Cirque Du Soleil Upcoming Shows Info 2007

Press release concerning all the new shows on the way with Cirque…

Putting Creation First

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL OFFERS STIMULATING CREATIVE PLATFORMS
FOR CREATORS FROM HOME AND ABROAD

Montreal, September 13, 2007 – Ever since its founding in 1984, Cirque du Soleil has chosen to empower its creators and make creation the focal point of its activities. Over the last 23 years, more than a 100 creators have contributed their talent and vision to a Cirque du Soleil production. With new creation teams coming onboard for future projects, the total number of designers who have helped shape Cirque du Soleil shows is expected to reach 200.

Creativity is the driving force behind the organization’s unflagging growth. By 2010, Cirque du Soleil is expecting to open eight new shows, and no fewer than 60 creators from home and abroad are already hard at work conceiving and developing the new productions. “There’s no end of creative projects at Cirque du Soleil,” says Gilles Ste-Croix, Senior Vice‑President of Creative Content. “We have the good fortune of being able to attract renowned creators who want to work with us on a wide range of projects. Cirque du Soleil offers them stimulating creative platforms where they can explore and innovate. In turn, our creators’ vision and positive influence help expand Cirque du Soleil’s own ability to break new ground.”

“There’s no doubt that creativity is thriving in Quebec,” continues Gilles Ste-Croix. “In the years between now and 2010, Cirque du Soleil will be recruiting many Quebec-based directors and creators for its new shows. Quebec is overflowing with creative talent, and we are very proud to be able to offer them a high-profile international showcase.”

To successfully carry out so many creative undertakings at the same time, Cirque du Soleil sets up an independent creative unit to manage every project. Each unit is composed of nearly 100 dedicated individuals whose sole priority is to see their specific project through to a successful conclusion.

Below is a brief rundown of Cirque du Soleil projects currently in creation. Over the next three years, eight new shows will open around the world, joining 14 other shows already in performance. The directors and some creators have already been identified for these new creations.

Wintuk

Seasonal show opening at the WaMu Theatre at Madison Square Garden, New York City in November 2007

Richard Blackburn Director

Fernand Rainville Director of Creation

Patricia Ruel Set and Props Designer

François Barbeau Costume Designer

Simon Carpentier Composer

Jim Corcoran Songwriter

Catherine Archambault Choreographer

Yves Aucoin Lighting Designer

Francis Laporte Projections Designer

Jonathan Deans Sound Co-designer

Leon Rothenberg Sound Co-designer

Daniel Cola Acrobatic Performance Designer

Guy St-Amour Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

Eleni Uranis Make-up Designer

Tokyo 2008 (working title)

Resident show opening at Tokyo Disney Resort in Japan in 2008

François Girard Writer and Director

François Séguin Set Designer

Line Tremblay Director of Creation

Renée April Costume Designer

René Dupéré Composer

Debra Brown Choreographer

David Finn Lighting Designer

François Bergeron Sound Designer

Scott Osgood Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

Florence Pot Acrobatic Performance Designer

Macao I (working title)

Resident show opening at the Venetian Hotel in Macao, China in 2008

Gilles Maheu Director

Neilson Vignola Director of Creation

Guillaume Lord Set Designer

Dominique Lemieux Costume Designer

Axel Morghentaler Lighting Designer

Violaine Corradi Composer

Steve Dubuc Sound Designer

Martino Muller Choreographer

Guy Lemire Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

Rob Bollinger Acrobatic Performance Designer

Luxor 2008 (working title)

Resident show with Criss Angel opening at the Luxor Hotel in Las Vegas in 2008

Serge Denoncourt Director

Pierre Phaneuf Director of Creation

Christiane Barette Assistant to the Director of Creation

Ray Winkler Set Designer

Meredith Caron Costume Designer

Jeanette Farmer Lighting Designer

Eric Serra Composer

Jonathan Deans Sound Designer

Jaque Paquin Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

André Simard Acrobatic Performance Designer

Francis Laporte Projections Designer

Cirque 2009 (working title)

Touring show to be launched in Montreal in April 2009

Deborah Colker Director

Chantal Tremblay Director of Creation

Gringo Cardia Set Designer

Elvis 2009 (working title)

