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Published: Monday, 08 July 2024 at 11:22 AM


The audience begins to clap, gradually gathering speed in time with the pianists on stage. Willed on by the percussive accelerando, the duo zips through Zorba’s Dance, a piece by Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis that evokes ouzo-soaked taverns and hot summer nights. The dark-haired pianists, virtually identical in sunglasses and denim shorts, finish their own arrangement of Greece’s popular musical export with a flourish.

As the sun makes a lengthy retreat behind the tree-lined stage, musicians invite young audience members to try out some instruments. A child delights at blowing a clarinet mouthpiece, another tentatively presses piano keys. These guests have come from one of the refugee camps that remain on Lesbos, the Turkey-adjacent island that unwittingly became the centre of the 2015 migrant crisis.  

The sisters who co-created a musical festival in sun-soaked Greece

A short while later, the stage lights – and mosquito repellent – are out in full force. The pianists, Greek-German sisters Danae and Kiveli Dörken, are back. Alternating between Greek and English, the Dörkens welcome visitors to the Molyvos International Music Festival (MIMF), the event they established – along with their Lesbos-born mother Lito Dakou – in 2014.