/ TIMING
- 6.30 pm: doors open
- 6.50 pm - 7.20 pm: Hippotraktor
- 7.40 pm - 8.15 pm: BEAR
- 8.35 pm - 9.20 pm: Psychonaut
- 9.40 pm - 10.30 pm: BRIQUEVILLE
- 11.00 pm - 12.05 am: The Ocean
! Due to the extensive line-up, the end time of this concert evening is planned later than the usual 10:30 pm. Keep this in mind when choosing your means of transport.
Cult of Luna, Baroness, Amenra, Russian Circles
The Ocean
The Ocean flows to us all the way from Germany and brings music that defies expectations and buries conventions. Since forming in 2000, they have consistently pushed the boundaries of what metal can be, incorporating elements of post-rock, classical music, and even spoken word. Led by the enigmatic frontman Loïc Rossetti, The Ocean's live shows are a visceral experience with a unique sense of magnitude. Whether you're looking to be buried under walls of sound or drift away to calm and intricate compositions, this is something you will resonate with as their music draws from both sides of the coin.
B R I Q U E V I L L E
The contemporary Belgian heavy music scene keeps spawning awesome bands, and B R I Q U E V I L L E – thespaces in between the letters are part of their moniker – are among the most intriguing and compelling of them. The meditative heaviness of their sound and the careful engineering of the visual aspects of their mesmerizing live-performance rituals are awe-inspiring and challenging in equal measure. After 2017’s dazzling instrumental opus „II“, the Flemish 5-piece finally return with their 3rd studio album, one of the first real pandemic-albums to be released on Pelagic. The band members had to finish the album in separation, which worked out better than they had initially expected: the forced distance allowed them to take distance not only to each other, but also towards their own song material. Some pieces grew larger than originally intended, others were stripped down to the essentials and reinvented. The end result is a staggering album that is sophisticated and smothering at the same time, made up of altogethershorter songs as compared to the previous release, and there is a more prominent focus on those tasty electronics,which have always been an integral part of B R I Q U E V I L L E‘s sound. The album is also the first one with analbum title: Quelle means „source“ in German, and „which“ in French. „We strongly feel that this record keeps all the ingredients of previous records and explores them further than we ever did before. The theme of a ‘source’, and the ‘which’ linking it reflexively to our previous album artwork gave us the feeling that we stayed true to our original concept, music, artwork and clips. Water and sand as a source of life and death. How an isolated soul deals with these elements“, says a nameless band member… What? Yes, B R I Q U E V I L L E is a band shrouded in mystery. The black Nazgûl-robes and golden masks that all members wear on stage give their presence the air of an occult ritual… but the band is not chasing (a) GHOST; in fact they have worn their masks for 10 years plus, and even do so during rehearsals. The anonymity creates equality, and prevents a cult of personality… and makes it easier to swap out band members without anyone noticing. Members of Briqueville were active in various other bands from the local jazz, electro and metal scene, when they met over 10 years ago in a school building, with the ambition to improvise around one single note. „In order to do this anonymously and have the audience concentrate on the music, we decided to play with masks”, a band member explains. When they got out of the building after that session, they ran into an old man who told them a story of a son murdering his father right at the entrance of that school, many years ago. He pulled out a newspaper article to legitimize his story, before he disappeared. „That story stuck with us. We kept asking ourselves why someone would keep an article recounting a patricide in their wallets for seventy years. We couldn’t help but conclude this man we’d met must have been the son. Maybe our imagination was just doing overtime, but the grandparents of one of our band members confirmed the murder had happened… however, we were unable to trace the old man.” This ludicrous story has ever since served as inspiration for the band’s pounding sound. It wasn’t until 2014 that B R I Q U E V I L L E released their self-titled debut album, four tracks that all conclude around the 10 minutes mark. Upon release, the band buried 20 copies at various locations across the country, and gradually released the coordinates on their facebook page, animating fans to dig them up from the soil. The idea was met with great enthusiasm among their quickly growing fanbase, and was revisited and extended for the release of Briqueville’s mesmerizing 2nd album, aptly titled „II“, when members of various Pelagic artists buried vinyl records between Vancouver, Canada and Sao Paulo, Brazil… all of them were found by happy vinyl fan diggers. Quelle shows that B R I Q U E V I L L E individually and collectively have a big heart for the gritty, dark, psychedelic, heavy and other-worldly, as much as a love for beauty and melody. It’s a soundtrack to the pandemic, written and recorded not before, but during isolation – and a testimony that isolation can spawn the greatest creativity.
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Psychonaut
Psychonaut is a three-piece post-metal/sludge band from Mechelen, Belgium. Together, they create a whole of atmospheric riffs and rhytms where feeling the music with all senses instead of only the ears is a guiding light.
As for a description of their music, one could say that they create a mix of trippy, psychedelic influences along the lines of Pink Floyd combined with the heavier influences of bands like Tool, Amenra and Sleep. The power of their songs lies in the variation between these two main anchor points and by toying with these sometimes paradoxal energies, they generate the PSYCHONAUT experience.
BEAR
Antwerp-based progressive hardcore band BEAR herald their triumphant return with their highly-anticipated new album, „VANTA“, out September 29. Emerging from the crucible of personal trials - cancer, a global pandemic, broken relationships, and profound loss - BEAR has crafted an album that resonates with the pain, anguish, and fear that defines our human experience.
„VANTA“, named after the darkest known substance, represents the band’s voyage through their most challenging times. It is a testament to their resilience, an unapologetic and unrelenting auditory journey that fearlessly navigates through the storm of adversity. But beneath its ferocious exterior, the album also uncovers the beauty nestled within suffering, underscoring the profound truth of no light existing without darkness.
„VANTA“ is not just an album. It’s the embodiment of BEAR’s journey through personal and global upheaval, their transformation from victims of circumstance to harbingers of hope. It is a clarion call to all who hear it: In the face of the bleakest darkness, there can still be light.
As BEAR continues to evolve and forge their path, one thing remains certain: fear the BEAR
Hippotraktor
Hippotraktor is a progressive metal band from Mechelen. Intriguing textures and strange atmospheres are just a few gears that power the Hippotraktor machine. With 'Stasis', Hippotraktor returns, the powerful sequel to their impressive debut album 'Meridian' from 2021. This album balances precisely between the grandeur of nature and the chaotic nature of our own existence. It documents human unrest with explosive riffs and captivating grooves, brought by closely connected musicians and good friends, who are confident in their collective abilities. Hippotraktor finally finds its rhythm with the permanent addition of guitarist/vocalist Sander Rom and percussionist/vocalist Stefan De Graef.