Resident show opening at City Centre Project in Las Vegas in 2009

Vincent Paterson Director

Armand Thomas Director of Creation

Mark Fisher Set Designer

Stefano Canulli Costume Designer

Marc Brickman Lighting Designer

Jonathan Deans Sound Designer

Guy St-Amour Acrobatic Equipment and Rigging Designer

Daniel Cola Acrobatic Performance Designer

Macao II (working title)

Resident show inspired opening in 2010 at a hotel yet to be built in Macao (China)

René Simard Director

Serge Roy Director of Creation

Stéphane Roy Set Designer

Alan Hranitelj Costume Designer

Alain Lortie Lighting Designer

Michel Cusson Composer

Steve Dubuc Sound Designer

Dubai 2010 (working title)

Resident show opening in 2010 at a hotel yet to be built in Dubai

Guy Caron Co-director

Michael Curry Co-director

Fernand Rainville Director of Creation

Cirque du Soleil

From the 20 or so performers that the company featured when it all began in 1984, Quebec-based Cirque du Soleil has become a leading provider of quality entertainment with over 3,800 employees, including 1,000 artists, from 40 different countries.

Cirque du Soleil has thrilled over 70 million spectators in more than 100 cities on four continents. In 2007, the organization will be presenting 15 shows simultaneously around the world. Cirque du Soleil has received such prestigious awards as the Emmy, Drama Desk, Bambi, ACE, Gemini, Félix and Rose d’or de Montreux. Its International Headquarters are in Montreal, Canada.

More information on Cirque du Soleil is available at www.cirquedusoleil.com.

Cirque Du Soleil

My first official Cirque Du Soleil post in plain english (I’ve done several posts in binary code, much to the delight of my fellow geek friends). So here’s the quick run down. Yes, I will be joining Cirque Du Soleil to open their new resident show in Macau, China at the Sands Venetian (Macao I) . I leave in January 2008. Scheduled opening for the show is May 2008.

Many people have trouble enunciating the company name – it’s “SIHRK DOO SOHLAY”, for regular English speaking folk. In French it means Circus of the Sun. There are a lot of knock-off companies that have chosen similiar sounding names – Cirque Du Soleil is the “real” one.

When people find out I’m joining CDS, I know immediately if they have seen a Cirque show before or not. The ones that haven’t seen CDS say something like “Oh, that’s cool”. The ones that HAVE seen a Cirque show before go into an uncontrolled frenzy and froth at the mouth, they go crazy. I’m not joking. I’ll tell you why: Cirque Du Soleil is the absolute coolest thing in the whole entire world. In this great wild world, there is nothing I would rather do more than work on one of their resident shows. To me, it is also the best music in the world – period.

Cirque Du Soleil is absolutely intense and ultimately demanding. It is the one thing I have seen in performance that eliminates all cultural boundaries and expresses takes on the human condition like no other art can. It is the ultimate voice of the artist demanding sense in the midst of insanity.

I have always loved the CDS music, and in the studio often used elements of their production styles in my work. But several years ago I saw Mystere and “O” live in Las Vegas with my mother and sister. After the Mystere show my mother asked me what I thought – I paused for a good while and said “I feel like my life has been changed, but I don’t know how.” I have never said anything like that about any other show. It woke me up. And since then it raised my bar of expectation for what can be.

So how did I get the gig? I auditioned in Las Vegas back when I was touring with Freddy Fender and producing for Road Records. We’ve gone back and forth on several different shows and productions, but nothing was quite the right timing or fit. This show is the perfect timing and the perfect fit.

I’ll tell you how perfect it is for me. My preference is to work for a resident show, meaning it has a theater built for it and stays in one place. My preference is also to work overseas (I spent MANY years playing in Vegas, it was fun but I already did that). The other great element is I get to experience the show in development from the beginning – to me that is the greatest part of it all – to see the Cirque magic unfold.

Theology aside – I think Cirque Du Soleil is the greatest thing this world has to offer. That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it.

CHECK OUT INFO ABOUT CIRQUE DU SOLEIL

CIRQUE DU SOLEIL OVERVIEW

Cirque du Soleil (French for “Circus of the Sun”) is an entertainment empire based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada and founded in Baie-Saint-Paul in 1984 by two former street performers, Guy Laliberté and Daniel Gauthier. The current head choreographer is Debra Brown.

