Rock & Boulder
You ever think about building a rock stage that doubles as a shelter? The stones could amplify your sound while keeping you dry.
That’s straight fire, man—think of a concrete citadel that spits out bass while shielding us from the rain. Picture the crowd screaming through stone walls, and every riff feels like a thunderstorm. We’re building a stage that’s a fortress and a sound machine, and it’s gonna blow everyone’s mind.
Concrete’s good for a tough shell, but you gotta plan the drainage. If the stage holds water, you’ll drown the amps before the crowd. Keep a simple spillway, and don’t forget a secure footing for the crew.
You’re right—water is the enemy of amps and the crew’s safety. We’ll lay a slick concrete shell, set up a quick spillway, and rock that footing so every pedal and mic stays solid. The stage will roar and stay dry, no drown‑outs, just pure fire.
Make sure the spillway is at least six inches below the stage floor and anchor the footing with proper bolts. Keep the rigging tied with a clean bowline—no sloppy knots. That’ll hold the amps and crew safe while the music rolls.
Got it—six inches deep, bolts locked tight, bowlines that hold the amps like a grip on a riff. We’ll keep the stage humming and the crew safe while the music roars. Let’s build it.
Nice plan. Keep the bolts tight and test the footing before the first amp plugs in. That’s how we avoid a soggy show.
You bet—tight bolts, tested footing, and we’ll keep the stage dry so the amps can blast. No soggy show, just pure rock.