El histórico Strawberry Field de Liverpool cuenta con una nueva atracción. El Strawberry Field Forever Bandstand se inauguró oficialmente el 2 de mayo de 2023. El quiosco de música fue donado por Cliff Cooper, Consejero Delegado de Orange Amplification y Patrono de Honor del centro Strawberry Field.

El quiosco de música se encuentra en el jardín original de Strawberry Field, donde, de niño, John Lennon saltaba el muro para escuchar tocar a la banda del Ejército de Salvación. La emblemática canción “Strawberry Fields Forever” se inspiró en los recuerdos que Lennon tenía de este lugar y se incluyó en un sencillo de doble cara A con “Penny Lane”.

El Strawberry Field Forever Bandstand es una maravilla tecnológica con equipos de iluminación y sonido de última generación, además de instalaciones para retransmisiones, grabaciones multipista, streaming y uso completo de Internet. Los visitantes también podrán disfrutar de las actuaciones a través de auriculares inalámbricos con tecnología Bluetooth.

El diseño del quiosco se basa en el tambor que aparece en la portada de la carátula del álbum Sgt. Pepper, y el interior cuenta con ilustraciones del famoso artista de Paintpop James Wilkinson. El suelo del quiosco de música presenta un mosaico en blanco y negro elaborado con más de 390.000 piezas de mármol importadas especialmente de Estados Unidos y cuidadosamente trabajadas a mano para el suelo del quiosco. El mosaico es similar al monumento conmemorativo John Lennon Imagine colocado en Strawberry Fields, Central Park, Nueva York, pero tres veces más grande.

El centro Strawberry Field, ahora gestionado por el Ejército de Salvación, ha sido un centro de programas juveniles desde la década de 1930. El nuevo quiosco de música servirá de apoyo al programa “Steps at Strawberry Field” del Ejército de Salvación, que ofrece formación para el empleo y prácticas a adultos con dificultades de aprendizaje y otros obstáculos para encontrar trabajo. Todo el dinero recaudado en los actos celebrados en el quiosco de música se destinará a apoyar este programa.

En la ceremonia de inauguración, Cooper estuvo acompañado por dignatarios como el Vice Teniente de Merseyside, Robert Owen, High Sheriff de Merseyside, la Dra. Ruth Hussey, CB OBE, Lord Mayor de Liverpool, Julia Baird (hermana de John Lennon), y el Mayor David Taylor, jefe de división del Ejército de Salvación para el Noroeste. Ruby J, Brooke Combe y Logan Paul Murphy también actuaron en el escenario.

El quiosco de música Strawberry Field Forever es un homenaje a los recuerdos de la infancia de John Lennon y un guiño a su legado perdurable. Es una gran incorporación al centro Strawberry Field y una nueva atracción de Liverpool que no querrá perderse.

La inauguración oficial del Strawberry Field Forever Bandstand tuvo lugar en Liverpool el 2 de mayo de 2023. El quiosco de música ha sido donado por el mecenas honorario, Cliff Cooper, Director General de Orange Amplification.

Se encuentra en el jardín original de Strawberry Field, en Liverpool, donde John Lennon, de niño, solía saltar el muro para entrar en el recinto del hogar infantil y escuchar tocar a la banda del Ejército de Salvación. Escrita por Lennon, la canción Strawberry Fields Forever apareció en el single de doble cara A con Penny Lane.

Diseñado para ser uno de los atriles tecnológicamente más avanzados del mundo, cuenta con equipos informáticos de iluminación y sonido de última generación e instalaciones para retransmisiones, grabaciones multipista, streaming y uso completo de Internet. También incorpora tecnología Bluetooth que permite a los visitantes disfrutar de las actuaciones mediante auriculares inalámbricos.

El concepto del nuevo Strawberry Field Forever Bandstand se basa en el tambor que aparece en la portada de Peter Blake y Jann Haworth de la emblemática carátula del álbum Sgt. Pepper. El interior está decorado con obras del famoso artista de Paintpop James Wilkinson https://www.paintpop.com/ . El suelo del quiosco de música presenta un mosaico en blanco y negro similar al monumento conmemorativo John Lennon Imagine colocado en Strawberry Fields, Central Park, Nueva York, pero tres veces más grande. El mosaico está hecho con más de 390.000 piezas de mármol cuidadosamente seleccionadas y cortadas, importadas de EE.UU. y fabricadas a mano especialmente para el suelo del quiosco de música.

