In Loving Memory Of Sergio Ricciardone / C2C Festival 2025

Report from the Turin-based experimental electronic music festival

The long-awaited annual edition of C2C has just come to an end. Marked by bittersweet memories of its late founder, Sergio Ricciardone, and performances that electrified both body and mind, the festival once again proved why it remains the most anticipated event in the Italian music scene. Also a collective moment of rememberance & a tribute to a figure whose absence is deeply felt, yet whose influence continues to resonate with unmistakable force.

Reading the press release issued after the C2C Festival, the conclusion that can be drawn is quite easy: the Turin festival, which has just wrapped up its 23rd edition, breaks records every year. 2025 saw a total attendance of 42,000, spread over four intense days of music, talks, and various side events.

These are very important figures, especially for the organizers of Italy’s largest indoor festival. But these numbers do not do justice to what C2C really is. Crossing the threshold of the monumental halls of the Lingotto, which seem to have been carved out of solid rock like those of a Tolkienian dwarf kingdom, triggers an adrenaline rush that the passing of time cannot diminish.

However, this year, that sense of excitement was mixed with an initial feeling of melancholy. ‘Per Aspera ad Astra’ is the name chosen for the 2025 edition, a tribute to Sergio Ricciardone, founder and artistic director of the festival who died in March after a swift and cruel illness that suddenly left the world of avantgarde music without one of its greatest figures. This was the initial fear: that the festival would be more of a mourning than a celebration.

Well, shame on those like me who had this doubt. For starters, it was one of the first times I clearly enjoyed myself at the OGR. The first day of the festival historically takes place not at the Lingotto, but in a venue that shares its industrial past: the Officine Grandi Riparazioni. Here, on Thursday evening, an evening of pure avant-pop entertainment unfolded before our eyes (this is the expression Sergio liked to use to define the ontological nature of the festival itself).

The surgical precision of YHWH Nailgun’s math rock contrasted with the total chaos of their singer, the exquisite class of Jenny Hval, and Kelman Duran’s epic DJ set (completely detached from time and rhythmic structures): all this kicked off four days of perfect harmony.

Yes, because the following day, which for some years now has coincided with Halloween night, was a much bigger, more polished version of the previous one, finally in its natural habitat at the Lingotto. In the 15 years I’ve been going, I’ve never seen a main stage overflowing with people at 7:40 PM, first to watch the hypnotic live performance of Ali Sethi and Nicholas Jaar (whose sinuous bolero is reminiscent of an Arabic version of what Lucrecia Dalt does) and then the total deconstruction of song form with IOSONOUNCANE featuring Daniela Pes.

The gigantic sound system of the Stone Island Stage was confirmed again this year, with an upgrade that allows for better enjoyment by the audience. While Blood Orange left the main stage speechless by playing every possible instrument for his new “Essex Honey,” on the other side, Djrum showed that all you need is a couple of turntables and a mixer to achieve a similar output. Provided, of course, that the person behind the DJ booth is a virtuoso of the kind that comes along once in a century. Friday ended on a high note with the legendary set by DJ Python and his terrifying USB stick, which, incidentally, fell out of his pocket backstage while we were talking. Luckily, I noticed it. Pure swag.

It was Saturday, however, that made the difference. After a much slower start due to the collective hangover from the previous evening, an even more intense euphoria than the day before was immediately triggered. Kudos to artistic director Guido Savini, who cleverly chose specifically adrenaline-fueled and uplifting acts, such as Model/Actriz, Ecco2k, and AG Cook, who instantly wiped away any lingering lethargy with an injection of dopamine. John Maus was then the climax of this muscular rebirth: an hour of thrashing and writhing on stage to the beat of his new wave beats, which left the American musician completely soaked in sweat amid the applause of the crowd at the Stone Island stage. I will always remember the artist’s wife, who, putting a jacket over his wet and exhausted shirt, looked at him with apprehension mixed with disapproval, as if to say, “Maybe you could have avoided those final burpees.” Lol.

Saturday added even more pathos to the closing, with a Rossinian crescendo that started with Floating Points, passed through Four Tet, and concluded triumphantly with a surprise set by Kode9. For those who were there, the Young Records showcase on Sunday was the real finale of the festival, with Smerz embodying everything that the words “loudness” and “fierce” mean.

Thinking back on the lasers, the smiles on the audience’s faces, the major upgrades to the moving lights on the main stage, the total absence of queues thanks to a highly effective wristband recharging system using cell phones—in short, all the little things that make a festival great—I feel a little stupid. Stupid because after all these years of friendship with Sergio, always trying to interpret his fascinating gaze to predict his next move, I made the mistake for a moment of believing that his death could change the C2C Festival. Not that it could get worse, but that the subtle crack created in my ego at the time of his passing could somehow widen, edition after edition. Now I know that the opposite is true, and that it is precisely during those first four days of November that I can finally reunite with a person I miss and will miss all year round, except during C2C Festival.

In Loving Memory Of Sergio Ricciardone / C2C Festival 2025

Credits:

Event: C2C Festival / @clubtoclub
Words: Claudio Biazzetti / @claudiobiuz
Editor: Anca Macavei / @ancamacavei

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