Kurim Muzikor 99 returns to Underground Agimi on May 22 for its ninth edition, continuing to build one of Tirana’s most emotionally driven underground club concepts.
Led this time by Nica2Cica and Leo in a back-to-back session, the night promises another journey through trance, disco and deeply atmospheric electronic music designed less around intensity and more around connection, feeling and shared movement on the dancefloor.
That emotional identity has become central to Kurim Muzikor 99 itself.
Rather than functioning like a typical club series focused on hype or spectacle, the project has steadily carved out its own atmosphere inside Tirana nightlife — one where music is treated as emotional communication first and club functionality second.
The organizers describe the night not as something measured in hours, but in feelings.
That philosophy is immediately reflected in both the music and the environment surrounding the event.
As warmer nights begin taking over the city, Kurim Muzikor 99 returns carrying the soft tension and emotional openness often associated with springtime dancefloors — moments where rhythm feels lighter, bodies move slower and intimacy naturally replaces pressure.
At Underground Agimi, that atmosphere becomes even stronger.
Over recent months, the venue has increasingly positioned itself as one of Tirana’s most consistent underground spaces, hosting nights rooted in deeper club culture rather than commercial nightlife formulas. Its stripped-back energy, close connection between crowd and selectors, and focus on sound over spectacle have made it an important meeting point for audiences searching for something more personal inside the city’s evolving electronic scene.
Nica2Cica and Leo fit naturally within that context.
Together, the two selectors approach music with a fluid and emotionally responsive style, balancing hypnotic rhythms, trance nostalgia, disco warmth and subtle late-night groove into long-form dancefloor narratives. Their selections tend to prioritize mood and emotional pacing over aggressive transitions or predictable club moments, allowing the room to gradually evolve together over the course of the night.
That slower emotional build has become one of Kurim Muzikor’s strongest qualities.
Instead of demanding constant intensity, the series creates space for listeners to fully sink into the atmosphere — to dance longer, think less and allow the music to quietly reshape the room.
The event’s visual identity captures that same mindset perfectly:
“Dress lightly. Dance longer. Leave the rest outside.”
It feels less like marketing and more like an invitation into a temporary emotional state disconnected from the outside world.
As Tirana’s electronic music landscape continues developing, nights like Kurim Muzikor 99 represent an increasingly important side of the city’s underground culture — spaces built not around trend cycles, but around emotional sincerity, musical openness and community-driven energy.
Following the main event, the experience continues with an afterparty accessible through direct booking.
On May 22, Underground Agimi once again becomes a place where music is felt first and understood later.