Strawberry Fields ha estado al cuidado del Ejército de Salvación desde los años 30 y hoy es un centro donde los jóvenes pueden incorporarse al programa Steps to Work de la organización. El Ejército de Salvación es una causa muy cercana a Cooper, ya que la organización ayudó a su difunto padre a encontrar trabajo cuando regresó de la Primera Guerra Mundial.

Todo el dinero recaudado en los actos celebrados en el quiosco de música se destina a los “Steps at Strawberry Field” del Ejército de Salvación, una serie de programas que ofrecen formación para el empleo y valiosas prácticas a adultos con dificultades de aprendizaje y otros obstáculos para encontrar trabajo.

Cooper asistió a la inauguración oficial del nuevo quiosco de música de Strawberry Field junto con el Vice Teniente de Merseyside, Robert Owen, la Alta Sheriff de Merseyside, Dra. Ruth Hussey, CB OBE y otros dignatarios entre los que se encontraban el Alcalde de Liverpool, cllr Roy Gladden, Julia Baird, hermana de John Lennon y el Mayor David Taylor, jefe de división del Ejército de Salvación para el Noroeste. En el escenario actuaron Ruby J, Brooke Combe y Logan Paul Murphy.

Nos reunimos con Truls Mörck, bajista de Graveyard, a la salida de una iglesia en Noruega (¿por qué no?) en el festival Høstsabbat del año pasado, y aquí está el resultado. En estos momentos nos estamos preparando para el Desertfest London de este año, en el que serán cabezas de cartel el viernes en Electric Ballroom. ¿Nos veremos allí? Entradas aquí.

Hemos hablado con el embajador de Orange , Ross Dolan, de Electric Citizen , para saber más sobre la banda, sus primeras influencias como guitarrista y su amor por Orange.

“One of the biggest things that you learn from 50-odd years of experience,” begins Cliff Cooper, founder and CEO of Orange Amps, “is the ability to listen to something and just say no to a sound—and to keep saying no until you can truthfully say yes.” Although that seems, on the face of it, like a fairly simple requirement, Cooper, who started Orange Amps in 1968 with modest means and an exacting personality, is only too aware of the pratfalls of such pickiness: “But the problem with saying no to a sound or a product is that it costs time and money”, he explains. “Each time, you’ve got to work out why you’re saying no, and go back to the drawing board to fix it—and that’s the difficult part.”

That iterative loop—of listening and tweaking, pouring over schematics and components, then listening again, each time getting slightly closer to that resounding “yes”—has been a pattern played out throughout Orange’s history, and is perhaps the cornerstone of its success, with musicians returning again and again for the past five decades, knowing they’re going to get a piece of equipment that sounds perfect and is built to last.

Today, however, for the first time in the company’s history, Cooper is explaining that development process not in the context of a new guitar amp or effects pedal, but of a product built for both musicians and non-musicians alike: a premium Bluetooth wireless speaker called the Orange Box, which is also an Orange first—specifically, the first consumer-facing product designed entirely in house by Orange’s engineering wizards, from the ground up.

Since the initial blueprints were drawn up back in 2017, Cooper and the team have said “no” to a lot of Orange Box sounds. Now, however, they’ve given it a yes, and the Orange Box is available from tomorrow, starting a new chapter in the history of Orange Amps. Accordingly, this is a story of how over half a century of guitar-amp expertise can be adapted to something more universal; a story of trial, error, patience and success; and a story of what Cooper describes as one of the most important products Orange has ever made.

The new Orange Box: the premium Bluetooth speaker was designed 100% in-house, and is manufactured in the same factory as its guitar-amp cousins

“When we had the first prototype back for testing,” recalls Cooper of the early days of Orange Box development, “it just wasn’t better than anything else. It was fine—good, even—but it just didn’t stand out, and one of the things Orange has always been proud of is that anything we do has to be better than what’s already out there.

