Behind the dancing throng, in another booth, Steve Lieberman pauses from his work controlling all those lights and video screens to pop open a bottle of 12-year-old Glenlivet. He
For 15 years, Lieberman and his company, SJ Lighting, have been Insomniac’s go-to partner for stage and lighting design. Up until last year, Lieberman was responsible for most of what you saw on EDC’s multiple stages. “For years past, I designed every single detail of Electric Daisy Carnival, Nocturnal Wonderland, Beyond Wonderland,” Lieberman says. The native New Yorker, who usually speaks in the rapid-fire patter of a three-card Monte dealer, pauses between words for emphasis: “Every. Single. Detail.”
This year, however, he’s focused on just two stages: Cosmic Meadow, which will host such big names as Moby, Pretty Lights and Flosstradamus, and the smaller (by EDC standards) Circuit Grounds, where Lieberman plans to spend most of the festival, running the lights. “Now it’s kinda nice, ‘cause we have a bigger team,” he says. “We all participate. It feels more family oriented.”
To call Cosmic Meadow and Circuit Grounds gargantuan would be an understatement. Cosmic Meadow alone has over 4,500 video tiles covering the surface of a structure 90 feet tall and 400 feet long. “The money we’re spending on Cosmic Meadow is probably three times the budget of the show 8 years ago,” says Lieberman, who designed the lights for the massive installation. To be clear, by “show,” he means all of EDC.
At first glance, Circuit Grounds, inside a Quonset-hut-shaped tent, appears less imposing. Then three sets of circular lighting and video elements suspended from the ceiling start tilting on their axes and spouting streams of confetti, and you realize that Lieberman, who designed all of the space's production elements, has pulled out all the stops.
From an early age, Lieberman was drawn to club culture. One of his first jobs was working as a bar back at a nightclub in the Hamptons in the late ‘80s, “cleaning glasses and scrubbing the floors. Whatever it took to be inside that venue.” Later, he discovered underground parties like the legendary Storm Rave events thrown by techno DJ Frankie
Those early parties “weren’t really legit,” as he tactfully puts it. “I remember we broke into a building in Manhattan,” he says. “And there were some dilapidated cars inside and we were jumping up and down on them when the fire department walked in and tossed us all out. I don’t remember where we ended up after that, but I’m sure we found a place to go.”
In those early, renegade days, the sound system was everything; lighting was virtually non-existent, decorations an afterthought. Even when Lieberman started doing lighting for dance music events in the mid-‘90s, it was uncharted territory. “I’m not gonna say I was the first one to do it, [but] I’m the first one that I know of.”
After a brief sojourn in Phoenix, where he started his first proper lighting company, Lieberman sold that business to his partners (“It was either go crazy, kill
He tells one
Despite that rocky start, Lieberman would go on to design lights for Giant at its next home, the Park Plaza, and for massive one-off events like Together As One, the New Year’s Eve party Giant co-produced with Insomniac and Go Ventures at the L.A. Sports Arena. Soon after that, Lieberman was designing stages and lights for EDC, helping transform it into the biggest and most visually over-the-top EDM festival in North America.
These days, in addition to Insomniac’s many festivals, Lieberman does design work for Miami’s Ultra and a few other international festivals. Plus, he adds, “we build between 10 and 20 nightclubs a year,” all designed and tested from SJ Lighting’s headquarters in Westlake Village. To keep up with his crazy schedule, the self-described “obsessive-compulsive neurotic” is in the process of getting his pilot’s license so he can fly himself to gigs.
But as much as loves production and lighting design, it’s working the controls at a festival where the 42-year-old seems most in his element.
“Part of the joy of what I get to do, the privilege of being involved in these events, is the fact that, even when I’m at work, we’re jumping up and down, we’re having a good time, we’re enjoying the music, and we’re really participating in the show.”
Lieberman has been running lights at EDM events for so long that, to the untrained eye, it may appear that he’s working off a rehearsed cue sheet, or even that his lights are somehow triggered by sound. But really, he’s just had two decades to perfect his timing.
“I know what’s gonna happen probably before any of the kids know what’s gonna happen. I know exactly when the drop’s gonna hit and I have the confidence to know when to hit the button on the console, mostly because I programmed that button. So I know exactly what it’s gonna do.”
As a designer, Lieberman’s job is to dazzle. As an “LD,” or lighting director, manning the controls, his job is to be such a seamless part of the experience that he becomes invisible to the fans. “When they watch that show, things need to happen at the appropriate time, at the exact time. It can’t be a millisecond early, it can’t be a millisecond
So the crowd may keep facing the DJ, and watching the lights instead of the man running them, but that’s how it’s supposed to be. Steve Lieberman will be in the booth at the back, sipping his Scotch and blowing minds.