For Immediate Release
2 June 2005
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Kenny Chesney Gets Stadium-Sized
CMA/ACM Entertainer of the Year Gets Extra Jumbo for 3 Football Stadium Shows
Nashville, TN: Kenny Chesney has never been one to not come all the
way to the line -- and for his stadium-sized Somewhere In The Sun concerts, the
scope of everything the reigning Country Music Association and Academy of
Country Music Entertainer of the Year has expanded accordingly. With his first
mondo-show this Saturday at Washington, DC's FedEx Field already under
construction, the numbers are staggering.
"Hey, if you're gonna go in there and play," says the Luttrell,
Tennessean non-chalantly, "you wanna play."
The 209 feet wide stage -- for the show which features current ACM
Male and Female Vocalist Keith Urban and Gretchen Wilson, Grammy-nominated Texan
Pat Green and pop/soul/hopper Uncle Kracker -- weighs in at an impressive
345,000 pounds, with over 250 tons of gear being moved onto the field.
Currently, 102 people are working to construct the stage and support elements,
and that number will swell to over 200 when the production aspects need to be
laid in.
"It's just like we've got our own little factory in Landover,
Maryland," says Chesney. "But instead of making cars or something, they're
making this stage, the sound towers, so we can do this show for the D.C. area.
It's almost like we're raising a skyscraper -- I mean, they're using a 60 ton
crane to lay in the stage towers and the PA structure is 35 feet tall! You don't
think in terms like that when you're thinking about a concert, but THAT'S how
big it is -- and it kind of blows my mind."
No doubt Chesney will be on track to blow minds with his
high-energy stage show and blend of progressive/traditional country music. With
280,000 watts of sound running through 125 individually remote controlled
amplifiers, it will not only be loud enough for people to hear, but clear enough
to understand as well. And with an additional 28 7k synchro lights ringing the
stadium's upper balcony -- each 30 amps with 3 phases each for an output of 2500
amps of power -- it's gonna be bright as Broadway down on the field.
"If you're gonna do it, do it," shrugs the singer/songwriter with a
laugh. "We've customized the stage for each stadium, so the spread runs from as
far as it can one way to as far as it can to the other, with the biggest video
wings we can find and a shell that reaches up 80 feet! We started working on
this design almost as soon as we wrapped Neyland Stadium (the University of
Tennessee's football stadium, where Chesney's 2003 Homecoming Show marked the
1st concert since Michael Jackson in 1984), because I figured if I ever got to
this point, I'd want whomever came to see us to see something as strong as what
we did in my hometown."
It more than takes a village -- or hometown. Over 50 trucks of
equipment -- the field covering and chairs alone took up 12 trucks and the steel
to construct the stage another 10 -- there are 3 additional generators up and
running on the ground. To that end, the 10-man culinary staff that accompanies
the tour have been plenty busy feeding the various crews -- cooking upwards of
2300 meals alone over the 4 days of construction and show day.
"It's gonna be big. It's gonna be fun. And, you know I can't wait,"
says the man whose frat rave remembrance "Keg In The Closet" is flying. "I feel
like Ferris Bueller on steroids, and that's a pretty great place to come at a
show like this from. After all, as much as we have normal-sized, this just takes
it that much further."
In addition to the DC show, Saturday July 23 it's Foxboro,
Massachusetts' Gillette Stadium, where the current Super Bowl Champion New
England Patriots kick butt. Then Somewhere in the Sun Stadium-Sized winds up in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on July 30 at Heinz Field, where the Steelers get it
done.
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