“So that’s why it took so long,” he continues, with a wry smile, knowing not only how six years stretches out in the world of research and development, but also knowing now that the Orange Box really does stand out. And it was clearly time well spent: listening to that initial prototype—then nicknamed the Juicebox—at Orange’s development laboratory is simultaneously a revelatory and lacklustre experience, with all three test songs of various genres selected for this article to put the unit through its paces sounding tepid and distant. Only Madonna’s ‘Hung Up’ has the faintest flicker of life (Bowie’s ‘Modern Love’ and Led Zep’s ‘Black Dog’ are pale imitations of their true selves), but the reality is that this particular Juicebox contained a far-too-diluted, watery recipe.

The second and third versions fared slightly better. For these, the R&D team experimented with weight-saving neodymium speakers and a more lozenge-shaped form-factor, and as a result, all three songs started to resemble their imperious selves. There was still something off, though—a sort of drab fizziness, like day-old soda water, with strangely scooped mids and muffled bass.

Thankfully, the fix was at hand: “After several prototypes,” explains Cooper, “we decided that the only way to improve the sound was to use active electronic crossovers, which other companies weren’t doing.”

The active crossover in a unit like the Orange Box splits the incoming audio signal in two based on frequency range, with the different signals being sent to different amplifiers specific to those ranges, and then on to appropriate speakers custom-tuned to those frequencies. An active crossover has the advantage of perfectly matching the respective specialist amplifiers and speakers, making sure all parts of the path work together holistically, and each part of the sound is dealt with by the most appropriate equipment. An active crossover also prevents loss of information in the splitting process, meaning that all the audio in your favourite records is retained, all the way to the speakers’ cones.

Getting that split-point right, however, is always the key, and this is where the expertise that Orange technical director Adrian Emsley, amp-design genius and brains behind virtually every Orange product for the past 25 years, shone through: “Frank and I changed the crossover so that just the amp dealing with the bottom end was Class D,” explains Emsley of his work on the Orange Box, alongside colleague and Cambridge academic Frank Cooke of JPF Amplification. “Then, the two amps dealing with the midrange and treble, on the left and right, were Class AB, which ends up much more musical in the area it needs to be.”

And musicality is exactly the watchword here. Listening again to those same songs on the first Orange Box prototype to implement such a crossover is a lightbulb moment, like a jump from black and white to colour: suddenly, Bowie’s vocals carry genuine anguish and Jimmy Page’s guitar a tangible bite. The arpeggiating synths on ‘Hung Up’, too, sound almost three-dimensional.

“Unlike a different guitar amp company’s wireless speaker, which is only stereo above around 3 or 4 kHz,” continues Emsley, referring to a frequency range in the very highest octave of a concert piano, “our version is stereo above 300 Hz [the middle of the piano], which works especially well with AC/DC-style guitar music, where Angus is on the left and Malcolm is on the right.

“Those other wireless speakers all sound pretty bad with AC/DC,” adds Emsley, ever the rock purist, “which I think is a very poor result.”

Rogue’s gallery: an assortment of Orange Box prototypes, each of which made progress towards the sound that got the “yes”

“The other thing, of course,” continues Cooper, “is that we use a wooden box. We could have used a plastic cabinet, to make it a bit more cost-effective, but it just sounded dreadful. Putting the speakers inside a wooden cabinet sounds much better, and we spent a lot of time making sure that the actual wood resonates correctly given the internal volume. If the cabinet resonates at the wrong frequencies, it just doesn’t sound right, you know.”

This level of perfectionism is evident upon examining the works-in-progress: each rejected test model had a different shape and heft, some including holes covered with rubber plugs, others with curved sides. Myriad porting options were clearly investigated, auditioned and tweaked. Every possibility was covered, it appears, before landing on the finished design. Then, finally, Emsley hit on the idea of making the crossover itself interact with its surroundings: “I put a hole in the active crossover at the frequency of the enclosure,” he reveals. “This ‘de-boxed’ the box, if you like, and gave the whole thing a more balanced frequency response.”

The result? Genuinely a sonically startling piece of kit, delivering the sort of audio quality you’d normally hear from speakers five times the size and price. All three test songs now leapt from the speakers, but not in the obnoxious, attention-grabbing way that has become the hallmark of a lot of more artless Bluetooth speakers, all booming bass and fool’s-gold glittery highs. Instead, the rasp of the sax lines on ‘Modern Love’ became almost tangible, and the undulations and throbs on ‘Hung Up’ were subtle and seductive, just as you’d imagine the producers of those records intended. ‘Black Dog’ growled with all the the verve and thrust as the first time you heard it.

