Taking place in June 2022 in London, UK, the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations involved various events, with the Jubilee Concert as the centrepiece. Consoles from DiGiCo played an important role in an audio design by Ben Milton Associates, that managed three discrete stages and complex time alignment.
The concert was staged by BBC Studios for a live audience of 22,000, and broadcast to more than 13 million viewers.
Audio rental company Britannia Row Productions was appointed to realise this huge logistical challenge, which took place in the environs of Buckingham Palace, with the audio system for the show spread across three independent stages in front of the palace. The first stage, designed as a catwalk in the round, was constructed around the Queen Victoria Monument (QVM), with two further stages erected in front of the palace railings and linked to the circular stage by a walkway, one hosting orchestral-based content and the other rock and pop acts.
“Everything was time aligned between each stage, including synchronising when artists were performing from two stages simultaneously,” explained sound designer Ben Milton. “For instance, if there was a performer on the QVM stage, complemented with the orchestra on the second stage, we wanted to make sure the sound image would be coming from the right place, and timed to work together. Balancing the sound image and time synchronisation was our highest priority.”
DiGiCo consoles were installed throughout FOH and monitor positions, managing the performances of artists such as Queen and Adam Lambert, Ed Sheeran, George Ezra, Duran Duran, Craig David and Andrea Bocelli, with three broadcast trucks, allocated one per stage.
The audio system’s full console list included five Quantum 7 and three Quantum 338 consoles from DiGiCo’s range, alongside an SD5, SD10 and the compact SD11i from the SD range, with 19 supporting SD Racks, five mini racks and several DMI/Orange boxes. Quantum 7 consoles were installed either end of the Orchestral stage, managed by Simon Fox at FOH and Billy Birks on monitors. On the north, Rock and Pop stage, a Q7 was selected for FOH and a Q7 for monitors, manned by Stefano Serpagli and Phil Down, respectively. Finally, on the QVM stage, an SD10 was chosen for FOH, managed by Chris Vass, and a Quantum 338 at monitors for James Neale.
All the FOH boards were fed into a separate Quantum 7 console which acted as a matrix mixer, and from there into a TiMax immersive spatial system for distribution via an L-Acoustics PA system. Each FOH console could send feeds to its own dedicated OB truck for broadcast duties, one of which was installed with an SD7, and mixes could be returned to stage from FOH for monitor mixes. The team utilised gain sharing on the orchestra stage as it had a huge channel count of 192. All monitor consoles across the stages had access to feeds from every other stage, so they could dovetail from the stage before them to the stage after, selecting any inputs and content they needed for their mix.
“This design meant I could navigate all the busses through the master Q7 console, so the engineers had the choice of which buss to use, so it would all be time synchronised,” said Milton. “Also, if there were any last-minute staging changes, we could just reallocate the buss. The matrix Q7, additionally took all guest speaker mic feeds and VT packages which could be placed on top of whatever else was coming through, and the monitor access was managed by bussing everything through the Q7. It played out like a choreographed performance – bussing all FOH feeds in that manner, with all three stages mixed independently for the broadcast trucks, and then the celebrity guest speakers could be mixed in around it.”
“It was DiGiCo’s buss structure that made the timeline synchronisation possible,” said Josh Lloyd, head of engineering – event support at Brit Row. “Being able to organise settings in a particular way was a huge advantage, whether the consoles were used for delay for one part of the show, or as the main system on another part as the action rolled from stage to stage. DiGiCo also offered great flexibility and built-in redundancy, as not only was the Q7 master console running Dante, we also had several Orange boxes offering a wealth of network options. For things that were show-critical, being able to support multiple formats was a huge advantage, as we needed to connect MADI, Dante, AES and analogue devices.”
Following a detailed pre-production period, the on-site set-up was swift due to DiGiCo’s offline planning and design tools. The event schedule stretched over four days, with Trouping of the Colour and Lighting of the Beacons on Thursday, a full dress rehearsal on Friday, pre-show on the Jubilee Concert on Saturday, and the Pageant show and Mall procession on Sunday.
The cable runs for the events were long – some up to 300m to the stage – but as DiGiCo operates on Optocore, the team were able to connect all the consoles to the Optocore Festival box and run them back through two fibre optic cables. Some of the DiGiCos were located at a distance from their stage boxes. For example, the Queen monitor consoles and the QVM monitor console were a good 100-150m from their stage boxes.
“The Optocore Festival box and its easy plug ‘n’ play integration was definitely a highlight for us,” said Tom Brown, Brit Row account manager. “DiGiCo’s ability to drop things on to the Optocore network to have I/O locally and also remotely really helped. The ability to move things around the loop was very helpful. For instance, we could have analogue outboard next to the monitor console, yet the in-ear devices local to the performer.”
“DiGiCo is always my first choice, so I always knew DiGiCo was part and parcel of the event from the outset,” said Milton. “All the engineers were comfortable with it and all the acts used the concert boards – it’s a rider pleaser. I didn’t have to bring in any other consoles, apart from for Queen, who wanted to use their own touring consoles, which happened to be two Quantum 338s – one for Adam and one for everyone else – plus an SD5 at FOH. It was great to work with Brit Row and have them on board for the technical deployments.”
“It was a huge infrastructure to manage but the DiGiCo consoles, particularly the Quantums, not only coped, they excelled,” said Lloyd. “The technology is just so flexible and I don’t think there is another product out there that could have handled this project. The weather was typically British – either boiling hot or chucking it down – which presented the usual production challenges, but from a worldwide stage point of view, we showed the best of what we can do for what was undoubtedly the biggest event of the year.”