[ATTACH=CONFIG]194819.vB5-legacyid=2161[/ATTACH]Presented in the Italian cave Grotte di Castellana, Hell in the Cave depicts anguished residents of the tragic underworld in Dante’s epic poem Inferno. Rather than using a single stage, the daring creators of the show take the unorthodox approach to bring the audience through scenes in separate grottoes. While visitors enjoy an immersive dramatic experience, the equipment supporting the presentation must endure a hostile environment through a long subterranean performance season. The sound designer chose a reinforcement system of 14 Meyer Sound self-powered loudspeakers.
“The biggest challenge inside the cave is the humidity, which is always close to 90%, combined with rapid temperature changes that result from the large opening in the roof,” explains Giuseppe Saponari, sound designer for the production and president of Officina Musicale. “Yet despite such harsh atmospheric conditions, the Meyer Sound loudspeakers are performing perfectly.”
The actors’ recitations and dancers’ movements are supported by a recorded musical soundtrack, created by Giuseppe Mariani and Paolo Iannattone and heard through Meyer Sound loudspeakers. The playback system is broken into six zones. As visitors first descend through a tunnel, they pass through a talking doorway where three MM-4XP self-powered miniature loudspeakers announce entry into the “woeful city.” Progressing from one scene to the next, the audience hears five more discrete audio programs: three in mono, one in stereo, and the final scene in discrete LCR. Together, the five zones employ 11 UPM-1P loudspeakers.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]194822.vB5-legacyid=2164[/ATTACH]“We were surprised how easy it was to translate our ideas from the studio into the field,” says Saponari. “We worked on problematic frequencies typical of the cave, but we quickly achieved ideal intelligibility. Thanks to Meyer Sound speakers, we soon had big smiles on our faces.”
The loudspeaker system was designed by Giovanni Bugari of Grisby Music, Meyer Sound’s Italian distributor, and supplied by Casa Musicale Luisi. The front end of the system, devised by Saponari, comprises a computer workstation (Apple MacBook running Logic 9.0 with a MOTU 828mkII interface) coupled to an Allen & Heath iLive digital mixing system.
“We’ve completed our first month of performances and all the comments have been positive, both for the audio quality and the spatialization effects of our sound design,” relates Saponari. “We are long-time users of Meyer Sound, and we appreciate the quality, reliability, and adaptability of the products. In this case, they help us to deliver a complete Dante experience, and that was the main goal of the production.”
Hell in the Cave’s unique staging of Inferno—the first canto of Dante’s Divine Comedy—is directed by Enrico Romita and choreographed by Mimmo Iannone. Featuring a cast of 50 actors and dancers, the production is a collaboration of Promo Apulia, Castellana Council, and the Grotte di Castellana, with support from the Puglia (Apulia) Region, Province of Bari, and Trulli Coast. More than 100 performances are anticipated seasonally through 2011 and 2012.
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Family owned and operated since 1979, Meyer Sound Laboratories, Inc. designs and manufactures high-quality, self-powered sound reinforcement loudspeakers, digital audio systems, active acoustic systems, and sound measurement tools for the professional audio industry. Founded by John and Helen Meyer, the company has grown to become a leading worldwide supplier of systems for theatres, arenas, stadiums, theme parks, convention centers, houses of worship, and touring concert sound rental operations. Meyer Sound’s main office and manufacturing facility are located in Berkeley, California, with field offices and authorized distributors located throughout the USA and around the world. Meyer Sound is a registered trademark of Meyer Sound Laboratories, Inc. All rights reserved.
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