After years of preparation, Various Voices Brussels 2026 finally kicks off today: delegations from across Europe and beyond are arriving to pick up their badges, volunteers are stepping into their roles, and the festival team is running on adrenaline and love. From 24 to 28 June, Brussels becomes a queer soundscape with 120 LGBTQI+ choirs and 4,000 singers spread across major venues and public spaces. For the city’s LGBTQIA+ community, this first day is the moment when long‑imagined solidarity, music and visibility start to take very real, very vocal shape.various-voices+2
Delegations Landing, Badges Printing, City Warming Up
Since early morning, coaches, trains and planes have been delivering choirs from 18 countries to Brussels: small ensembles and massive choirs, long‑time Various Voices veterans and groups joining for the first time. As the FAQ gently hinted, arriving around midday to collect your badge and delegate kit before the opening ceremony is key – and today that advice has turned into reality at the accreditation desks.ket+2
For months, Ket has been mapping these arrivals in articles like Queer Voices, One City: Meet the Choirs of Various Voices Brussels 2026, where we introduced some of the 120 choirs transforming Brussels into a queer choir capital. Seeing them step into town now – with flags, merch, inside jokes and mismatched luggage – is the live version of that story. Brussels is no longer waiting for Various Voices; it’s welcoming it.ket.
Volunteers Ready to Guide, Hold and Cheer
None of this would work without the volunteers. In recent weeks, calls for helpers have circulated widely, inviting people to assist with audience guidance, accessibility, logistics, artist care and more. Today, those volunteers put on their badges, T‑shirts and hi‑vis vests and start doing the quiet, crucial work of making the festival actually feel welcoming: pointing lost singers in the right direction, calming nerves, handling last‑minute changes.monasbl+1
Some will be at Bozar and City Hall, others in parks and streets, some at accreditation points, some backstage – often invisible, but at the core of what makes this festival a safer and smoother experience for queer communities of many languages, ages and bodies. In our piece Sing It Queer: Open Your Home (and Your City) to 4,000 LGBTQI+ Voices, we already highlighted the importance of local hospitality; today, it’s the volunteers’ turn to embody that same spirit across the city.brussels+2
A Huge Machine, Run by a Queer Team
After six years of work, the volunteer‑driven team behind Various Voices Brussels 2026 is finally pressing “play” on what is now the festival’s biggest edition. Rooted in Sing Out Brussels!, the organisation has navigated funding, partnerships, accessibility, artistic choices and endless logistics to bring this moment to life.facebook+3
In earlier Ket articles like From Choir Festival to Queer Utopia: Inside Various Voices Brussels 2026, we explored their ambition: not just to host concerts, but to turn Brussels into a temporary queer utopia where music, care and politics meet. Watching the team sprint between venues, accreditation desks and tech rehearsals today is a reminder that utopias are built by very real people, often exhausted, usually backstage, always essential.
Day One: Brussels Becomes a Queer Choir City
According to the festival FAQ, Various Voices officially starts at noon on Wednesday 24 June, and from there the programme of the day unfolds across different spaces in the city centre. Today’s focus is on welcoming choirs, setting up the first musical moments at Brussels City Hall, and building toward the Opening Ceremony at Bozar later in the day.various-voices+2
Throughout the afternoon, guided tours of City Hall include mini‑concerts in various rooms, offering an early glimpse of how choral music will inhabit civic spaces. Free performances in the Salle des Milices and other areas bring audiences close to the voices, in an informal setting that embodies the festival’s inclusive ethos. As evening approaches, Bozar prepares to host two Opening Ceremony shows where cabaret, choir and queer storytelling meet – the first big collective moment of the festival, and a taste of what Ket previously called in 5 Days, 1 Queer Capital “a city‑wide queer soundscape”.bruxelles+3
For full details of the day‑by‑day programme, including times and venues for each performance and event, check the official schedule on various-voices.be.various-voices
Today’s the Beginning, Not the Peak
Brussels has been preparing for this week for a long time – in policy, in partnerships, in rehearsal rooms and living rooms. As we wrote in Various Voices 2026: Brussels Prepares for Europe’s Biggest LGBTQI+ Choir Festival, the festival is about more than five dates on a calendar; it’s about how a city decides to hold queer voices loudly and publicly.singout+2
So if you’re around today, this is a beautiful moment to start listening: to the choirs picking up their badges in a mixture of stress and excitement, to volunteers rehearsing directions, to organisers catching their breath between two crises. The harmonies will get bigger over the next days – but the feeling that “it’s really happening” starts right now.
KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers and based in Brussels. You can find our other music and nightlife stories on ket.brussels, and you can always write to us to share your projects or pitch a story: info@ket.brussels
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