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“Para todos que cantaram até perder a voz. Para Edguy. Até o próximo monumento.” (“For everyone who sang until they lost their voice. For Edguy. Until the next monument.”)
But the Brazilians didn’t leave. They opened umbrellas and held them up like shields. During “Ministry of Saints,” lightning struck a transformer—killing the power for 45 seconds. The crowd kept singing the chorus a cappella . When the lights returned, Tobi knelt on stage, pretending to cry. “You just turned a disaster into a monument,” he whispered into the mic. That moment, captured by a fan’s shaky Flip camera, became the emotional center of Monuments . Edguy - Monuments- Live in Brazil 2004 -2017- -...
Brazil never just listened to Edguy. It lived them. From the sweaty, cramped clubs of São Paulo in 2004 to the roaring festival fields of Rock in Rio 2017, the country carved itself into the band’s history as a wild, untamable beast of passion. And somewhere, in the hard drives of die-hard fans and bootleggers, existed the myth of Monuments —a fan-assembled audio-visual time capsule spanning thirteen years of chaos, capes, and cachaça. “Para todos que cantaram até perder a voz
The setlist was a fan-voted monster: “Vain Glory Opera,” “King of Fools,” “Superheroes,” “The Piper Never Dies.” During the last song, “Avantasia” (yes, the Avantasia song, but Edguy played it as a tribute to themselves), Tobi stopped singing. He just held the mic out. The crowd sang every word—in perfect English, with a Portuguese accent. For Edguy