Maliq & D'Essentials Share Experience After Traveling To Five Cities
JAKARTA - Maliq & D Essentials (MAD) has reached the end of the series of album tours for Can Machines Fall In Love?. After visiting Makassar, Bali, Surabaya, Yogyakarta, and Bandung, they only have one show left in Kuala Lumpur on December 29.
Sarah Deshita, co-founder of Jagjag Studio as the promoter, said that performances in Surabaya and Yogyakarta had their own impressions.
In my opinion, Surabaya is interesting because it is the only one indoor. We can play the best lighting there," said Sarah, through a press release received by VOI, Tuesday, December 3.
Meanwhile, the appearance in Yogyakarta became special because the audience who usually only watched the third single video clip on the stage screen had the opportunity to see the cast firsthand. Angga Yunanda performed the song "So This" with MAD in Jogja.
"Prambanan is memorable because she really wants to make an event next to the temple," continued Sarah.
This album tour not only features MAD personnel, but supporting musicians who make the show even more perfect. They are Kamga, Menuk, and Meilita who fill the backing vocals, Rejoz on percussion, Jordy on therumpet, and Ivan on the synthesizer.
Bandung as the last city they visited in Indonesia, presented a romantic atmosphere. Heavy rain did not prevent the audience from attending until the concert ended.
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The feeling between emotion, happiness, tension, is still attacking. We first brought this big concept to the regions. Haru to loyal MALIQ audiences so far, as well as internally who have given 200% effort so that this goes smoothly," said Widi.
The frontman felt a lot of lessons from the implementation of this album tour. He really hopes that his trip to re-introducing his band can stop by other cities in Indonesia.
"We try five cities first, the actual scale is quite large. Next what concept can be, without reducing the soul," said Widi.
It is mandatory for MALIQ to be able to give MALIQ another introduction to everyone in Indonesia. Gen Z considers many MALIQs a new band. They don't know "Untitled" the first or second album. We have to get acquainted again. We don't want to "We make romance bigger than the band," he concluded.