French Montana rose from Casablanca-to-Bronx tapes to radio hits, while Max B shaped the city's wavy, half-sung style and spent years away from stages. That long pause is the backdrop here, making his presence the emotional center as the pair reconnect in public.
From the Bronx to the wave
Together they tap their
Coke Wave chemistry, balancing glossy hooks with loose, streetwise melodies. Expect anchor moments around
Pop That,
No Stylist, and
Shot Caller, with a nod to [Max B] classics like
Blow Me a Dub. The crowd skews tri-state and beyond, from mixtape diehards in vintage fitteds to younger fans curious about the wave, plus families repping Moroccan pride for [French Montana]. A bit of lore: [Max B] popularized the word wavy and often built hooks by humming a melody first, then adding words.
What this show might sound like
Another note: [French Montana] was born in Casablanca and speaks Arabic and French, which sometimes surfaces in his ad-libs and shout-outs. Details about songs and stage moves here are informed guesses from past sets rather than a locked script.
The Scene Around French Montana & Max B
Wavy uniforms, Bronx polish
The scene blends longtime mixtape heads with stream-era fans, all there for hooks, stories, and a shared New York pace. Yankees fitteds sit next to crisp runners and puffers, and you might spot a Moroccan flag or scarf saluting
French Montana's roots.
Rituals that carry the night
Between songs, Coke Boys calls bounce around, and many echo
Max B's drawn-out owww as a greeting more than a cheer. Merch trends favor bold type, chrome touches, and
Coke Wave throwbacks you can wear day to day. People swap favorite eras, rank
Harry Fraud joints, and compare borough lore without crowding each other. When a deep cut lands, phones dip, heads nod, and the floor moves like a block party with a better PA.
How French Montana & Max B Shape the Sound Live
Hooks first, then grit
French Montana leads with chant-ready hooks, laying lines clean and mid-range while his DJ and hype voice keep pockets full.
Max B slides between talk-singing and airy croons, letting ad-libs paint the edges and giving the grooves a lazy surf feel.
DJ flow, wave mood
Arrangements lean on a DJ at center with chesty 808s, and a live drummer may add snap for drops and outros. They often cut the beat for half a chorus so the room can carry it, then slam it back in to lift the energy without rushing. On older tape favorites, you'll sometimes hear the instrumental a touch slower live so the hooks feel wider and more human. Listen for
Harry Fraud textures and noir keys in transitions, with cool-blue lighting and ripple visuals echoing the wave idea.
Kindred Acts for French Montana & Max B Fans
Kindred energy, different zip codes
Fans here often cross with
Jim Jones, thanks to shared Harlem and Bronx roots, street anthems, and the historic ties between him and
Max B.
Wiz Khalifa hits the same laid-back, hook-heavy lane, drawing crowds that like a floaty vibe over hard drums.
A Boogie wit da Hoodie brings a newer NYC melody-first angle that mirrors
French Montana's radio instincts while keeping neighborhood grit. If you want lush beats and boss talk delivered with poise,
Rick Ross lives in that world, and his live polish suits this audience. For the hook-forward side of the night,
Swae Lee collaborations with
French Montana set a template even when he is not onstage.