In short, it made you want to play these songs again and again, and this repeat playability—that potential for long-term listening—has become an obsession of Cooper’s over the years: “One thing we kept an ear out for when testing was controlling for ‘listening fatigue’, which is when you listen through a product for a long time, and after a while it just doesn’t sound nice,” he explains. Any music lover will recognise the condition, and although exact causes of listener fatigue are still being explored, the latest research suggests that imperceptible sonic artefacts arising from non-musical aspects of a song’s reproduction, such as compression or artificial spatialisation, can cause listeners to lose interest.

“It’s difficult to design an amplifier or a speaker to control for listening fatigue specifically, because there are so many factors to take into account,” confesses Cooper, “but with the Orange Box you really can play it for ages—I have done!—and it doesn’t grate on your ears to the point where you think, I need to turn that thing off.”

A level of product testing this meticulous and drawn out, coupled with a love of making something that’s built to last, feels a long way from other bigger manufacturers’ approaches, which so often involves buying an off-the-shelf design from a Chinese third party, slapping their badge on it and releasing it without a second thought. But Cooper wouldn’t have it any other way: “It’s important that anything we bring out is fully researched by us and at the top of its range, and I think everybody in the company accepts that—Adrian in particular is fussy about everything!” he laughs of his colleague for nearly half of Orange’s entire existence. “It not only has to be really good, but it has to be bulletproof, and everything has to be built to last in terms of the components.”

The Orange Box’s control panel features and all-analogue EQ and an innovative warning light to show when the speakers are being driven too hard

Indeed, product longevity is another characteristic that Cooper and the team have carried from guitar-amp manufacturing over to the Orange Box: in a Bluetooth speaker marketplace saturated with disposable gadgets destined for landfill before the end of the summer festival season, Cooper was insistent that the Orange Box had to have premium staying power. That means the rechargeable battery had to be replaceable, and all components be made available for replacement well into the next decade, therefore also ensuring that the box was as green as it was Orange.

On top of that, the Orange Box comes with a unique audio-safety feature designed to lengthen the lifespan of the product: a tiny circuit between the crossover and the amps continuously monitors the volume of the signal going in, prompting a small LED to light up whenever the speakers are being driven too hard and potentially harming them. “It’s there to tell you when you should back off the volume so you don’t damage it, sure,” acknowledges Cooper, “but it’s also there to improve sound quality, to help you listen without any distortion, which in turn lessens listener fatigue.”

This audio-limiter light is a simple innovation that will keep the Orange Box in its prime for years, but it’s also a dead giveaway of a product designed not with the bottom line in mind, but with a genuine and enduring love for music, and for building innovative tools for spreading that love. After all, no one would ask for such an attentive add-on, but plenty will be grateful once it’s there.

It’s a feeling that sums up Cooper’s attitude, too: “Within the company,” he explains, “there’s an old-fashioned need to do things properly that’s run for 50 years, and if we can put it over to consumers that when they buy something with the Orange brand on it, it’s going to sound good, then that’s an achievement, and I think the Orange Box can do exactly that.

“After all, we don’t have any shareholders or venture capitalists to answer to,” he continues, proudly. “I’m the only shareholder! so any money that we earn goes straight back into developing new products—and I love doing that.”

It’s an approach that’s stood Cooper, and Orange Amps, in excellent stead since the 1960s, with countless iconic guitar amps—and world-famous fans—to show for it. As the company branches out into the middle of the 21st century, and to music connoisseurs, players and non-players alike, it’s also an approach, you sense, that will future-proof it too. 

A menudo nos preguntan por nuestros avales y qué buscamos en los artistas para que puedan optar a ellos. Aunque no hay una respuesta directa a esta pregunta, vamos a repasar algunos puntos clave que se tienen en cuenta a la hora de presentar solicitudes, ya que puede ser un concepto confuso para muchos. En un mundo perfecto, bastaría con ser un guitarrista/bajista increíble, pero por desgracia es algo más complicado que eso cuando se tiene en cuenta la perspectiva empresarial. Así que, antes de que te pases cuatro horas perfeccionando tu solicitud de embajador, lee lo siguiente para obtener información privilegiada sobre Orange A&R:

  1. Are you an established band or artist?
    As much as we’d love to support aspiring musicians on their road to stardom, that is unfortunately not something we can do via endorsements. While we don’t expect you to have a long year career behind you, we need to see evidence that you/your band are serious about what you do and have built something that exists outside your rehearsal space. Ambitions are great, but we can’t consider a band based on their ambitions and plans if there’s little happening in the present.
  1. Have you released any music?
    You have to have released some actual music. If your reaction to that is “hell yeah I just released my debut single last month” or “not a problem I released an entire album in 2013”, the chances are that that’s not enough. We need to see that you’re actively working, writing and creating, and one song or an old album followed by silence isn’t going to cut it.
  1. Are you touring and playing shows?
    Playing to a full house at your local pub on the third Friday of every month is great, but have you ever tried non-local shows, touring overseas and expanding your audience beyond your family and friends? No? Then we recommend you do that for a bit and re-visit this idea at a later date.
  1. Are you signed, working with a manager, PR rep or agent?
    We have so much respect for DIY artists, so kudos to all bands and artists doing everything themselves—and don’t let this one put you off. It’s not a must, but evidence that a label has shown interest and is willing to spend time (and maybe even money) on you, or that you’ve got someone onboard to help out with the admin side of things might also be an indication that this is something you’re serious about taking to the next level, and not just a hobby.
  1. Are you promoting yourself?
    Being an artist in the digital age is hard: you’re expected to master your instrument, kill it at marketing, social media, photography, copy-writing and content creation, and create something of an image or social approach. We totally understand that this isn’t for everyone. Hell, social media can be the devil at times, but that doesn’t change the fact that it’s something we unfortunately have to take into account as it plays a vital role in the modern industry. If you’re not a touring/gigging artist but have a huge social media following or online presence, we still might be able to work together, as at the end of the day, our goal is to have our amps be played in front of as many people as possible. That might be on a festival stage, but it could also be in a viral TikTok video. The industry is changing, along with its requirements.
  1. Can you actually play?
    This one brings us back to point 1—as much as we’d love to offer our support to every Orange-playing artist out there (and would actively encourage aspiring ones to pick up an instrument via Orange Learn), being able to actually play is a must. If you’ve just picked up the bass or guitar and have been playing for a couple of weeks, you’re still a while away from industry endorsement. But, if you keep at it, you might be the pride and joy of our roster in the future. We’d be so lucky! That being said, although technical abilities and virtuoso vibes are definitely our cup of tea, they’re not a necessity. If you can’t play along to Rush’s La Villa Strangiato, we won’t hold that against you; different types of music require different abilities, and you need to play well enough to master your music.
  1. Are you here with a genuine wish to work together and a hope to be a part of our global artist roster, or just hoping for freebies or discounted gear?
    Artist pricing is one of the awesome perks of being an Orange ambassador, even more so in this current financial climate with the ever-increasing cost of living. But if the main selling point in your application is wanting a free Rockerverb, which you “promise to promote the hell out of” to your social following of 112 people, that’s not gonna work—we are looking for artists with whom to build mutually beneficial relationships. So, instead of focusing on all the amps you want to add to your collection and trying to convince us these should be yours for free, focus on working hard, and getting yourself or your band to a place where we’d be proud and honoured to have you representing Orange.

Ahora que hemos expuesto todo esto, espero que tengas una idea más clara de lo que buscamos y de si tú o tu grupo podéis reunir los requisitos. Si crees que sí, entonces genial. Para enviar su solicitud, visite nuestra página de embajadores aquí.

Puede que sienta la tentación de volver a enviar su solicitud tres veces por semana en un futuro próximo y de hacer un seguimiento telefónico para asegurarse de que la hemos visto, y por mucho que nos guste la emoción, podemos asegurarle que no es necesario. Las solicitudes de embajadores se revisan periódicamente y se contacta con los candidatos seleccionados. Debido al elevado número de solicitudes, lamentablemente no podemos responder a todas, pero apreciamos sinceramente todas y cada una de ellas, y queremos agradecerles su apoyo.

Enviamos al guitarrista de Earthless y Black Crowes, Isaiah Mitchell, todos nuestros pedales Vintage Orange recién lanzados para ver qué tal se llevaba con ellos. ¿El resultado? Descúbrelo por ti mismo en el siguiente vídeo, en el que verás cómo pasan de la caja al tablero antes de ser demostrados tanto individualmente como juntos. Que lo disfrutes.

