«FOR WOMEN» | Αγγελική Τουμπανάκη 5tet
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Τετάρτη 4 Μαρτίου |
|---|---|
| Ώρα | 21:30 |
| Τιμή | €12 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | Half Note Jazz Club (Mets) |
| Διεύθυνση | 17 Trivonianou Street, Athens 116 36 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
For Women by Angeliki Toubanaki 5tet is a concert at Half Note Jazz Club in Mets on Wednesday, March 4. The lights drop low enough that the tables disappear and you are left with a voice that takes up more space than the room should allow.
Toubanaki trained as a molecular biologist — she holds a doctorate from the University of Athens Medical School — before committing fully to music. She studied jazz improvisation and harmony with Silvio Syrros at the Athenaeum Conservatory, classical singing, and traditional percussion. Her project For Women transforms the lives of historical women — rebels, healers, outcasts, pioneers — into songs that cross borders of language and tradition. The repertoire threads original compositions through works by Nina Simone and Joni Mitchell, then pivots into folk material from Greece, the Balkans, Anatolia, and Latin America, all bound by the idea that the women in the songs are not distant symbols but presences in the room.
Half Note's audience on a Wednesday has its own character. These are people who keep a jazz calendar, who know that the midweek shows sometimes land harder than the weekend headliners. Tables are shared with strangers. Someone is always nursing an espresso instead of a drink. The room listens.
Half Note Jazz Club on Trivonianou 17 seats roughly two hundred, with tables pressed close enough to the stage that the musicians' expressions are part of the performance. The quintet fills the room: Toubanaki on voice and loops, Grigoris Danis on guitar, Giorgos Makris on bagpipe and kaval, Apostolos Kaltsas on bass and loops, and Ilias Doumanis on drums and sound design. That lineup tells you the sound will move — jazz harmony meeting Balkan wind instruments and electronic layering.
The experience builds in layers. Toubanaki opens with a loop she constructs live — voice over voice, a lattice that the band enters one instrument at a time. By midset the bagpipe has entered and the room has shifted from jazz club to something closer to a ritual space. The songs move between Greek, English, Spanish, and languages you cannot immediately place, and the transitions feel earned rather than performed. The quintet plays for roughly ninety minutes without intermission. Among Athens jazz venues, Half Note's intimacy at this scale — two hundred seats, stage proximity measured in metres — makes this a different proposition from a festival or a concert hall. The room's forty-seven-year history adds a gravity the sound can lean against.
If you want a conventional jazz standards night with familiar changes and comfortable swing, the bagpipe will surprise you. But if you want to hear what happens when a scientist-turned-vocalist builds a song cycle about women who refused their assigned roles, performed in a room where you can hear the breath between notes — this is your Wednesday.
Half Note is a ten-minute walk from Akropoli metro. Tickets start from twelve euros through more.com. Reservations are essential — book ahead, confirm by phone on the day, and arrive twenty minutes before the 21:30 start or risk losing your seat fifteen minutes after the show begins. Tables seat four; smaller groups share.
A doctorate in molecular biology, a jazz voice, and a room of two hundred people listening to songs about women who burned rather than bent — all in a Mets basement that has hosted this kind of intensity since 1979.