ARTBAT
at Bondinho Pão de Açúcar in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for Cercle
ARTBAT playing from a cable car dangling over Rio de Janeiro is precisely the level of scenic overkill we've come to expect and secretly crave. It's a visual metaphor for their melodic techno: soaring, dramatic, and with a slight risk of inducing vertigo. The Bondinho Pão de Açúcar provides a breathtaking backdrop, all jagged cliffs and ocean haze, for a set designed to soundtrack sunsets and emotional crescendos. This is peak-time melodic techno with a progressive house heart, locked at an average 124.9 BPM and frequently anchored in the 4A key for its emotive, open qualities.
The energy is predominantly low-end (71.5%), providing a warm, rolling foundation for the soaring synth leads and vocal hooks that define their sound. Transitions are smooth and harmonic, favoring emotional resonance over rhythmic shock, with the mid and high frequencies carefully balanced to uplift without overwhelming. The track selection is a who's who of the genre's anthemic side. The opener, Rampa & WhoMadeWho's 'Tell Me Are We', sets a yearning, vocal-led tone.
The reboot of Tinlicker & Robert Miles' 'Children' is an obvious but effective tearjerker, while Damian Lazarus's 'All I Need to Get High' in its Ae:ther remix adds a dose of psychedelic depth. Younos's 'Mooreeffoc' is a deeper, hypnotic gem, and the inclusion of Calvin Harris's 'I Need Your Love'—likely in a bootleg—shows a playful, populist streak. HOSH & 1979's 'Midnight' and CJ Peeton's 'Weird Nature' further cement the vibe of accessible, melody-forward electronics. The journey is clear: it begins with the evocative question of the opener, builds through the nostalgic peak of 'Children', and lands, perfectly, with their own epic closer 'Closer', featuring WhoMadeWho for a full-circle moment.