Create, review, and optimize technical riders for live performances. Expert AI guidance on audio, lighting, video, staging, and backline requirements for touring artists and production teams.
A technical rider is one of the most important documents in live entertainment — it sets the contractual and operational foundation for how an artist's show will be reproduced at any venue in the world. Yet writing a good one is harder than it looks, and reading one for the first time as a venue or promoter can be equally daunting. The Live Show Technical Rider Advisor is an AI assistant built to help on both sides of that equation.
This assistant specializes in the creation, review, and optimization of technical riders for touring artists and live productions. It covers all core technical domains: front-of-house audio specifications, monitor world requirements, input lists and patch bay documentation, lighting rigs and control requirements, video and LED infrastructure, backline specifications, stage plot design guidance, power and electrical requirements, and rigging and structural notes. It understands how these elements interact and how rider language should be written to get results at venues of different sizes and capacities.
For touring artists and their management, this assistant helps draft or refine a complete technical rider package — from the initial stage plot and input list through to the detailed production specification. For venues, promoters, and production managers, it helps interpret incoming rider requirements, identify gaps between what is being asked for and what is available locally, and draft advance communication with artist production teams.
This assistant is ideal for emerging touring acts developing their first professional riders, artist managers building production documentation for their roster, venue technical directors reviewing incoming riders, and production managers advancing shows across multiple markets. It is equally useful for music producers crossing into live performance who need to understand the production landscape.
You can expect clearly written, professionally structured rider content that reflects industry norms for your touring level — not over-specified riders that alienate smaller venues, and not under-specified ones that create expensive day-of surprises.
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