Μίνως Μάτσας
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Δευτέρα 2 Μαρτίου |
|---|---|
| Τιμή | €15 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | VOX (Gazi / Keramikos) |
| Διεύθυνση | Iera Odos 16, Athens 104 35 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
A piano chord hangs in the room and the melody it introduces is one you have heard before — in a film you watched late at night, or a television series you cannot quite place — but you have never heard it performed live by the person who wrote it.
Minos Matsas studied at the Athens Conservatory, then the Juilliard School, then Columbia — and came home to compose scores for Greek cinema, television, and theater. His grandfather founded the Minos EMI label, one of the pillars of the Greek recording industry. Matsas opened Odeon Studios in 1996 and has scored films including Eduart, which took the music prize at the Thessaloniki Film Festival, and the Kazantzakis biopic. Dika Mou i Daneika — Mine or Borrowed — is his first concert series in years, built around a simple premise: his own film and television compositions performed alongside songs by other composers he has carried since the late 1970s and 1980s, rearranged for a ten-piece band until they become something the original performers would not recognize. Singers Kostas Triantafyllidis and Dimitra Moraiti join him at the piano.
The crowd for Matsas at VOX is not the usual Monday-night gathering. You will find people from the film industry who recognize his cues before the melody resolves, people who know the laiko recordings of Stratos Dionysiou by heart and want to hear what Matsas does to them, and conservatory-trained musicians who follow the arrangements the way architects read blueprints.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Setting** | Live stage in Gazi-Kerameikos, seated and standing zones, multi-level | | **Vibe** | Attentive, warm, cinematic — a listening room for songs that had other lives | | **Sound** | Ten-piece band, two vocalists, piano-led arrangements of film and laiko repertoire | | **Door** | Ticketed, reserved seating by zone |
The evening moves between two registers. Matsas opens with his own compositions — pieces written for screens that most of the audience has seen in darkened cinemas — and the recognition arrives slowly, a melody surfacing from a scene you had forgotten. Then the borrowed songs appear: laiko standards rearranged into shapes their original performers would not recognize. Triantafyllidis and Moraiti trade the vocal lead, and the band gives each song the room to unfold at concert scale. The second half lands harder, because by then you have stopped sorting the songs into his and borrowed and started hearing them as a single collection.
If you want a singalong concert where the familiar versions stay intact, Matsas does not perform covers — he disassembles songs and rebuilds them. But if you want to sit in a room where a Juilliard-trained composer reveals the architecture inside Greek popular songs, with a ten-piece band and two voices at full scale, Monday night at VOX is the room.
VOX is at Iera Odos 16, in Gazi-Kerameikos, a five-minute walk from Kerameikos metro. Showtime is 21:00 on Monday March 2. Seating ranges from front couches at forty-five euros to standing with a drink at fifteen euros. Reservations at 210 3475900. This is the first of only two performances — the second is March 16.
A composer who scores films for a living, stepping on stage for the first time in years to perform the songs that scored his own life — two Mondays only, then the arrangements go back into the drawer.