Songkran in Pattaya brings chaos, water, and packed streets. In the middle of it, one night cuts through the noise.
At BOHO Cocktail Club, Nakadia returns for her last Thailand show of the season. This is not a routine booking. It feels like a closing chapter before she heads back into her global circuit.

Nakadia’s story is not typical. She grew up in a small village in Thailand, far from clubs and electronic music culture. Her entry into the scene came later, driven by curiosity and obsession rather than connections. Once she found techno, she committed fully. Long hours of practice turned into small gigs. Small gigs turned into international bookings.
Today, she is based in Berlin, one of the world’s most demanding electronic music cities. That environment shaped her sound. It stripped away anything unnecessary. What remains is direct and physical. Driving techno. Deep, hypnotic grooves. Sets built for dancers who stay for hours, not minutes.
Her numbers tell part of the story. More than 2,000 shows across over 90 countries. Regular appearances in Europe and Asia. Clubs in Ibiza. Underground venues in Berlin. Rooftop events and dark rooms alike. The settings change, but her approach stays consistent. No gimmicks. No chasing trends. She plays for the floor.
That is why this night at BOHO matters.
BOHO has positioned itself as a house and techno venue in Pattaya with a clear identity. It avoids mainstream playlists and focuses on underground energy. The room is tight. The crowd comes to move. During Songkran, when the city fills with visitors and distractions, that focus becomes rare.
Nakadia fits that environment. Her sets build gradually. She controls pace and tension. Early layers pull people in. Mid-set grooves lock the room. Late moments hit harder when only the committed dancers remain.
Support comes from Kristina Poga, Fox Little Beat, and Ton, setting the tone before the headlining set takes over. Expect a smooth progression rather than abrupt shifts.
The timing also adds weight. This is her final Thailand appearance this season. There is no follow-up date in Pattaya after this. For fans in the region, this is the moment to catch her before she returns to Europe’s circuit.
The night starts at 8 PM and runs late. During Songkran, early arrival matters. The room fills fast, and the energy builds quickly. Those who stay until the end usually get the strongest part of the set.
If you are in Pattaya for Songkran and want one night centred on music rather than spectacle, this is the one to choose.




