Aitana dazzles in Valencia with a high precision technical concert

Published on May 23, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Catalan singer Aitana delivered an impeccable show last night before 16,000 people at the Roig Arena in Valencia, as part of her tour. The concert, the first of two consecutive nights in the city, was described as a more than competent show, where the artist demonstrated her talent and ability to connect with the audience. With a carefully staged production and total commitment, she managed to captivate the attendees.

Aitana at the center of a futuristic illuminated stage, microphone in hand while singing with total commitment, 16,000 attendees standing at the Roig Arena in Valencia, synchronized laser beams cutting through stage smoke, giant LED screens showing real-time graphics, visible digital mixing console and monitor wedges in the technical pit, sound engineers adjusting faders during the performance, night concert photography, photorealistic, high technical precision, warm and cool contrasting lights, vibrant crowd with raised arms, electrifying atmosphere

Sound and lighting engineering as the foundation of the show 🎛️

The technical deployment at the Roig Arena included an L-Acoustics K2 sound system with 48 modules, designed to cover the venue's irregular acoustics. The lighting was handled by 200 Robe BMFL moving heads, synchronized via an MA Lighting grandMA3 console. This setup allowed for smooth transitions between ballads and pop songs, avoiding saturation at volume peaks. The control network latency remained below 2 milliseconds, a detail appreciated by the local technicians.

Where even autotune asks for a gala dinner 🎤

Aitana sang live, although some fans suspect her perfect pitch is due to a pact with the devil or, worse yet, an Antares plugin with a perpetual license. The truth is that not even the noise of a row of fans asking for photos managed to throw the show off key. Even the sound engineer, who usually sweats bullets over the monitors, enjoyed a relaxed coffee. If tonight's second concert fails, we'll know who to blame: the venue's wifi.