Find more presales for shows in Fort Worth, TX
Show Afroman presales in more places
High Notes with Afroman
Born in California and seasoned in Mississippi, Afroman built a lane with story rap, sly jokes, and backyard-blues guitar. In the last few years, he announced a presidential run as an independent while doubling down on DIY shows and satire. Expect a tight party set that centers fan staples like Because I Got High, Crazy Rap (Colt 45), and Palmdale.
Two coasts in one voice
His delivery swings from sing-song hooks to quick deadpan lines, and he often grabs a guitar to lay bluesy strums over a rolling beat. The room usually fills with long-time radio-era fans, local hip-hop heads, and curious first timers, all grinning at punchlines and joining loud call-and-response.Small facts, big flavor
Early on, he sold homemade CDs hand to hand and saw Because I Got High spread online before radio caught up, and he still stretches songs live to riff about the city he is in. Note that any song picks and production touches mentioned here come from pattern-watching recent gigs, so the night may play out differently.The Scene: Jokes, Jackets, and Lowrider Nostalgia
Expect a mix of older fans who remember 2001 radio and younger faces who know the memes, trading nods more than wild movement.
What people wear and share
You will see throwback jerseys, Dickies and Chucks, bucket hats, and a lot of home-team caps, plus merch with bold cartoon fonts and Because I Got High punchlines. Friends practice the Crazy Rap (Colt 45) chorus in the lobby and then nail the call-and-response when the beat drops. Between songs, folks swap stories about first hearing Palmdale on burned CDs or in a friend's car, and they laugh when he freestyles local shout-outs.Rituals without the fuss
The energy is friendly and a little mischievous, more inside-joke hangout than high-gloss party, and most people come to sing, laugh, and zone into the bass. Even the merch line feels like a clubhouse, where fans compare favorite punchlines and point out the small guitar licks they caught in the mix. The culture around Afroman is casual, approachable, and rooted in stories, so the night reads like a reunion even if it's your first time.Groove Mechanics and the Band Behind Afroman
Afroman tends to ride mid-tempo beats where his voice can land right on the snare, letting jokes breathe before the next rhyme.
Music first, jokes second
When he brings a live band, the bassist holds warm, simple lines while the drummer keeps a dry, tight kick, and his guitar adds small blues bends that color the verses. With only a DJ, the parts get leaner, but he fills space by stretching hooks and talking to the crowd, then snapping back into time on the downbeat. He often flips Crazy Rap (Colt 45) into a longer call-and-response, and some nights reshapes Because I Got High with a lighter, almost reggae sway.Little choices that matter
You might catch him capoing up a fret or two to brighten the strum without changing the easy chord shapes, which keeps the tone cheerful while he tells tougher stories. Hooks favor simple two- or four-bar loops so the punchlines hit clean, and he will drop the instruments out for a beat to make a joke land. By the end, the set feels like a living-room jam pumped through club speakers, with the band orbiting his voice rather than crowding it.Fans of These Acts Will Click with Afroman
Fans of Devin the Dude will hear the same mellow, smoking-joke storytelling and easy pocket. Warren G brings that smooth G-funk bounce and clear hooks, which lines up with Afroman's laid-back grooves.