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Delicatoni, Le Feste Antonacci, Msaki and more bring fresh sounds to Linecheck on November 20

Where music breaks its own boundaries, new presences emerge. On November 20, our festival unites artists whose languages of sound, voice and performance dissolve boundaries between pop, jazz, experimentation and ritual.

A night where contrasts coexist: chaos and intimacy, poetry and rhythm, reflection and movement.

A Milan-based instrumental band formed in 2021, Camaleoni blend jazz fusion, funk and modern rock into a sound that’s both refined and fiercely energetic. Winners of JazzMi’s Jam the Future and fresh from their debut album Camadamia, they embody a new wave of Italian fusion: spontaneous, precise and alive.

Listen to their music.

Swiss duo Crème Solaire turn music into a multilingual performance art piece: a collision of trap, glitch, punk and pop wrapped in surreal energy. Vocalist Rebecca Solari and producer Pascal Stoll channel chaos into beauty, transforming every stage into an unpredictable, cathartic ritual.

Listen to their music.

Between soft jazz ballads, dreamy psych-pop and ecstatic dance, Delicatoni create music that feels both tender and euphoric. Their latest album Delicatronic pushes their sound into new electronic territories, expanding their dialogue between the organic and the digital.

At Linecheck, the band will welcome Coca Puma as a special guest for an exclusive live crafted for the festival.

Listen to their music.

Drummer, singer and bandleader, Evita Polidoro moves across post-rock, ambient and experimental jazz with instinctive precision. Her project Nerovivo transforms rhythm into narrative, merging force and fragility through intricate interplay and emotional power.

Listen to her music.

Based in Paris, Le Feste Antonacci rewrite Italian alt-pop with irony, sincerity and total creative freedom. Their debut UOMINI CANI GABBIANI (Panico Dischi, 2025) expands their sonic identity into new territories, somewhere between nostalgia, satire and melodic brilliance.

Listen to their music.

Born from the need to reclaim an endangered language, Mortòri brings the Ticino dialect into experimental pop. His music deconstructs the myth of romantic love with rare poetic intensity, turning linguistic fragility into raw artistic power.

Listen to his music.

South African artist Msaki merges sound, activism and visual art in multidisciplinary performances. Her voice, both tender and commanding, weaves together themes of identity, memory and collective healing, where music becomes protest and poetry at once.

Listen to her music.