Para más información sobre nuestros pedales Vintage, visite sus páginas de producto: Phaser // Distorsión // Sustain.

La “Voz del Rock” para toda una generación de aficionados a la música, Hughes fue reclutado por Deep Purple en 1973 y se convirtió en el bajista y cantante principal de la banda hasta su separación inicial. Desde entonces, Hughes ha seguido una carrera en solitario aclamada por la crítica, así como colaboraciones con actos tan diversos como Black Sabbath, Gary Moore y el grupo de acid house de los 90 The KLF, antes de unirse a The Dead Daisies en el bajo y la voz principal en 2019.

Radiance es el segundo álbum de The Dead Daisies desde que Hughes se unió al grupo. Descrito por La revista Razor’s Edge lo calificó de “fuerza imparable en el mundo del hard rock” y de “rockero grueso y carnoso que satisface a todos los niveles” por Metal Injection, los inmensos tonos de bajo del álbum son cortesía del equipo de Orange Amplification de Hughes, que incluye la cabina AD200 MKIII, el combo Crush Bass 100 y, por supuesto, su característico combo Crush Bass 50 púrpura. OBC810 cab, el cabezal AD200 MKIII, el combo Crush Crush Bass 100 y, por supuesto, su característico combo Crush Bass 50 de color púrpura. Al hablar de su amplificador característico, Hughes dijo: “Cuando puedes ir al estudio, coger ese combo de bajo y hacer tu álbum con algo así, es realmente excepcional. Es arenoso, tiene garra: el sustain es muy importante y sin duda tiene todo eso.” Y añadió: “Orange hastael final… Esel futuro, es el camino a seguir, ¡ya lo has oído de mí!

Ve a la leyenda del rock Glenn Hughes al frente de The Dead Daisies con su equipo Orange en los siguientes lugares este diciembre:

Fecha Lugar Lugar

3 de diciembre Rock City Nottingham

4 de diciembre O2 Ritz Manchester

6 de diciembre O2 Forum Kentish Town Londres

7 de diciembre KK’s Steel Mill Wolverhampton

10 de diciembre The Academy Dublin

11 de diciembre Limelight Belfast

13 de diciembre O2 Academy Edinburgh

Orange Jams es una serie de sesiones en directo organizadas por Orange y Jam in the Van en las que participan embajadores de Orange de todo el mundo. Esta sesión cuenta con la participación del embajador Orange, Zach Person, en directo desde la furgoneta de Jam in the Van. Zach Person Orange Perfil del artista […]

Orange Amplification is delighted to welcome JJ Julius Son, frontman and guitarist with the worldwide phenomenon Kaleo, as an ambassador for the company.

Kaleo are one of Iceland’s biggest musical exports. Their breakthrough album, A/B, took their music around the globe with its three hit singles, the Grammy-nominated No Good, All The Pretty Girls and the chart-topping Way Down We Go, which have featured in more than twenty hit TV shows including Suits, Orange Is The New Black and Grey’s Anatomy. The band’s Fight Or Flight tour, supporting the release of their critically acclaimed third album, Surface Sounds, has taken them across the USA, including appearances at Coachella, and seen them opening for the Rolling Stones in Europe.

Jökull Júlíusson, better known as JJ Julius Son, is the frontman and guitarist for Kaleo. As the primary writer for the band, as well as lead singer, guitarist and pianist, he leads the blues-driven group with passion and musical skill. Demonstrating a wide range of musical genres and influences, the diversity of JJ’s music moves from cinematic, classic rock through soft, folksy blues, into hard-hitting stomp rock. JJ appeals to a mainstream audience with his grungy guitar riffs, crying leads and electrifying performances.

JJ Julius Son uses an Orange AD30 on tour, in the studio and at home. Speaking about the amp, he said ‘the Orange AD30 is the only amp I’ve found that can handle the wide variety of tones and instruments that I use in a single show’.

The Orange AD30 is a one-stop shop for all shades of pure British chime and crunch. From shimmering cleans, edge-of-break-up jangle or fire-splitting classic crunch, this amp has it all, in a simple, road-proven package.Check out orangeamps.com for an interview with JJ Julius Son coming soon.