Sequence Editor
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The image
shown below is the editor software. This
software program layout is
similar to a spreadsheet. Each row
is a different channel of lights (only about 50 channels are in the view below). Each
vertical column defines one beat of music. Differing
patterns and colors determine when lights turn on or off for each channel.
Some patterns ramp the lights on or ramp off while other
patterns may blink or twinkle. The process of designing and sequencing a song
is slow and tedious. Timing needs to be perfect because the
human eye and ear can detect a light action that is out of beat with the
music by only a few thousands of a second.
I first plan the design
by mentally thinking about what I want the audience to see, the
lighting pace, and patterns. I start by
listening to a song 3 or 4 times as I visualize how I want
the lights to respond to the music, then I start with the layout and
programming phase. Often I assign specific lights to a particular
instrument. On average, it takes about 5 hours of development time per
minute of a song to design and program all 144 channels of lights.
Therefore, a typical 4 minute song takes at least 20 hours to "sequence."
However, once it is done, I can use that song every year.
When sequencing is done for all songs, I use "show
editor" software (not shown) to determine which order the songs are played, how often
they play, and to announce narrations between shows. Once set
up, there is nothing else to do. The lights and music
automatically start each night and play in a predefined program sequence
at the times I programmed. The software runs on a computer that is dedicated to controlling and recording security cameras
and sensors around the
home, but the computer has extra capacity to run this software at the same time.