U2 has no limits when it comes to putting themselves on stage. The Irish group, however, surpasses them all with its residency show in Las Vegas, where it performs in a spherical room built expressly for it. “There is nothing like it on the planet,” says Jonathan Labbee, of the Montreal company SACO Technologies, involved in the project.
The boundaries of reality are never really there when U2 decides to put on a new show. Over the past three decades, cutting-edge technologies have even had to be developed or improved to make the wildest stage dreams of the group and its close collaborators come true. However, with U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere, the limits of the rock concert as we knew it are completely shattered.
“It’s not even an evolution [par rapport à ce qui existait]it’s definitely a transition to something else,” summarizes Yanick Fournier, vice-president of business development at SACO Techologies, who obtained the mandate to create the immense exterior and interior screens of the state-of-the-art room where the group performs. Irish.
The Sphere (whose external structure is called an “exosphere”) was developed and built for MSG Entertainment. U2 is the first artist in residence in this new venue, designed to present immersive shows.
When you’re inside and, say, U2 is playing, every surface around you is part of the show. You are literally transported to another world.
Jonathan Labbee, Co-CEO of SACO Technologies
The photos and videos that we have seen all over the internet since Friday, the evening of the inaugural concert, indeed suggest that this is a unique experience of its kind. Imagine: one of the most universally known rock bands on the planet, playing in a stunning visual environment in a spherical room twice the width and one and a third times the height of the Montreal Biosphere.
U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere left more than one baby. The British daily critic The Guardian notably called the show a “stunning and admirably raw extravaganza”. He specifies that even on the scale of U2, a group not exactly shy of its ambitions, it is “grandiose”. Varietyin the United States, judged this show, which is the complete opposite of what one expects from a rock concert, to be “spectacular”.
Five years of work
SACO Technologies has spent the last five years working on the Sphere project – and challenges. In addition to having to design the exterior surface, animated day and night, using approximately 50 million small LED lights grouped in rounds of 48, the company had to develop a unique curved screen for the interior.
“We had to create a screen that allowed sound to pass through,” explains Yanick Fournier. You don’t see any speakers in the arena. U2 had almost nothing on stage. The sound is of incredible quality. » The result is, in his opinion, “dazzling”.
The Montreal firm is not its first participation in a show involving U2. “We were born into rock’n’roll,” says Jonathan Labbee. U2 was our first client. » SACO Technologies has in fact designed for the group the first giant screen using LED technology for its tour Pop Martin 1996. The company also contributed to the tours Elevation And Vertigo.
This time, its client was not U2, but MSG Entertainment, which wanted to build the “arena of the future”, where it will present shows and other immersive experiences. However, U2 was the best artist to launch this new venue, according to Jonathan Labbee and Yanick Fournier.
U2 has always been at the forefront of technology. Each time, their goal is to push the show using technology to break away from the norm. They succeeded: it’s a touching and elegant show.
Yanick Fournier, vice-president of business development at SACO Technologies
U2:UV Achtung Baby Live at Sphere is presented at least until mid-December. Bono, The Edge and Adam Clayton are playing for the first time in their band’s history without their drummer, Larry Mullen Jr., who required surgery to resolve health issues caused by decades of gigging. He is replaced by the Dutchman Bram van den Berg.
Las Vegas concert features songs from the album Achtung Babyas well as essentials like Elevation, Where the Streets Have No Name, With or Without You And beautiful day.
30 years of excess
Designing innovative and extravagant stage devices has been part of U2’s artistic approach for three decades. Reminders.
Zoo TV (1992-1993)
Bono described the show Zoo TV like a “Disneyland on acid”. U2 began to play around this time with the possibilities offered by giant screens, often pushing the limits of this technology. Willie Williams, lighting designer and set designer for the Irish group’s concerts since 1983, was the artistic coordinator of Zoo TV. The stage structure was designed by architect Mark Fisher, a favorite of rock stars.
PopMart (1997-1998)
The show PopMart was, however, even more extravagant than Zoo TV : the group performed under a huge yellow arch (a nod to McDonald’s), in front of a giant screen, and even entered the stage coming out of a disco lemon…
Vertigo (2005-2006)
U2 returned to earth for their tours Elevation And Vertigo in the early 2000s. Both shows were based on the same concept: a traditional stage in front of which a circular walkway was built (Elevation) or elliptical (Vertigo). The brilliant innovation of the show Vertigo, it was a retractable screen curtain made of luminous balls which dressed the stage without blocking the view. “The idea came up in one of my conversations with Mark Fisher and it turned out that we had both been thinking about the same thing, separately,” Willie Williams revealed in an interview with The Press in 2005.
U2 360o (2009-2011)
For years, Willie Williams was against the idea of a center stage. “When you go to see a group, you have to feel that it is one, the energy must come from one place,” he told The Press in 2005. However, in 2009, Bono returned to the charge. Willie Williams had the idea to make the central stage structure look like it was part of the stadiums where U2 performed. Mark Fisher then designed an enormous “clamp” which notably supported a huge conical screen. The structure required four days to assemble. The Montreal representations directly demanded the construction of an amphitheater on the site of the former Blue Bonnets racetrack.