Scott Warner

Scott Warner (born in Latrobe, Pennsylvania) is a U.S.-based lighting designer who has recently designed for The Pussycat Dolls,Jimmy Eat World, Everclear, David Cook, Gavin Degraw and Queen Latifah. Warner started his career is the late eighties with the Pittsburgh based bands, The Affordable Floors and The Cynics. His first national client was the shock rock group GWAR. In the late 80's and early 90's, Scott was an Independent Producer and Engineer, recording out of studios in Pittsburgh and New York. It was in Pittsburgh where he recorded and performed a song titled "Zip It" that was written for talk show host Morton Downey, Jr. The song was played on Downey's show as well as the Dr. Demento show. Downey endorsed the record, but a dispute with his network forced the label to stop distributing the record. Scott recently designed and directed the 2012 UK Tour for Nicole Scherzinger. Currently the lighting designer for Smokey Robinson, Scott is the owner of Karate Pinky Visual Design, a video production and lighting design company. Scott recently directed the video "KIng Of Broken Hearts" by Carolina Liar and "Cobwebs Of The MInd" by Watson's Awakening.

Scott has teamed up with Robe Lighting based in the Czech Republic to create a innovative lighting fixture called The Cyclone. This innovative effects moving head product has an integrated fan in the centre of the head surrounded by a ring of 24 x high powered RGBW multichip LEDs.

Read more about Scott Warner:  Other Lighting Design and Direction Clients, Productions, Sound Engineering, Guitar Tech, Touring Experience, Webisodes

Famous quotes containing the words scott and/or warner:

    Poetry is either something that lives like fire inside you—like music to the musician or Marxism to the Communist—or else it is nothing, an empty formalized bore around which pedants can endlessly drone their notes and explanations.
    —F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896–1940)

    What a man needs in gardening is a cast-iron back, with a hinge in it.
    —Charles Dudley Warner (1829–1900)