Concert Lighting

Concert lighting forms the visual backbone of every live performance.Read More
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  1. BeamZ Pro IGNITE400 Professional Moving Head Light - 400W 3-in-1
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    £2,299.99
    BeamZ Pro IGNITE400 Professional Moving Head Light - 400W 3-in-1
    • 3-in-1 effect: combines beam, spot, and wash functions
    • 400W white LED produces intense output and vibrant colours
    • 8-colour and CMY wheels for diverse lighting mixes
    • Dual gobo wheels, rotatable prisms, and frost filter
    • 25 DMX channels, manual, sound-activated, and master/slave modes
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    £2,299.99

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  2. 2x BeamZ Pro IGNITE400 LED BSW Professional Moving Head Lights & Case
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    £4,900.00
    2x BeamZ Pro IGNITE400 LED BSW Professional Moving Head Lights & Case
    • 3-in-1 moving head with beam, spot, and wash functions
    • 400W LED delivers high-intensity, consistent output
    • Full DMX control with 25 channels for advanced programming
    • CTO and CMY colour systems for precise colour mixing
    • Flight case with wheels for secure, easy transport
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    £4,900.00

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  3. BeamZ Pro MHL760 Bee Eye Moving Head Wash Light with Zoom
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    £1,199.99
    BeamZ Pro MHL760 Bee Eye Moving Head Wash Light with Zoom
    • 7x 60W RGBW LEDs with precise individual LED control
    • Motorised zoom offering a 6 to 60-degree beam angle range
    • Distinctive rotating Bee Eye lens and honeycomb design
    • 39 RGB SMD LEDs forming a vivid aura backlight effect
    • Flexible DMX, standalone, and sound-activated operation
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    £1,199.99

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  4. 2x BeamZ Pro MHL760 Bee Eye Moving Head Wash Light & Flightcase
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    £2,599.99
    2x BeamZ Pro MHL760 Bee Eye Moving Head Wash Light & Flightcase
    • Pair of 7x 60W RGBW LED heads with independent pixel control
    • Motorised zoom offers variable beam angle from 6 to 60 degrees
    • Rotating Bee Eye lenses and aura ring create dynamic effects
    • Supports 26, 38, or 66-channel DMX for versatile programming
    • Includes wheeled flightcase with custom foam protection
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    £2,599.99

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  5. 2x BeamZ Pro IGNITE300A Professional Moving Head Lights in Flightcase
    In stock
    £3,589.99
    2x BeamZ Pro IGNITE300A Professional Moving Head Lights in Flightcase
    • 3-in-1 spot, beam, and wash lighting for versatile event coverage
    • Adjustable motorised zoom for fast swaps between wide and narrow beams
    • Dual gobo wheels and animation for complex customisable visual patterns
    • Rotating 3 and 8-facet prisms overlap for stunning multi-beam effects
    • DMX, RDM, master/slave, and stand-alone modes support any control setup
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    £3,589.99

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  6. BeamZ Pro IGNITE300A Professional Moving Head Light with Animation
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    £1,660.00
    BeamZ Pro IGNITE300A Professional Moving Head Light with Animation
    • 3-in-1 effect: combines spot, wash, and beam in one fixture
    • Animation wheel delivers striking moving patterns for vivid displays
    • Static and rotating gobos with diverse patterns and colour mixing
    • Adjustable 3 and 8-facet prisms produce complex multi-beam effects
    • Operates via DMX, sound, master/slave, or standalone controls
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    £1,660.00

    Free delivery and weekend delivery available

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  7. BeamZ Professional Tiger 17R Moving Head Lights with Flightcase
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    £2,999.99
    BeamZ Professional Tiger 17R Moving Head Lights with Flightcase
    • 350W discharge bulbs for intense, vibrant stage lighting impact
    • 13 colour wheel and dual prisms create striking lighting patterns
    • Motorised focus, linear dimming, and frost filter for full creative control
    • Works standalone or with DMX, supports 16/20 channel operation
    • Wheeled flightcase included for safe, simple transport and storage
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    £2,999.99

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  8. BeamZ SB400IP Stage Blinder LED Light
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    £679.99
    BeamZ SB400IP Stage Blinder LED Light
    • Stage blinder with 4x 100W COB LEDs for intense warm white illumination
    • Works as both a stage blinder and high-speed strobe effect
    • DMX control with 4 or 8 channels for precise light shows
    • Multiple operating modes: stand-alone, sound activation, master/slave
    • Weather-resistant IP65 design for outdoor and indoor events
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    £679.99

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  9. BeamZ Professional MHL1240 Moving Head Lights with Flight Case
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    £3,580.00
    BeamZ Professional MHL1240 Moving Head Lights with Flight Case
    • 12x 40W 4-in-1 RGBW LED for vibrant, consistent colour washes
    • Extensive 540-degree pan and 220-degree tilt range
    • Fully motorised zoom with field angle adjustment
    • Rugged flight case ensures secure transport and simple storage
    • Pixel control, DMX up to 58 channels, and silent pan/tilt motors
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    £3,580.00

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Concert Lighting

Concert lighting forms the visual backbone of every live performance. It aids rhythm, highlights performers, and connects audience members from front row to back. While artistic goals vary, the essential considerations remain constant power, control, colour, coverage, and safety. Whether on a small club stage or at a national stadium, designers apply these principles to create cohesive, impactful experiences.

