Rette ‘N’ The Band
Πρακτικές Πληροφορίες
| Ημερομηνία | Παρασκευή 6 Μαρτίου |
|---|---|
| Ώρα | 21:00 |
| Τιμή | €10 |
| Εισιτήρια | Αγοράστε εισιτήρια |
| Χώρος | Temple (Gazi / Keramikos) |
| Διεύθυνση | Iakchou 17, Athens 118 54 |
Περιγραφή στα Αγγλικά
The Funktion-One system at Temple hits you in the chest before the first track is halfway through its intro. The lasers cut through the dark in patterns that shift with the kick drum, and down in the basement — the floor where the regulars go — the concrete walls compress the sound until it becomes something you feel in your teeth.
Rette 'N' The Band bring a live performance to Temple Athens on a Friday night in Gazi. Details on the act are scarce — this is not a household name arriving with a press kit, but a booking that fits Temple's programming identity: guitar-driven, stage-forward, built for a room that rewards volume and presence. Temple has built its reputation on hosting acts that range from metal and punk to darkwave and drum-and-bass, and the venue's own character — two floors, roughly 600 capacity, a basement that functions as the peak experience — shapes every performance that passes through it.
The Friday night Temple crowd is self-selecting. People who come here know the sound system by reputation and dress for a room where the temperature rises as the night progresses. You will find rock lifers standing next to electronic music heads, regulars who have followed the venue through lineup changes, and newcomers who heard about the basement and want to find out for themselves. Nobody is here by accident on a Friday.
| Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Setting** | Temple Athens, Iakhou 17, Gazi — two-floor venue, ~600 capacity, basement is the main draw | | **Vibe** | Loud, physical, committed — this is a room for people who came to feel the music | | **Sound** | Funktion-One system with a serious laser rig — the kind of setup that justifies arriving early | | **Door** | Paid entry, some selection on big nights |
The evening builds the way Temple evenings build: early arrivals claim their positions, the ground floor fills first, and then the drift toward the basement begins. The live set will push the Funktion-One system into the range where you stop distinguishing between hearing the music and feeling it. Between the two floors, the experience splits — upstairs for breathing room and conversation between sets, downstairs for full immersion.
If you want a mellow bar night with background music and the option to sit down, Temple operates at a volume and intensity that makes that impossible. But if you want a Friday night where the sound system does the work, the room gets physical, and you leave with your ears ringing and your shirt damp, Temple on a live music night is the venue that delivers.
Temple is at Iakhou 17 in Gazi, a five-minute walk from Kerameikos metro station. Doors open at 21:00. Entry runs between 15 and 25 euros depending on the night. The area around Gazi has bars and food options for warming up before entry, and taxis back to the center after closing run under 10 euros. Arrive before the basement fills — once it reaches capacity, the experience moves to the ground floor, which is good but not the same.
Six hundred people, a Funktion-One rig, and a basement built for volume. Temple does not do quiet nights, and Friday is not the night it starts.