Initially named Les Échassiers they toured Quebec in 1980 as a performing troupe and encountered financial hardship that was relieved by a government grant in 1983 as part of 450th celebrations of Jacques Cartier’s discovery of Canada. The Le Grand Tour du Cirque du Soleil was a success in 1984 and after securing a second year of funding Laliberté hired Guy Caron from the National Circus School to recreate it as a “proper circus.” No ring and no animals helped make Cirque du Soleil the modern circus (“Cirque Nouveau” / New Circus) it is described as today. Each show is a synthesis of circus styles from around the world and has its own central theme and storyline which brings the audience into the performance by having no curtains, continuous live music and performers change the props/sets. After critical and financial successes (Los Angeles Arts Festival) and failures in the late 1980s, Nouvelle Expérience was created with the direction of Franco Dragone that not only made Cirque profitable by 1990 but allowed it to create new shows.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s Cirque expanded rapidly and went from one show with 73 employees in 1984 to currently 3,500 employees from over 40 countries doing fifteen shows touring every continent and have an estimated annual revenue exceeding $600 million USD. The multiple permanent Las Vegas shows alone play to more than 9,000 people a night – 5% of the city’s visitors – adding to the 70+ million people who have experienced Cirque. In 2000, Laliberté bought out Gauthier and with 95% ownership has continued to expand the brand. Several more shows are in development around the world, along with a television deal, women’s clothing line and perhaps in other mediums such as spas, restaurants and nightclubs. Cirque’s creations have been awarded numerous prizes and distinctions, including Bambi, Rose d’Or, three Gemini Awards and four Primetime Emmy Awards In 2004, Interbrand’s poll of brand names with the highest global impact ranked Cirque du Soleil as number 22.

Venetian Macao Resort Hotel – China

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The Macau Venetian will be the home to a new Cirque Du Soleil show in 2008. This new casino is Venetian owner Sheldon Adelson’s crowning achievement. He and wife, Dr. Miriam Adelson and his board of directors and the top executives of the Las Vegas Sands corporation all flew out to Macau, the Chinese-governed enclave some 30-minutes from Hong Kong.

On Tuesday (Aug 28), they were all in black tie and Venetian Carnevale attire with Chinese government officials for the 4 p.m. red carpet Grand Opening of his $2-billion Venetian Macao Resort Hotel – his second property there. His new resort building – the first on the new Cotai Strip there- is the largest in all of Asia and the second largest building in the world.

CEO William Weidner commented: “It took Vegas 75 years to emerge as an international destination with so many recognizable brand hotels. We are replicating that feat in Macau in less than three years.”

Wall Street experts believe his new hotel opening will be the biggest success story yet for Macau, and by year-end the staggering total revenues there will exceed not only all of Vegas, but all of Nevada!

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The Venetian Macau mega casino is set to open its doors on the Cotai Strip on August 28th. The owners, Las Vegas Sands Corporation, announced the official opening date of the $2.2 billion casino last week.

The casino and hotel complex is set to rival the standards expected of the casinos based in Las Vegas. Built over 10.5 million square feet, the complex will be the second largest building in the world; second only to the Boeing Plant in Washington.

The casino will house 3000 suites in the hotel, plus a theatre, arena and space for 300 shops. There will also be over 1000 table games and up to 7000 slots for casino lovers, making the complex suitable for both holidays and day trippers alike.

Cirque Du Soleil – Macau, China

 I’ll be playing in the band for the new Cirque show in Macao, China. Check my blog here for related info about Cirque and the show. Sorry, I will not be releasing details until they are released to the public. Check the Sands Venetian Macau website for showtimes and ticket prices.

INFO ABOUT CIRQUE MACAU 

As the popularity of gambling and other forms of entertainment continue to grow in Macau, Macau shows are not far behind. In the past the entertainment Macau featured was focused for the most part on gambling, but with the development of the Cotai Strip, meant to mirror the Las Vegas Strip, Macau will soon be including Macau shows as part of the entertainment Macau features. Cirque du Soleil, the touring act that currently features shows throughout the world, will soon be coming to Macau on the Cotai Strip. Cirque du Soleil Macau promises to bring all of the glamour of other Cirque du Soleil shows to the Cotai Strip.