Stadium Lighting Design Factors

When planning stadium lighting, scale and environmental conditions dominate the discussion. Stadiums demand fixtures that can throw light over vast distances, sometimes exceeding 80 metres, while maintaining focus and clarity. Lighting choices favour sealed, weatherproof housings with tight optics, powerful LEDs, and robust mounting solutions. Floods may bathe terraces and perimeters, while beam units cut cleanly through haze and stand out even against massive LED screens. Truss designs are calculated to distribute weight efficiently, and control systems often incorporate redundant paths to safeguard against failure.

Arena Lights for Indoor Concerts

In contrast, arena lights serve the acoustically sealed, medium-scale venue. Arenas are large enough to require powerful coverage but small enough to allow nuanced effects. Lower ceiling grids enable immersive design without towering rigs. Lighting within an arena is typically zoned - front-of-house spots follow key performers, while wash lights provide overall coverage, and accent fixtures punctuate visual moments. Noise and reverb within enclosed arenas also necessitate quiet cooling fans and smooth motor control to preserve the audio mix.

Concert Lights by Function

Seasoned designers classify concert lights by their function rather than brand or trend. Key lights create the general stage wash and ensure performers are visible. Beam units offer narrow, intense bursts of light that track beats or cues. Profile units incorporate shutters and gobos for texture and branding. Strobes or audience-facing effects add dramatic energy peaks. Finally, linear pixel strips allow for animated chases across set pieces or risers. Some rigs opt for all-in-one fixtures to save space and speed up load-in, especially during tour stops with tight turnover.

Concert Lighting Control Systems

Modern concert lighting systems depend on sophisticated control networks. Desks handle thousands of parameters using protocols like DMX, Art-Net, or sACN. Cue sequences are pre-programmed and triggered via timecode. MIDI signals may activate scene changes in sync with music. Operators also retain manual override options for improvisation during solos or crowd interaction. Redundancy is vital - dual consoles, duplicate servers, and mirrored control lines ensure the show continues even if one system fails.

Rigging and Power Planning for Tours

A robust plan supports even the most creative rig. Every fixture, cable, and scenic element adds weight. Engineers often calculate total rig loads well in advance, including allowances for cable runs, clamps, and other mounting hardware. In venues with limited rigging points, spreader trusses distribute the weight. Touring crews must confirm venue electrical phases, separate signal from mains runs to avoid interference, and label looms clearly to minimise errors and save time during setup.

Creative Trends in Concert Lighting

Several design trends have emerged in concert lighting in recent years. Pixel mapping blends lighting and video by controlling emitters as if they were screens. Designers are also embracing negative space - intentionally darkening parts of the stage to heighten contrast and shift attention. Compact touring fixtures that fold or nest improve efficiency for air-freight travel. Sustainability now plays a larger role, with a push toward energy-efficient fixtures and recyclable construction.

Specifying Concert Lighting for Tours

Choosing the right package begins with defining coverage zones using stage layouts. Designers cross-reference throw distances and beam angles to select the correct optics. Power loads are calculated to prevent brown-outs during peak moments. Roof structure limits are factored in to avoid overloading. Even rider flexibility is considered - technical sheets list preferred fixtures, but colour temperature, dimming curves, and gobo specs help ensure that substitutions remain consistent.

Maintaining Touring and Permanent Systems

Concert gear sees hard use. Touring crews routinely clean fans, check motor alignment, and carry spares for PCBs and LED modules. These preventative measures minimise delays and keep performances on track. Permanent stadium installations follow a different rhythm, with quarterly inspections, software updates, and calibrated brightness checks. Some venues use remote monitoring to alert technicians about fixture issues before they impact a show.

Frequently Asked Questions

What sets concert lighting apart from general venue lighting?

Concert lighting responds to the music in real time, using timed effects, dynamic colour shifts, and high-output fixtures to match the energy and pacing of a live performance. Venue lighting typically focuses on static illumination.

How bright should stadium lighting be?

Designers aim for 700 to 1,500 lux on stage surfaces, depending on whether the show is filmed. This ensures visibility without overwhelming the audience with glare.

Can arena lights handle concerts and sports?

Yes. Versatile fixtures with adjustable colour temperature and beam spread allow the same lights to serve concerts, conferences, and sporting events.

Are LEDs now standard in concert lighting?

Absolutely. Most modern shows rely on LED fixtures due to their low power draw, colour flexibility, and long service life. However, some designers still use discharge or tungsten fixtures for specific looks.

How long does concert programming take?

For large arena shows, programming may take five to ten days in a previsualisation suite, followed by two to three rehearsals on site.

What safety checks happen before a show?

Crews verify focus and address, check safety bonds, confirm signal flow, and run through cue sequences including failover scenarios and emergency lighting.