Frekuence continues its underground programming on May 15 with a carefully curated night featuring Gemza and MYA, two artists connected through deep, atmospheric and groove-focused electronic music.
Running from midnight until sunrise, the event brings together sounds rooted in old-school house, minimal structures and acid-influenced textures inside one of Tirana’s most community-driven club spaces.
Opening the night is Gemza, the Pristina-based DJ who has steadily built a strong reputation across Kosovo and the wider Balkan electronic scene since 2018. Her sets move patiently between deep and immersive openings before gradually developing into more driving and energetic moments, always maintaining a strong sense of flow and emotional pacing.
Beyond the booth, Gemza is also the founder of Babetronixx, a platform supporting women in electronic music and creating more space for female artists within regional club culture.
Over the years, she has appeared at events and venues including UNUM Festival, Dokufest, Sofali and Hapësira, becoming one of the recognizable names connected to the newer generation of Balkan underground selectors.
Closing the night is MYA, the Italian-Albanian DJ and producer currently based in Rome. Her sound explores deeper shades of house music through restrained rhythms, subtle acid elements and atmospheric textures designed for intimate dancefloors and late-night listening.
Rather than pushing obvious peak-time moments, MYA focuses on mood, detail and gradual movement — a style that has already brought her to spaces including HOR Berlin, The Sanctuary Eco Retreat, Beats & Brunch Tirana and Zone Club Kosovo.
Frekuence once again provides the ideal environment for this type of musical direction.
The Tirana venue continues positioning itself as a space dedicated to underground electronic culture, freedom of expression and community-oriented nightlife. Nights there feel intentionally stripped back — less focused on spectacle and more centered around music, connection and presence inside the room.
The club also maintains a strict no-photo policy and zero tolerance toward discrimination or harassment, reinforcing an atmosphere built around mutual respect and safety on the dancefloor.
As Tirana’s underground scene keeps growing through independent spaces and regional collaborations, events like this highlight the importance of artists who prioritize storytelling, atmosphere and emotional depth over fast-moving trends.
On May 15, Frekuence invites the city into a slower, deeper and more immersive journey through underground house and minimal club music.
