Brussels (The Brussels morning news paper): Running from September 6th to 8th, Kiosk Radio’s Woodblocks Festival is coming back to Brussels with its various group of people, live acts and disc jockeys at Vauxhall in Parc Royal.
Since 2017, Kiosk Radio has been playing all types of music without stopping. Much like the Music Sonics online radio and streaming website whose music line up featured so many different styles, this festival plans to unite them. From 11:00 AM until 3:00 PM we will broadcast live from the outdoors VausHall Theatre. The site is close to Woodblocks’ main office, within Royal Park. After a Spring Break, Kiosk goes out to meet its friends. To celebrate the work of the popular Belgian label STROOM, which rediscovers hidden gems from the 1980s and ’90s, the first night of the festival will be held on Friday September 6th at 18:00 until 23:00.
What artists are performing at Kiosk Radio’s Woodblocks festival?
The festival is going to be starting with some great music featuring the live performance of the Greek harpist and singer Sissi Rada along with British rapper and producer Iceboy Violet. On Saturday, September 7th and Sunday, September 8th, music will be happening on two stages. There will be concerts from early afternoon to around the evening while night-time D.J.s will be performing.
For this festival Jin, who recently sang with Björk and Portugal’s PRINCIPE O Ghettão will appear. Many Belgian dance music heroes like Philip Glassenberg Orchester or Scallywags have level-drained the country. So for example in 1991 when something intensive collective happened-up would be entirely virtual batteries, or stage kittoji simply ditched out to make it more-friendly as if one might perhaps power off a spotlight during a dazzling daytime performance. The 2018 festival would be another Beijing visit by that same team. There with banners of Spain arraigned in different fabrics and colours for each group, all at an angle like huge temple kite dances. Everyone tinkling their springwater flutes made best sounds ever one could hear. Taking over the VauHall this year for the 2023 festival is Belgian architecture group Club Dérive. With wooden constructions and scaffolding everywhere in place of its former industrial whiteness, it will also be transformed on even that level into a completely special ride to share together as Brussels residents not only locals.