VRacer-111
1000+ Head-Fier
Okay, ended up going to both the Dallas and the Houston concerts and confirmed some things.
1. Get a viewing position within the screen's width, NO MATTER HOW FAR BACK. I had bought a reserved seating ticket for Houston that was up and off to the left hand side, but upon arriving the attendant in that section told me they were relocating me to general admission...I was like "YESSSS!" on the inside and "okay, that's fine" on the exterior....was able to get a good spot right of center and about midway back. I brought binoculars just in case, but didn't need them. The Vocaloid's look much more 3D with better presentation than they did when I was way off to the left at the Dallas show.
2. No matter the venue, or the size of the crowd it will be quite an event. Even though the Houston event had noticeably less attendies than the Dallas concert (mostly because Houston was added on after most everyone bought their tickets for Dallas...) it still felt as big an event as the Dallas show, and in a few instances more intense. I would go to either venue again, though The Bomb Factory in Dallas is better setup and staffed than the NRG Arena in Houston. Both rocked...
3. Venues really need to have additional displays showing the vocaloid screen from a straight on dead center camera shot....because in both concerts there were a whole lot of people who couldn't see the stage, and with a Vocaloid concert the projection screen is the whole point of the concert in the first place. Just need two displays up high and to either side of the stage...then everyone can have a chance to see. Because really, the only view that is truely optimal is that within the width of the sceen, so like maybe 10% or so of the audience is all that gets to truely experience the visuals properly. Once you get outside of the screen the Vocaloid image starts looking really FLAT...
4. Good in-ear headphones are excellent for concerts. The Shure SE215 IEM's I just recent got are the best thing ever for hearing protection and while waiting you can listen to music to get ready for the show.... For the concert you get plenty of detail of sound with them since it's so loud, no detriment to the concert experience plus you keep your hearing safe. Get some nice IEM's... you can use them to listen to music and as hearing protection, 2 for 1 deal.
5. I hope there is an eventual move from projection on a screen to real 3D holographic projection at some point...if for no other reason than to keep the image from blurring so much when the bass kicks in... you feel and see the bass very intimately!
So yeah, I had an equally great time at both events - great memory that I won't ever forget and look forward to experiencing again if there is another chance to do so.
1. Get a viewing position within the screen's width, NO MATTER HOW FAR BACK. I had bought a reserved seating ticket for Houston that was up and off to the left hand side, but upon arriving the attendant in that section told me they were relocating me to general admission...I was like "YESSSS!" on the inside and "okay, that's fine" on the exterior....was able to get a good spot right of center and about midway back. I brought binoculars just in case, but didn't need them. The Vocaloid's look much more 3D with better presentation than they did when I was way off to the left at the Dallas show.
2. No matter the venue, or the size of the crowd it will be quite an event. Even though the Houston event had noticeably less attendies than the Dallas concert (mostly because Houston was added on after most everyone bought their tickets for Dallas...) it still felt as big an event as the Dallas show, and in a few instances more intense. I would go to either venue again, though The Bomb Factory in Dallas is better setup and staffed than the NRG Arena in Houston. Both rocked...
3. Venues really need to have additional displays showing the vocaloid screen from a straight on dead center camera shot....because in both concerts there were a whole lot of people who couldn't see the stage, and with a Vocaloid concert the projection screen is the whole point of the concert in the first place. Just need two displays up high and to either side of the stage...then everyone can have a chance to see. Because really, the only view that is truely optimal is that within the width of the sceen, so like maybe 10% or so of the audience is all that gets to truely experience the visuals properly. Once you get outside of the screen the Vocaloid image starts looking really FLAT...
4. Good in-ear headphones are excellent for concerts. The Shure SE215 IEM's I just recent got are the best thing ever for hearing protection and while waiting you can listen to music to get ready for the show.... For the concert you get plenty of detail of sound with them since it's so loud, no detriment to the concert experience plus you keep your hearing safe. Get some nice IEM's... you can use them to listen to music and as hearing protection, 2 for 1 deal.
5. I hope there is an eventual move from projection on a screen to real 3D holographic projection at some point...if for no other reason than to keep the image from blurring so much when the bass kicks in... you feel and see the bass very intimately!
So yeah, I had an equally great time at both events - great memory that I won't ever forget and look forward to experiencing again if there is another chance to do so.