Not quite sure how it took me more than a week to get around to writing a post about Gotan Project's recent concert at the Halles de Schaerbeek in Brussels, but if you're going to fall behind with updating a blog, the build-up to Christmas seems as good an excuse as any.
I only heard my first Gotan Project album this summer, but I immediately loved the group's sound – tango with an electronica twist. Given that the music can be moody and atmospheric, I wasn't sure what to expect from a live performance. I was both surprised and impressed.
The visuals were almost as important as the music. In many ways it was a show more than just a concert. The group opened their performance behind a gauze screen the height and breadth of the stage onto which images and film were projected. Just as I was beginning to think that the music would feel more live and more direct if the screen wasn't there, the screen disappeared and the group took centre stage - vocalist, bandoneonist, string quartet, pianist, guitarist and two DJs/programmers, all dressed in white.
The visuals continued with images projected onto a screen at the back of the stage, and a couple danced tango to a few songs, but for the most part the musicians were now in the spotlight. The audience was more than warmed up and the show really took off. Including the couple of encores, the audience was treated to about 2 hours of fabulous music. A most memorable concert.
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