Welcome to Apropos’ love letter to Wonderfestiwall on Bornholm 2025. A festival where sea, sky, ruins and green hills melt into a stage that feels almost too magical to be real. This isn’t about being the biggest, the fastest or the wildest. It’s about doing things properly — the Bornholm way. So yes, we love Wonder. And here’s what you absolutely shouldn’t miss:
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Disclaimer: Apropos Magazine received access or a review copy. As always, we share our own impressions — unfiltered.
Six stars
Anastacia – Power pop, sunglasses and guilty pleasures without the guilt
Anastacia is playing Wonder, and somehow it just feels right. There will be fists in the air for I’m Outta Love, dancing along to Left Outside Alone, and letting go in that way you only can when you’re standing on Bornholm, surrounded by sea views and draft beer in plastic cups. It’s going to be huge, it’s going to be gloriously silly, and it’s going to be 100% free of ironic distance.

Medina – Pop queen on home turf
Medina isn’t just an artist. She’s a feeling. When she steps onto the Wonder stage, it becomes everything best about Danish pop gathered in one place: from the early Kun for mig vibes to the newer, more reflective ballads. We’re expecting both tears at the corner of the eye and plenty of singalong magic under the starry sky.

D-A-D – Your mom’s favorite rockers (and your friends’ too)
D-A-D is the kind of band that really shouldn’t still be going — and yet somehow, they just keep going. They’ve got guitars, they’ve got energy, and they’ve got Sleeping My Day Away ready to go like a gift box that explodes into a singalong. A concert where it suddenly feels completely natural to air-guitar with 3,000 other people in the middle of a green fairytale.

Lamin – The voice of a new generation
Lamin is one of the strongest young voices in Danish hip-hop right now. He brings the city to Bornholm, but in a way that still feels like something you can dance to in rubber boots. His lyrics have edge and warmth, and we’re expecting a concert that hits hard, lands deep — and brings people together.

Hugorm – Rock’n’roll on Bornholm battery power
There’s something about Hugorm that doesn’t ask for permission. They just show up and make noise — as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Simon Kvamm has put the Nephew colours back in the drawer and pulled out something rougher, something that sounds like basements, fists and old amplifiers with brand-new sparks flying off them. At Wonder, you can expect a concert that tumbles along with both self-irony and noise. It’s the kind of rock your mother hates, and the kind you thought you’d outgrown — until you’re standing right in the middle of it, shouting along as if you were 17 again and had your whole life ahead of you.

Peter Sommer – Poetic on the edge of the cliff
Peter Sommer is a master at making a few words feel like entire novels. He’s playing Wonder with his whole vulnerable, crooked, shimmering catalogue of songs that do something special when they’re allowed to drift out over the sea. It will be intimate, it will be poetic, and it will be the kind of thing you can’t quite explain afterwards — only feel.