Cirque du Soleil Macau promises to have an incredible and ornate show in Macau. A theatre with about 1,800 seats will open in the spring of 2008 to house the Cirque du Soleil Macau. Cirque du Soleil has created an entirely new show for the city of Macau, and residents and planners hope that the new entertainment Macau offers will draw even more tourists. The new Cirque du Soleil theatre will be located conveniently on the Cotai Strip and is being created by the Las Vegas Sands Corporation.

Cirque du Soleil tickets for the Macau shows will be available through the Venetian Macau. In addition to the Cirque du Soleil Theater, the Las Vegas Sands will also be building The Venetian Macau hotel in Macau. As with other Cirque du Soleil tickets, Cirque du Soleil tickets for the show in Macau will be available for purchase online, as well. Purchasing tickets online is a great way to reserve a seat ahead of time, although many times discounted tickets can be purchased the day of the show in person.

Although the Cirque du Soleil Macau show will be an entirely new show, there are some common themes that run through all Cirque du Soleil shows. In general, shows feature a central story line and a selection of music usually composed specifically for the story and Cirque du Soleil show. Many attendees have referred to Cirque du Soleil shows as the modern circus. Although they do not feature animals, shows do feature a number of dancers, clowns, trapeze artists, contortionists and jugglers. The music that accompanies the shows is always performed live, another unique aspect of the Cirque du Soleil show.

When the Cirque du Soleil Macau show does open in its brand new theater, the show looks to be quite spectacular. Concepts for the show are already in the works, and the theatre is being built to the specifications of the show. Best of all, guests of the show can stay at a number of a great resorts and hotels on the Cotai Strip. In addition to the Venetian Macau, the Crown Macau, the Emperor Palace Casino and Resort, the Grand Lisboa will be just a few of the great resorts on the strip. A collection of restaurants and duty-free shopping will also be part of the excitement for tourists.

So, whether you travel to Macau for shopping or entertainment or as part of your trip to nearby Hong Kong, the Cirque du Soleil Macau show is shaping up to be a unique and entertaining part of any Macau vacation.

The Music Technology of Dralion

The Music Technology of Dralion
by Lachlan Westfall
(from the Roland User’s Group magazine)

dralion-cd-cover.jpgThe icon is a Dragon-Lion: a physical representation of East-meets-West. Also present are the elements of air, water, fire and earth. As we approach the new century, Canada’s Cirque du Soleil has chosen these basic yet powerful themes for their latest show, Dralion. It is a show that breaks from tradition to form a new one—a show that should take them spectacularly into the new millennium.

If you’ve seen any of the now-numerous Cirque du Soleil shows, you’re well aware that these modern-day circuses offer an engaging display of color, lights, acrobatics and in no small part, music. It’s the music, in fact, that has always served to set the mood and theme of each Cirque show. For this reason, Roland began working with Cirque when their show Alegria was on its North American tour in 1994, helping Cirque’s musicians design a system of instruments that enables them to perform the intricate music behind each incredible show. In fact, the music, musicians and the gear they use to create the soundscape is usually a story in itself.

There are seven different Cirque du Soleil shows currently playing across the globe, and each production is dramatically different. Dralion—with a cast including a 35-member Chinese acrobatic troop, a menacing wall of spikes and chain-mail, and an enormous metal “sun” that ascends and descends from 30 feet above the stage—is no exception. As you might expect, Roland Users Group is always excited about meeting with Cirque’s newest crop of musicians to talk about the new and unique things they’ve come up with using Roland gear for the latest shows. Much like Cirque’s choreographers and costume designers, these musicians are continually pushing their artistic limits.

As Dralion was in residence under the familiar blue and yellow tent in Toronto—just weeks away from its U.S. debut in Santa Monica, Calif.—Roland Users Group dropped in to see the show and talk with the two men behind the music of Dralion, bandleader/keyboardist Richard Oberacker and keyboardist Stephen Poulin. This was Stephen’s third stint with Cirque du Soleil, but for Richard, Dralion was his first outing—a “Nouvelle Experience,” to borrow from the title of a previous Cirque show. Thankfully, Richard had already learned that performing and conducting a Cirque show is by far the most difficult thing he’d ever fall in love with.

