Sound & Lighting Newington

Sound & Lighting

Stage Sound

Performers knows the importance of an excellent sound engineer. No matter what the genre of the music, if the sound engineer doesn’t build a mix that sounds good, the performance will be tarnished. A sound engineer who knows how to create a mix that sounds great and can build and deploy a high-quality sound system is highly coveted throughout the music industry. We can get you up and running learning how to make a live performance sound great using a PA system.

Stage Lighting

We teach essential concepts and practices of effective stage lighting and related technologies, including the science of light, color theory, electrical concepts, digital control signals, conventional and intelligent lighting, LED technology, console programing and lighting design as well as rigging and staging principals. We will show you how to get started using DMX lighting control systems.

Music Lessons Newington

Newington is a town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States. Located 8 miles (13 km) south of downtown Hartford, Newington is an older, mainly residential suburb located in Greater Hartford. As of the 2010 census, the population was 30,562.[2] The Connecticut Department of Transportation has its headquarters in Newington.

Newington is home to Mill Pond Falls, near the center of town.[3] It is celebrated each fall during the Waterfall Festival.

Newington has a history of nearly 375 years. While not established officially as a separate town until 1871, settlers from nearby Wethersfield took up residence on the western frontier of their riverside town in 1636. “West Society,” as some called it, was an area rich in timber that was used for pipe staves, barrel-sized containers used for colonial trade. Grand pastures also made the land ideal for herding and grazing cattle. Its inhabitants received land grants from Wethersfield leaders. Known as “West Farms,” the area west of the central portion of Wethersfield became settled by those who were almost exclusively the descendants of the earliest Wethersfield settlers. In 1721, the “western” farmers requested that the General Assembly of the Connecticut Colony give their land the name “Newington” to denote “the new town in the meadow.” The Assembly granted the request, even though it took another 150 years before Newington officially became an incorporated town. The town’s name predates its official existence.

Give us a call for more information about Home/towns Music Lessons in Newington Connecticut.