Charlotte de Witte — Tomorrowland 2022 Mainstage Closing Set (Full)
The official recording of Charlotte de Witte's historic closing performance. Streamed live on One World Radio and the Tomorrowland YouTube channel.
Mainstage Closing Set · Friday July 29, 2022 · De Schorre, Boom, Belgium
July 29, 2022 — a night that rewrote the history books
On Friday, July 29, 2022, as the clock struck 11 PM in Boom, Belgium, Charlotte de Witte stepped up to the decks of the Tomorrowland mainstage and did something no woman had ever done in the festival's 16-year history: she closed the show. This was not a secondary stage, not a warm-up slot, not a compromise booking. This was the slot — the final performance on the biggest stage at the biggest electronic music festival on Earth.
For context, the Tomorrowland mainstage closing slot is the single most coveted performance position in the entire electronic music calendar. Previous closers read like a hall of fame: Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike, David Guetta, Martin Garrix, Tiësto. These are artists who command audiences of 100,000+ and whose sets are broadcast to millions via live streams. The closing slot is the culmination of the entire festival day — the grand finale, the moment when production peaks, confetti cannons fire, and the crowd reaches its emotional crescendo.
That Charlotte de Witte was given this slot was already historic. That she played uncompromising, pounding techno — not the euphoric big-room EDM that typically dominates mainstage closings — made it revolutionary. She did not soften her sound. She did not play to the expected formula. She brought the full, unapologetic weight of her KNTXT-branded acid techno to 70,000 people, and they roared.
The set took place during Weekend 2 of Tomorrowland 2022, themed "The Reflection of Love." The mainstage that year was an elaborate, fantastical construction featuring towering mythical figures, cascading waterfalls of light, and an immense LED screen array. Against this backdrop of theatrical grandeur, Charlotte delivered a relentless onslaught of dark, driving techno — a striking contrast that only amplified the power of the moment.
The performance was streamed live to a global audience on One World Radio and YouTube, with hundreds of thousands watching in real time. Social media erupted. The electronic music community recognized instantly that they were witnessing something that would be talked about for years to come. This was not just a DJ set; it was a cultural moment.
90 minutes of relentless techno that shook Boom, Belgium
The official recording of Charlotte de Witte's historic closing performance. Streamed live on One World Radio and the Tomorrowland YouTube channel.
A thunderous opener that set the tone immediately. Pounding kicks and distorted acid lines announced to 70,000 people that this was going to be a techno closing — no compromises.
One of Charlotte's signature anthems. The crowd erupted as the unmistakable acid synth line cut through the night air. A peak-time weapon that never fails to ignite a dancefloor.
A devastating acid techno cut from French producer AIROD that fit perfectly into the relentless energy Charlotte was building. Raw, hypnotic, and absolutely punishing.
A collaboration with her partner Enrico Sangiuliano that felt deeply symbolic given the festival's "Reflection of Love" theme. Massive, euphoric techno that bridged underground grit with festival-scale grandeur.
Charlotte's most iconic production. The hypnotic, spiraling acid line of "Doppler" is one of the most recognizable sounds in modern techno. A moment of pure collective euphoria on the mainstage.
Dark, atmospheric, and brooding. "Mercury" brought a moment of tension before the set climbed again, its heavy bassline reverberating across De Schorre's open-air amphitheater.
A relentless driving force that kept the energy locked in. The track's industrial textures and unyielding rhythm embodied the raw power Charlotte is known for.
A hard-hitting techno bomb from the KNTXT catalog. Precision-engineered for moments exactly like this — tens of thousands of people locked into a collective trance under the Belgian night sky.
The penultimate track. "Weltschmerz" — a German word meaning "world-weariness" — delivered a philosophical weight to the set's final stretch, its deep, pulsing energy building toward the climax.
The final track. As confetti rained down and the mainstage production reached its zenith, "Trip" brought the historic evening to its conclusion. Charlotte de Witte raised her fist to the sky. The crowd roared. History was made.
How one set changed the conversation about women in techno
For 16 years, the Tomorrowland mainstage closing slot was exclusively held by male DJs. Charlotte de Witte's 2022 closing shattered that pattern. It proved definitively that a woman could command the biggest stage at the biggest festival with uncompromising underground music. The booking was not a token gesture — Charlotte had earned it through years of relentless touring, critically acclaimed productions, and a rapidly growing global fanbase.
Beyond the gender milestone, this set was also significant for what it represented musically. The Tomorrowland mainstage has historically been dominated by big-room EDM, progressive house, and crowd-pleasing anthems. Charlotte brought raw, unfiltered techno — acid lines, industrial textures, pounding kick drums — to an audience of tens of thousands. It challenged assumptions about what "mainstage music" could be and opened the door for more underground sounds at the festival's highest-profile slots.
The set generated massive media attention beyond the usual electronic music press. Mainstream outlets covered the historic achievement, bringing visibility not only to Charlotte de Witte but to the broader conversation about gender representation in DJ culture. The performance trended on social media, with fellow DJs, fans, and industry figures sharing their reactions and celebrating the milestone.
In the years following this set, there has been a noticeable shift in festival programming. More female and non-binary artists have been booked in prime slots at major festivals worldwide. While the industry still has a long way to go, Charlotte de Witte's Tomorrowland 2022 closing is widely cited as a turning point — a moment that demonstrated the commercial viability and artistic power of diverse headliners in electronic music.
The queen of techno — from Ghent's underground to global domination
Charlotte de Witte (born July 21, 1992, in Ghent, Belgium) is one of the most influential and celebrated techno DJs and producers in the world. She began her career under the alias Raving George, winning Tomorrowland's DJ contest in 2012 and gaining early exposure. By 2015, she had transitioned to performing under her real name, fully committing to a darker, harder techno sound.
Her breakthrough at Awakenings 2018 in Amsterdam put her on the global map, and she has since headlined virtually every major electronic music festival and club on the planet — from Tomorrowland and Time Warp to Berghain and DC-10 Ibiza.
In 2019, she launched KNTXT, her own record label and event brand, which has become one of the most respected techno imprints in the world. Her signature tracks include "Doppler," "Rave On," and "Overdrive," which exemplify her acid-tinged, dark techno style.
Charlotte is in a relationship with Italian techno DJ Enrico Sangiuliano, and their collaborations have produced some of the most talked-about techno productions in recent years.
Everything you want to know about Charlotte de Witte's Tomorrowland 2022 closing set