That was a
good introduction display from the Italian entrant, performed during a comfortable, windy, summer night.
The 25-segment soundtrack was very interesting, with well-known musics presented as representative of various parts of the rock’n’roll history, each part being announced with short narratives which didn’t interrupt the flow of the display. I can only imagine how much work has been required to design the soundtrack. It seemed obvious to me that each segment had been carefully extracted from the original songs, so all these segments were inserted into a show which last close to 33 minutes. The mix between each song added to the soundtrack fluidity. The synchronization with the musics was also very good throughout the display.
Many pyrotechnic pieces were sophisticated, with many multi-break shells of various effects, as well as double-change colours shells of stars. A.P.E. Parente was also the first team, this year, to launch nautical effects (fountains, flares, and shells) on the Dolphin Lake. However, the richness of colours appeared somewhat limited to me. In addition to the green, white and red (from the Italian flag, which itself appeared from twinkling bombettes at the 20th minute of the show), white and blue were other predominating colours. A wider range of colours would have bring more diversity in this show.
I would point out the lack of diversity as the main weakness of the display. A wider range of colours and pyrotechnic effects would have been welcomed, as well as more diversity in firing patterns. We saw several chase sequences, repetitive shooting angles, etc. The design of many
tableaux was not as complex as we see in other extravaganzas, featuring pyrotechnic effects at one level at a time instead of more sophisticated segments mixing multi-level activities, or designs which make the most of the firing area depth. This comment should not overshadow some more complex and intense segments, for example the one on the musics of Led Zeppelin’s
Stairway to Heaven, one of the best parts of the show, with an accumulation of crackling and kamuros above low-level effects. Unfortunately, several moments of darkness occurred during the show, including one for 18 seconds on the
Piece of My Heart song.
A.P.E. Parente did a good show, but for the reasons outlined above, I don’t think they are going to appear on the podium this year. To bring some perspective, I would add that many pyromusical designers have been inspired by the history of rock musics. While I was preparing to go to La Ronde, I decided to wear my
Rock loves t-shirt of Pyrotecnico, the American entrant in 2008. In 2013, the unforgettable
Juke Box of Pyroemotions & Pyrodigit from Italy was also based on that theme. Both were awarded the Gold Jupiter. But there design was much more sophisticated than what we saw last night. (For memories, a short video montage of Pyrotecnico's show I did in 2008, for PyroPlanet.com, a domain name owned by BC-based Bill Raynault at the time, is still available
here.)
That was the second night without Michel Lacroix. This week, the organizers have appropriately stopped his pre-recorded post-show message, so the audience had time to applause the Italian team once he announced the end of the show, before his closing remarks.