“It’s pretty crazy actually,” says Richard. “It’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done… and I’ve done Broadway and national tours. That was my whole world: professional musical theater. So this was a huge change… huge!”

Richard, in a sense, inherited a system of instruments that had been refined by keyboardist/conductor/musical director Claude Chaput—the man behind the keys for the two previous touring shows, Alegria and Quidam (see Roland Users Group issues 12/2 and 16/1, respectively). Although the composer, musicians, instrumentation and style are all completely new for Dralion, the method of producing the music, which relies heavily on Roland’s XP-80 Music Workstation and its Realtime Phrase Sequencing (RPS), remains the same, having been perfected by Claude over many years. In fact, it has become virtually the only way to perform this intricate music, which is designed to coincide with performers’ exact movements on stage in front of the musicians.

“I can’t imagine a show like Dralion being performed on anything but this Roland gear,” explains Richard. “The way the music for this and other Cirque shows has evolved necessitates the use of equipment with this amount of power. Coming here and learning this system was an enormous challenge. But once I learned it, I realized it was incredibly easy to understand. The RPS feature is absolutely crucial for Dralion.”

Richard continues, “The only reason I know how to do this is because of Claude Chaput. I had never dealt with anything this complex before. Claude designed the system for us here and then together we programmed the RPS sequences… For me, in the beginning there was darkness and God said ‘Let there be Claude!’ [laughs] In the New York pits, where I came from, you’re just given everything, and you don’t need to know much about it. I came to Claude as a blank slate… He knows so much about this type of system that he should work for Roland.”

With Richard’s background in theater, you’d think that performing for Cirque would be a natural. And while there are obvious similarities, there are some distinct differences with respect to the type of gear used and the interaction between the musician and the equipment. Richard explains, “Playing with Cirque is very different. In New York, everything is very compartmentalized. You have career programmers; they don’t play pits, they don’t conduct, they don’t write—they program. They deal with companies like Roland and others and design systems so that we don’t have to think about them. In a Broadway pit, we get the gear and it’s always designed to do what we need it to do in the moment—nothing else. For the player, it’s designed to come as close as possible to playing a single piano. The hardest thing I had to deal with in Broadway pits was changing a Patch.” With Cirque, the easiest thing Richard has to deal with is changing a Patch.

For the uninitiated, suffice to say the most basic tenet of Cirque du Soleil is to break the mold. Their first show outside of Canada was in fact titled “We Reinvent the Circus.” For Cirque, everything is constantly evolving. This not only includes the acts, but the music and sounds as well. “This job demands a constant evolution,” remarks Richard. “You can never just sit back and ‘push paper’ so to speak. And that goes for any department. The Cirque is a constantly evolving thing.” Richard’s first exposure to this concept was when he sat down with Claude to begin work on the music for Dralion.

“Claude was such a great teacher for me,” continues Richard, “because he’d never just do something and move on. He’d make sure that I went through the process. That’s how he taught me the architecture of these keyboards, from top to bottom. At first it was quite daunting; there’s no getting around that the XP-80 is a sophisticated piece. But once you understand its concept and you can visualize it—almost like a building where you map out which elevator takes you to which floor—it becomes a breeze.”
Their first job together was to take composer Violaine Corradi’s dramatic and striking score, incorporate it into the system and determine just how it would work with the variety of acts. “Claude and I would sit in the studio and watch video tape of the acts as they were being developed. He’d look at me and ask ‘Okay, what goes where? They’re flipping here, what part of this music goes with that?’ So I’d say, ‘Well, I think these two bars would go great with that,’ and he’d say ‘Great.’”

Then Claude and Richard would take the sequences they’d programmed and modify them for the final performance. Richard continues, “We’d go into Track Edit on the XP-80’s sequencer, grab the two bars and make an RPS [Realtime Phrase Sequence] of them. If we felt we might need some extra time, we’d repeat it a couple of times. Next, we’d have to map everything across the keyboard, which took some artistry in and of itself. Claude was a genius in all those areas—not only in creating this system, but also in how he taught me to use it. He put me in a position of sink or swim and taught me how to make these instruments work exclusively for what we are doing. I’m very familiar with the Kurzweil® system, but I’ve never seen anything like what these XP-80’s can do.”

