At Botanique’s Orangerie, INJI didn’t just play a concert — she turned the room into a party. The Turkish-born pop artist from Istanbul brought her high-energy, joy-saturated club pop to Brussels, carried by a stage presence that felt impossible to stand still for.
The setting suited her perfectly. The show had the pulse and immediacy of a night out in a club, and the Orangerie proved to be the ideal space for that kind of shared release: intimate enough to feel close, yet open enough to let the beat bounce through the crowd.
A pop artist built for movement
INJI, born İnci Gürün in Istanbul in 2001, has quickly made a name for herself with a playful, hyper-kinetic sound that sits somewhere between pop, dance and internet-born euphoria. Her music has already taken her to major festival stages including Lollapalooza Paris, Osheaga and Outside Lands, and Botanique’s listing places her in the orbit of artists like Ke$ha, Zara Larsson and Kim Petras.
That comparison makes sense: INJI writes songs that feel designed for collective release, with sharp hooks and a joking, self-aware edge. Her set at Botanique leaned fully into that promise, delivering exactly the kind of joyful club pop that invites the audience to shout, dance and give themselves over to the moment.
A performer with contagious energy
What stood out most was her energy. INJI came across as a genuinely overcharged live artist, someone whose enthusiasm on stage quickly spread through the room and pulled everyone into the same rhythm. That communicative force is part of what makes her live identity feel larger than her relatively young discography.
Her background helps explain that control of performance: she studied classical piano and music theory at the Istanbul University State Conservatory from a young age before moving through different musical environments. That classical training sits underneath the glossy pop surface, giving the whole thing an extra layer of precision even when the result feels loose and unruly.
Brussels responded in kind
The crowd at Botanique clearly met her where she wanted them. The concert felt less like a formal showcase and more like a mutual exchange of energy, with the audience swept up by the sense that the night could just keep accelerating.
For a Brussels queer audience, that kind of pop performance lands especially well: playful, physical, slightly chaotic and unashamedly fun. INJI’s music does not ask for cool detachment — it asks for movement, and the Orangerie was ready to give it back.
Useful links
INJI’s official Botanique page is here, and the concert listing can be found here. For more music, her streaming profiles include Spotify.
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.
You may also like
-
Belgian Drag Monarch: Belgium Is Looking for Its Queen (or King, or Sovereign)
The Belgian drag scene has found itself a new throne. Produced by two alumni of
-
Circle Park and La Fabriek launch summer with a 16-hour day-to-night party in Anderlecht
Brussels’ south-western edge is getting a full-season lift-off on Saturday 25 April 2026, as Circle Park x
-
Nabou: Turning the Trombone into a Space of Freedom
Some jazz artists play within the tradition; others reshape it from the inside. Nabou Claerhout, the
-
Queer Screams turns horror into a queer cabaret at Les Riches-Claires
From 20 May to 5 June 2026, Les Riches-Claires hosts Queer Screams, a drag, circus and puppetry cabaret that
-
Family Triangle: a queer family story that questions what parenthood can be
At a time when queer parenthood remains entangled with law, tradition, and social expectations, Family Triangle arrives
