REVOLT returns on May 17 with Love Letters From Oslo, a day-to-night gathering at ATHarea shaped around stripped-back grooves, emotional flow and the kind of underground atmosphere that unfolds gradually over hours.
Leading the journey are Berlin-connected selectors Nekes and Federico Molinari, two artists whose musical chemistry has become widely respected within Europe’s deeper house and minimal circuits. One year after their last appearance together left a lasting impression on local dancers, the duo returns for another extended session designed around patience, subtle tension and timeless groove.
Rather than relying on oversized moments or predictable dancefloor formulas, both artists are known for creating immersive musical narratives where rhythm and atmosphere evolve naturally from track to track.
That approach fits perfectly within the spirit of Love Letters From Oslo.
The event moves from daytime warmth into late-night intimacy, creating a space where the energy shifts slowly through light, movement and connection between crowd and music.
Joining them are REVOLT residents Nausicaä and Liou, helping shape the emotional direction of the evening from opening moments until the final hours. While the night may begin with restraint and elegance, the organizers already hint that things probably will not stay polite for too long.
ATHarea provides the setting for this transformation — an open environment designed for long-form musical experiences rather than quick nightlife consumption.
The concept itself feels intentionally romantic without becoming nostalgic. The title Love Letters From Oslo suggests memory, distance and emotion, but the actual experience remains fully rooted in the present moment: dancing from afternoon into darkness alongside people connected through sound rather than spectacle.
REVOLT continues developing a recognizable identity through exactly these kinds of carefully curated events — gatherings where atmosphere matters as much as the lineup itself.
Instead of chasing trends, the focus remains on artists capable of building genuine dancefloor journeys through subtlety, groove and trust in the process.
As the organizers put it:
Some love letters were never meant to stay private.
This one probably should not either.
On May 17, ATHarea becomes the setting for another deep and emotionally charged underground session stretching from sunlight into the late-night unknown.