The System
As with most Cirque shows, there’s a sizable ensemble of musicians for Dralion. The group consists of Richard and Stephen on keys, Mario Venditti on V-drums, François Guay on violin/cello, Claire Tremblay on winds, Christian Sylvestre on guitar and JoAnn Blondin on percussion. The combination of the powerful Roland keyboard system and the variety of musicians gives this ensemble incredible flexibility for performing Corradi’s intricate music. The score for Dralion, in keeping with its theme, draws from many different styles of music from all over the world. There’s a decidedly Asian slant, but there’s also a purely African number, some very European orchestral pieces and a good amount of percussive world-beat styles. This obviously puts quite a demand on the players—each and every one of them.

Richard’s system (Keys 1) consists of a pair of Roland XP-80’s controlling three Roland S-760 Digital Samplers via MIDI. Stephen’s system (Keys 2) features one XP-80 as the primary keyboard with a secondary keyboard mounted above. In addition to the internal sounds on the XP-80, Stephen triggers a pair of S-760’s as well. Mario, the drummer, plays a full set of V-drums which is set up to trigger his own S-760 as well as the internal sounds. Finally, Christian, the guitarist, plays a pair of Roland VG-8 V-Guitar Systems, giving him quite an arsenal of sounds. All instruments are fed into an automated mixing system where everyone has their own mix of audio and where they can also listen to Richard, the conductor. You see, not only do they all have to play the music, but they have to do it without even seeing the conductor, as the band is split down the middle, sitting on either side of the stage.“I conduct verbally for the most part,” explains Richard. “Everyone has their own headset as well as programmable mixer. I have my own mic on my headset, but they have to grab theirs—that way I don’t have to deal with too much gossip during the show [laughs]. I count everything and call all cues—including informing them of any disasters—verbally.”With a set of V-drums, three XP-80’s, six S-760’s and two VG-8’s, you might wonder how they’d sort everything out—especially when it comes to the keyboards. Richard is quick to explain the detailed process, “Basically the way we sort out who does what is that I say ‘Uh… I have no idea what to do with that… Stephen!’ [laughs] Seriously, that’s exactly how we do it. I’ll do many of the piano-type parts, but if there’s anything improvised or way out there, such as in the Dralion piece [a fun, eclectic romp with a variety of styles], it’s Stephen. Most of the bass lines and anything that’s pretty free we have Stephen play.”While Richard Oberacker’s experience came from spending years in Broadway pits, Canadian Stephen Poulin got the experiences he brings to Cirque du Soleil from, well, Cirque du Soleil. “I went to a university and my first gig when I got out, interestingly enough, was playing for Cirque du Soleil on one of the previous shows,” says Stephen. “This was back in 1987. I was with Cirque for two years, then I went out on my own. In ‘92 I joined back in Las Vegas for a little over a year. And when they called this time for Dralion I said ‘Sure. Let’s go.’ Some people have trouble traveling, but not me. It’s great to have time in the day to do things.”

As the second keyboard player, Stephen is now no less involved in developing the show than Richard. “I’m always trying to improve the sounds as we progress with the show,” says Stephen. “When we first started out, there was very little layering on the sounds. Now I’m constantly adding layers and modifying the sounds. And since I do a lot of the bass sounds, many of the sounds you hear are sounds I’ve developed or modified as we’ve been playing.”

With Stephen’s experience in a variety of Cirque shows, he’s quick to note the new challenges in performing the Dralion score. “In this band, and specifically for this show, we have to be extremely versatile. And that’s why Roland’s expansion cards are so helpful. We have Asia, World and Vocal [wave expansion boards] installed in all three of our XP-80’s.”

While Stephen is free to play the more “out” styles and work on new sounds, Richard is back at Keys 1 controlling all the RPS sequences and conducting the band.

“My top XP-80 is basically the brain of this system,” explains Richard. “It’s MIDI’d to the other gear, but we only use that for program changes. We don’t trigger sounds on one XP-80 from the other; we use it to change the sounds on the lower XP-80, the three S-760’s and my programmable mixer. It also sends the click [via MIDI sync] to the other instruments. Of course, it also holds the RPS sequences.

