The tour’s camera package includes seven Panasonic camera systems, a Towercam system and two autopod systems ‘to create more dynamic shots’, plus ‘tracks and dollies at the front’. For playback and processing, after ‘a lot of testing’, according to Strange, they “opted to use Disguise GX 3s, due to their familiarity with the company. We used Brompton SX40s with Tessera XD data distribution units,” he concludes.
What might appear a simple set-up to audiences is actually fairly complex, “from the number of pixels through to the amount of power required,” states Strange. Certain venues, such as Heaton Park in Manchester, demand over 1000 sq m of LED screens. The tour, which kicked off in Cardiff, continues through the UK and Europe to North and South America, Australia and Asia, finally wrapping up in São Paulo, Brazil.
“There’s certainly a lot of pressure and expectations,” Strange admits. “We’re under the microscope from media and fans. Initial reactions are that the brief has been met – the show is certainly biblical,” as described by critics from Manchester Evening News and Rolling Stone UK. Thanks in large part to Universal Pixels, Strange contends, “there is no doubt that these shows will be talked about for years to come.”
Universal Pixels isn’t just lighting up the stadium for Oasis – its expertise also extends to the stage, with recent work in theatre productions.
Visit universalpixels.com
This feature was first published in the Jul/Aug 2025 issue of LIVE.