In a music scene that still too often rewards visibility unevenly, Loud Ladies Belgium stands out as a necessary force. The collective exists to represent, empower, and unite female DJs in Belgium, while strengthening their presence across clubs, festivals, and the wider music industry. You can explore the project on its official website here and on VI.BE.
What makes Loud Ladies so important is that it is not just about visibility in a symbolic sense. The initiative is practical, collective, and built around real structural change, including a five-point charter designed to push venues, festivals, and event organisers toward a fairer scene. This is not branding without substance; it is a concrete attempt to reshape the conditions in which women and queer artists work, perform, and grow.
A Brussels Pride initiative
One of the most exciting dimensions of the project is the call Loud Ladies x Brussels Rainbow Village @ Brussels Pride. The initiative, hosted on VI.BE, invites DJs to submit a one-hour mix for the chance to win a one-hour set at Brussels Pride, along with a fee and drink vouchers. It explicitly encourages applications from women, non-binary, and LGBTQIA+ artists, which makes it a particularly meaningful queer initiative within Brussels’ Pride ecosystem.

That connection feels especially timely in 2026, as Brussels Pride celebrates its 30th anniversary and continues to frame Pride as both a celebration and a political moment. The City of Brussels also confirms that the Pride Village and March will take place on Saturday 16 May 2026, making this a particularly visible year for community-led cultural action.
For KET, this is exactly the kind of initiative that deserves the spotlight. It brings together music, queer visibility, and public participation in a way that feels alive rather than decorative. Loud Ladies is not simply asking for space; it is actively creating it, while placing emerging artists at the centre of a larger community moment.
Why it matters
There is something deeply resonant about a collective that works at the intersection of gender equality and nightlife culture. Loud Ladies’ own platforms make clear that the project is about listening to female DJs, learning from their experiences, and building toward a genuinely fairer scene. That matters in Belgium, where music spaces still too often reproduce the same old hierarchies, especially behind the decks and in booking decisions.
The Brussels Pride collaboration gives that work even more meaning. Pride is at its strongest when it connects celebration with community building, and when it creates opportunities for artists and organisers to shape the city’s queer future together. Loud Ladies fits naturally into that vision: loud, grounded, ambitious, and unapologetically committed to changing the scene from the inside.
A scene with more voices
What Loud Ladies Belgium offers is not just representation, but momentum. It reminds us that nightlife can be a site of culture, solidarity, and political imagination, not just consumption. In Brussels — a city already rich with queer energy, activist history, and multilingual cultural exchange — that kind of initiative feels especially necessary.
And perhaps that is the most important thing: Loud Ladies is making space for more people to be heard, seen, and booked. In a music world still too often built around the same familiar names, that is not a small gesture. It is a necessary one.
KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers based in Brussels. Get in touch to share your thoughts or tell us about your activities. You can also promote your events on our website or support our work with a donation. Contact us at Info@ket.brussels.

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