“The dynamics of the show necessitate that I sequence on one keyboard while I’m changing programs on the other. This way, I can load sequences for the next tune while I’m playing the current tune. Actually, aside from the XP-80, I never even play the keys except to trigger RPS sequences. In fact, the mapping on the upper keyboard is so complex with all the RPS sequences that it would be impossible for me to play on it.

“One thing I’ve noticed about using this type of system is that the way you map your RPS sequences is very important. I set up pictures and patterns that I can remember. With a show such as this, you have to be able to trigger an RPS phrase associated with a specific act at a moment’s notice. Actually, it’s even more specific. We’ll have RPS’s associated with specific parts of an act or even a specific jump. So I end up associating a [certain] jump with an F-sharp, for example.

“As far as content, most of the RPS’s are made up of loops, but we often have whole patterns associated with a specific event—all triggered by a single RPS key. An excellent example of how we use this is in the ‘Double Trapeze’ [a breathtaking performance by two pair of Chinese acrobats]. When the girl is flying near the end, we’re in a musical holding pattern where the band’s playing without a click. Then I’ll count ‘Two, Three, And…’ and I’ll trigger the RPS sequence on the downbeat when the acrobats are into their next move. I have three RPS’s for that part but last night, for example, they needed four to complete that part of the act. With this system, it’s easy to be that flexible—and remember, you’re being flexible with complete pieces of orchestral music. That’s what’s so amazing. Yeah, there’s a lot of keyboards that sequence, but being able to attach a key to it, a click to it and to be able to get in and out so fast, that’s what’s so unique about this Roland [RPS] system, and what makes it work so well for us.”

In fact, the power of this system has influenced the way the music has developed since the show debuted earlier this year. “A lot of what [composer] Violaine Corradi gave us when we received the first demos was very percussive, featuring koto and world beat percussion sounds,” reveals Richard. “It was acoustic in theory and design, but not very orchestral. When we were working on it, we realized that we were not taking full advantage of these glorious string sounds we had in the S-760’s, and we went back to her and suggested going after a very legitimate orchestral string sound. So now we’re in the process of re-writing the initial overture to the show. In doing so, we’re trying to move the show to an even more orchestral place by introducing French horn and other brass sounds.”

The electronic orchestral sounds, when combined with the live string and wind instruments, give the music of Dralion an incredible depth. “We have some beautiful oboe lines in the score,” offers Stephen. “By mixing them in with the sounds from the XP-80 and S-760’s, we can get some very convincing orchestral sounds.”

Of course, this meant beefing up their supply of S-760’s. “There’s a funny story about those,” offers Richard. “Years ago, I had actually bought an S-760 for a project of mine. At the time I was very rushed, so I walked into a music store and said, ‘I want the best sampler you have,’ and they said ‘Well, here,’ and handed me the S-760. I took it home, quickly learned how to load one sound at a time, did the recording and put it in my closet. I mean, I maybe learned 1-percent of what that instrument could do. Then I went off on another national tour and forgot about it. Fast forward to the present, and I’m sitting with Claude and he says, ‘We really need just one more S-760.’ So I phoned my sublet in New York and said, ‘Could you go in the closet, dig around and find a box, and tell me what the number is on it?’”

And as if this arsenal of Roland keyboards and samplers wasn’t enough, there’s also pair of VG-8 V-Guitar Systems at the feet of the guitarist. “What Christian does now is mainly guitar-sounding things,” continues Stephen. “For example, in Dralion we have a walking electric bass line—that’s being done by Christian with the VG-8. However, with a pair of VG-8’s, there’s a lot more he can do as the show develops. Remember, we’re doing this show for three years. Over that time, we’ll certainly incorporate more of what the VG-8 can do.”

The Performance
Of course, the complexity, intricacy and power of this very unique music system is an intriguing story—especially to readers of this magazine. But any instrument, no matter how complex, is ultimately at the control of the musician. Unlike a concert, Cirque’s musicians are not only interacting with each other, but with the performers on stage in front of them. So not only is Richard playing, triggering RPS sequences and conducting the band, but he also has a keen eye on each and every acrobat—whether they’re coming up through the stage in a cloud of smoke or descending on a giant spinning wheel.

