Robbie Cavanagh at The Apex
When Robbie Cavanagh asked us to create content for his support slot with Skippinish at The Apex, we already knew this was going to be one hell of a night.
Having worked with Robbie before, we knew exactly what he brings to a room. Honest songwriting, huge presence, and the kind of performance style that quietly wins people over song by song. But this show felt different from the start.
The Apex is a serious venue. Large stage. Big atmosphere. The kind of room that asks questions of an artist. But if there was any pressure on Robbie walking into a venue of that scale, it didn’t show.
From soundcheck onwards, the feeling in the room was obvious.
This was going to land.
Before the audience even entered, we made it a priority to document the quieter side of the evening. The setup. The preparation. Robbie moving through soundcheck and settling into the space. Those moments matter just as much as the performance itself because they tell the full story of the night, not just the polished version people see on stage.
Once the show began, everything clicked into place.
Robbie did exactly what we expected him to do, he completely won over the room. Song by song, the audience leaned further in, and by the end of the set it felt like everyone there understood exactly why he continues to build such a strong reputation across the UK live music scene.
For us, the task was to capture that feeling properly.
Using the Canon EOS R for photography and the Canon C400 for video, we worked to create content that felt cinematic without losing the authenticity of the performance. Strong stage moments, crowd atmosphere, backstage detail, all documented with the intention of creating a content library Robbie can continue using long after the night itself.
Because great live content shouldn’t just exist for 24 hours on social media.
It should continue supporting the artist months later.
And with a performance like this, there was more than enough worth remembering.