Het Sieraad welcomes Antdot, AJNA and Ronja on May 24 for a special Pinkster Sunday session built around Afro house rhythms, melodic progression and sunset dancefloor atmosphere in the heart of Amsterdam.
Running from evening into late night, the event brings together three artists connected through emotionally driven electronic music, organic groove structures and globally influenced club sound — transforming the iconic Amsterdam venue into a space where warmth, movement and deep rhythmic energy guide the night from start to finish.
At the center of the lineup stands Antdot.
The Brazilian DJ and producer has rapidly become one of the rising names within the global Afro house movement, blending tribal percussion, melodic layering and world-influenced textures into sets that feel equally suited for beach sunsets, intimate club spaces and major festival stages.
The timing of the Amsterdam performance feels especially significant.
Just days after this appearance at Het Sieraad, Antdot begins his residency at Hï Ibiza — one of the most high-profile club platforms in the world. That context gives the night an added sense of momentum, offering Amsterdam audiences the opportunity to experience his evolving sound in a more intimate setting before another major summer season begins internationally.
And intimacy matters here.
Unlike oversized festival environments, Het Sieraad naturally creates a closer emotional connection between artist and crowd. The former school building turned cultural venue has become one of Amsterdam’s most visually distinctive nightlife spaces, known for combining elegant architecture with underground electronic programming and immersive atmosphere.
Its warm interior and cathedral-like design make it especially suited for melodic and emotionally expansive music.
Joining Antdot is Belgian artist AJNA, co-founder of Magnifik Music alongside Samm.
Over recent years, AJNA has steadily become one of the more respected names connected to melodic Afro-influenced electronic music in Europe, performing across major festivals and underground club circuits alike. His sets balance hypnotic percussion with cinematic progression, often creating long emotional builds designed for immersive late-night dancefloors rather than immediate impact alone.
This marks his first appearance at Het Sieraad before another busy summer festival season begins.
Opening the evening is Ronja, whose presence brings another layer of warmth and atmospheric depth to the night.
Known through performances connected to Gardens of Babylon and Komm Schon Alter, Ronja’s selections often move fluidly between melodic house, spiritual electronic textures and groove-driven progression, making her a natural choice for the early sunset portion of the event.
That progression feels intentional.
From Ronja’s opening atmosphere into AJNA’s deeper rhythmic immersion and eventually Antdot’s globally influenced Afro house energy, the lineup unfolds less like separate performances and more like a continuous emotional journey throughout the night.
The broader rise of Afro house culture globally also gives events like this additional significance.
Over the last several years, audiences across Europe have increasingly gravitated toward electronic music rooted in percussion, organic movement and emotional openness rather than purely mechanical club functionality. Afro house in particular has become a bridge between underground dance culture and warmer, more human emotional experiences on the dancefloor.
Artists like Antdot and AJNA stand directly within that movement.
On May 24, Het Sieraad once again becomes a meeting point for rhythm, atmosphere and collective release — a Pinkster Sunday built around sunset emotion, deep groove and dancefloor connection lasting until early morning in Amsterdam.
