Casablanca — Jazzablanca turns toward a more electric and groove-heavy mood tonight, bringing brass-driven techno, contemporary pop, jazz fusion, and Moroccan urban energy to Casablanca.

The Monday, July 6 lineup brings MEUTE and Danyl to Scène Casa Anfa, while daoud and Nubiyan Twist take over Scène 21 at Anfa Park. At the Parc de la Ligue Arabe, Gaouta carries the festival’s public stage into a more contemporary lane.

A night built for movement

After an opening weekend that moved from Robbie Williams’ pop spectacle to Scorpions’ classic rock storm, tonight’s program gives Jazzablanca a different pulse.

MEUTE, the German techno marching band, brings one of the night’s most unusual live formats. The group’s sound turns club energy into a brass-and-percussion experience, making the stage feel closer to a moving street party than a traditional concert.

Danyl adds another current to the main stage, bringing a contemporary sound shaped by pop, North African influence, and modern production. His presence keeps the night connected to younger audiences and to the kind of hybrid musical language that increasingly defines live festivals.

Jazzablanca’s Scène 21 leans into fusion

Scène 21 keeps the festival’s jazz identity alive through daoud and Nubiyan Twist. daoud, listed as a jazz artist for tonight, brings trumpet-led energy and a taste for contrast, moving between softness, chaos, and groove.

Nubiyan Twist adds a wider fusion sound, blending jazz, soul, Afrobeat, and dance-driven arrangements. Their place on Scène 21 makes sense within a night that seems designed around rhythm first, but without losing musical depth.

Together, daoud and Nubiyan Twist give the evening its more exploratory side. Their sets are likely to appeal to audiences looking beyond headline spectacle and into the musicianship that has long anchored Jazzablanca’s identity.

Gaouta brings the public stage into the night

At the Parc de la Ligue Arabe, Gaouta continues the festival’s free city-stage program, keeping Jazzablanca present outside Anfa Park. The public stage has become one of the festival’s most important spaces, giving Casablanca audiences a way into the event without turning the full experience into a closed-ticket circuit.

Tonight’s lineup may not carry the same nostalgia as Scorpions or the same pop familiarity as Robbie Williams, Faouzia, and Naïka but it offers something just as central to Jazzablanca’s spirit: movement, discovery, and risk.

With MEUTE, Danyl, daoud, Nubiyan Twist, and Gaouta, Jazzablanca’s Monday night feels built for a city still carrying the energy of the weekend but ready for a new sound. It is a reminder that the festival’s strength is not only in big names, but in the way it lets Casablanca move between genres, stages, and generations.