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08 July 2026

GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026

Prismic Productions deploys 108 JDC1 hybrid strobes on a headline run spanning arenas and major festivals across the US and Canada

Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour is one of country music’s most ambitious headline runs of the year, taking the multi-platinum artist across arenas, outdoor amphitheaters, and major festivals throughout North America in support of Famous Back Home, his fourth studio album. With the tour representing a significant step up in production scale and spanning a wide range of venue formats, the lighting rig needed to deliver consistent visual impact in any environment. GLP’s JDC1 hybrid LED strobes helped tie the entire dynamic rig together.

Lighting design, programming, and creative direction were led by Nick Chang, owner and lighting/production designer at Prismic Productions, alongside project manager and creative Chris Diener. Chang was engaged by production manager Zander Scott with just six weeks until production rehearsals. A timeframe of this nature required delivering a full rig design, programming 20 songs, and finalizing all tour creative simultaneously, with the grandMA3 showfile built from the outset to quickly scale into major festival appearances. The gear package was finalized with Christie Lites, and visual content was developed in close collaboration with tour content creator Andy Reuter to ensure lighting, video, and SFX felt cohesive and intentional across every element of the show.

The 108 JDC1s span every major element of the rig. Six fanned, raked finger structures each carry a vertical stick of truss on the downstage side, outfitted with 11 JDC1s alongside additional fixtures. Two tormentor structures flanking the video wall carry eight JDC1s each, the upstage floor package pairs eight JDC1s with additional fixtures, and the riser package integrates 18 JDC1s and more directly into the set pieces.

The JDC1 combines a high-intensity white tube element with a full-face array of 1,320 RGB LEDs divided into 12 independently controllable plate sections. Both elements can run continuously for blinder and wash effects, and 16-bit motorized tilt across 185 degrees allows precise repositioning throughout the performance. “From the beginning, I knew Russell’s music needed a rig that could deliver a punch in any environment, whether that was an arena, a shed, or a festival stage in broad daylight,” says Chang. “The JDC1 checked every box for that. It’s incredibly bright, extremely versatile, and the housing is visually subtle even before you start programming it.”

The fixture’s hybrid design, capable of functioning simultaneously as a strobe, a wash, and a pixel-mapped effects unit, made it well-suited to a touring rig that needed to do a great deal without multiplying system complexity. “One of the things I love most about the JDC1 is that it doesn’t feel like a one-trick fixture,” says Chang. “That hybrid nature made it a huge asset on this show because we needed the rig to do a lot without overcomplicating the system.”

Chang leaned heavily on the JDC1’s pixel-mapping capabilities throughout the show, using 12-section control across all 108 fixtures to shift between subtle sparkle effects and aggressive rig-spanning directional chases from song to song. That flexibility proved especially valuable in a production built around a drummer with an energetic, gospel-inspired playing style. “The JDCs allow me to separate different musical elements within a single fixture. I used the strobe for snare hits, the color plate for kick accents, and the pixel effects to help drive transitions and song progression,” says Chang. “This allowed the rig to feel massive and detailed at the same time, which was exactly what this show needed.”

The design also needed to reflect both ends of Dickerson’s catalog, from high-energy anthems to more personal, mid-tempo material. Therefore, Chang was deliberate about ensuring the rig could span that range without losing intent. “We didn’t want the show to feel like nonstop flash just for the sake of it,” he says. “Every lighting cue, content moment, and visual accent was designed to support the emotion and energy of the music in a meaningful way.”

The production has been well received by Dickerson, his management, and the wider team, with the RussellMania run representing a significant push forward in production ambition and scale for the artist. Across the tour, the JDC1’s consistent performance in every venue format has been central to the show’s impact.

“I’ve used GLP fixtures across a wide variety of projects and show sizes over the years, and they’ve consistently delivered both visual impact and road-worthy reliability,” says Chang. “The JDC1 is a very proven fixture at this point. It did exactly what we needed it to do, night after night.”

The RussellMania Tour 2026 continues across the US and Canada through October.

Category
Concert & Touring
Lighting design
Nick Chang (Prismic Productions) | Chris Diener
Products involved
Pictures
GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026
Pictures: Thomas Heney
GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026
Pictures: Thomas Heney
GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026
Pictures: Thomas Heney
GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026
Pictures: Thomas Heney
GLP JDC1 brings arena-scale punch to Russell Dickerson’s RussellMania Tour 2026
Pictures: Thomas Heney
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