drama, high-impact dance moves and energising music, and this year’s acclaimed Coachella headliner slot took this art to new levels. Her two-hour performance complete with elaborate costumes, epic set, thought-provoking video and diligently crafted lighting has been hailed as a masterpiece of stagecraft.
Vienna’s Marx Halle bristled with excitement for the 2025 Amadeus Austrian Music Awards, a BIG and super glamorous night out for the Austrian music industry, staged by IFPI Austria, to recognise outstanding achievements by Austrian artists and musicians.
All rights reserved. Created by Appio