Ώπα Festival! powered by ΔΕΗ
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Πέμπτη 4 Ιουνίου |
|---|---|
| Ώρα | 19:00 |
| Τιμή | €8 |
| Χώρος | Τεχνόπολη |
| Διεύθυνση | Pireos 100, Athina 118 54 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
Five acts and a stand-up comedian share a single Thursday night stage. Ώπα Festival lands at Technopolis on June 4 as an evening built around the collision Athens does best — heritage Greek music against contemporary live energy. Doors at 18:30, music from 19:00, a single ticket covers the whole bill.
The headliner is Eleni Tsaligopoulou, one of the most distinctive voices of Greek song over the last four decades, working a repertoire that ranges from rebetiko and laiko to her own contemporary collaborations. Around her, Ώπα Festival fills the bill with Otra Rota, Sourloulou, and Voukoliki Diatarahi, and brings Jackpot Zurni Band's zurna players onto the stage — the double-reed wind instrument that anchors so much Balkan and Greek wedding music. Stand-up comedian Thomas Zambras hosts the evening.
The crowd will look like Technopolis crowds always do for hybrid Greek bills — younger listeners who came to Tsaligopoulou through her later collaborations, older audiences who remember the 1990s records, Gazi regulars on a Thursday-night spillover, parea groups treating it as the opener of festival season. Expect drinking, dancing, and loud collective singing through the choruses everyone knows.
If you came for a single-headliner concert with quiet curated breaks between songs, this is not the bill. If you came for a five-act Athenian summer-music sampler stitched together along tradition-to-modern lines, ΔΕΗ has bought your evening.
Technopolis is the former gasworks complex at Pireos 100 in Gazi, two minutes from Kerameikos metro. Tickets €8 presale, €13 at the door via more.com. The site runs multiple bars; food trucks typically operate on the larger Music Technopolis nights.
Ώπα Festival opens June with a corporate-funded bill arguing Greek music's most interesting territory lies in the conversation between forms — not in choosing one.