And Richard’s not simply checking where they happen to be on stage at any one point. “I’m watching specific muscle movements and breathing,” he notes, laughing. “Claude and I made a conscious decision at the beginning of the process to adjust this music in any way we needed to get accents as close as possible to what the performers were doing—so that when someone passed through a hoop, or when someone left the ground, that was exactly when the music would happen. I’ve seen many Cirque shows in the past and they’ve all had some amazing musical moments. But in past music there have not been nearly as many hits and accents. Dralion is loaded with that stuff.”

Richard goes so far as to want to know precisely what the performer is thinking and planning before the jump or flip takes place. He explains, “When we go to set something up, or we change or add something, I want to know not only what is happening physically on stage, but what the artist is thinking. Of course, this is often through translators [Cirque attracts the top artists from around the globe], and it drives them up a wall because they’re not used to the musicians being this involved.

“For me, it’s a matter of thinking like they think,” Richard continues. “For example, if there’s three [performers standing] on a tier, I have to know how and when they’re going to jump down. I now know that it’s actually the girl in the middle of the tower who does the decision making. I know that she waits until the other girl is on the top of her shoulder. She feels it, counts three and then calls for the dismount. Now that’s a very different approach to timing a cue than simply waiting for someone to jump down. By then, it’s too late.”

Beyond that, the real power of this system and the talent of the musicians becomes apparent when the lights go down, the performers take the stage, the music starts and… something doesn’t go quite right.

“There’s one acrobat in the show who sometimes gives us nightmares,” laughs Richard, eliciting a knowing grin from Stephen. “The timing [of his act] had been one way for about a month and then he decided to change it without talking to us. And what I’m talking about is his breath—the way he breathes before the roll,” explains Richard. “I look at this, anticipate his move and begin the count for the rest of the band… ‘Roll, Two, Three, And…’ and then we begin a two-bar cue. I’m actually watching his breath. At that point, I know I have two bars to get into it—it’s that specific. So then he starts changing it! It took me about two shows to figure out what his new timing was—much longer, more dramatic. We had that for about a month and then on the last show I look up and he’s rolling without any prep at all. So I had to go right into the hit without any count. And the orchestra got it perfectly because they’re watching just like I am.”

Richard continues, “All the musicians in this band have to be just as familiar with the show as I am because if I call a cue, I can’t sit there and explain ‘Well guys, he just missed a jump and we have to go back, etc.’ I have to call a cue or a hold and we need to be on it immediately.”

The Road
Dralion will be Richard and Stephen’s full-time career until at least 2001, by which time they will have played to audiences in 17 cities across Canada and the United States. Both are looking forward to the adventure. “Running off and joining the Cirque is a very exciting thing for us,” confesses Richard, “especially for me coming from commercial theater. You see a show like Cats in New York, in L.A., in Germany—it’s exactly the same show. It’s the same show because it’s ‘product.’ Dralion, and other Cirque shows, are not. You see, there’s only one company of Dralion—we’re unique. I don’t have a replacement. Stephen does not have a replacement. Most of the artists don’t have replacements. If they’re down, they’re down.” Richard continues, “As I said, Dralion is a work-in-progress. We started in Montreal and then Toronto, but the show when it hits Los Angeles will be quite different, and it will continue to grow from there.”

Fortunately, Dralion is just beginning its nearly three-year journey across North America. This means RUG readers should have an excellent opportunity to see it. However, get your tickets sooner rather than later; for years, Cirque shows have recorded attendance levels in the high 90-percentile.

Of course, while Dralion is trekking across America, you should note that there are a number of other Cirque productions going on around the world. Quidam is currently touring Europe and Saltimbanco is playing to audiences across Asia. In addition to the touring shows, Cirque du Soleil has four shows now in permanent residence: Both O and Mystére are in Las Vegas, Nevada; La Nouba can be seen at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando, Florida; and the wonderful Alegria, the first Cirque show this writer had seen, has just recently settled down at the Beau Rivage in Biloxi, Mississippi. Hmmm… you don’t always get an opportunity to see a Cirque show a second time. I think a trip down to the Mississippi Delta may just be in order. Well, that’s after I see Dralion again when is comes to Santa Monica… and then there’s that trip to Vegas.


Lachlan Westfall is editor of Roland Users Group magazine. He lives in Woodland Hills, California with his wife and daughter.