Welcome! If you've come for access to
Molotov 30 Anniversary Txxxr presale codes (used for early ticket purchases) scroll for the list of events, tap one and see what is available or coming soon! Our site only provides official verified, current and future Molotov 30 Anniversary Txxxr presale passwords.
There are 3 upcoming presales! To get notified when new presale tickets are added scroll down and locate the performance you are looking for.

Right now there are presales for Molotov 30 Anniversary Txxxr with events scheduled in
New York City, NY
Find more presales for shows in New York City, NY
Show Molotov 30 Anniversary Txxxr presales in more places
Find more presales for shows in New York City, NY
Show Molotov 30 Anniversary Txxxr presales in more places
Lighting the Fuse with Molotov
For 30 years, Molotov from Mexico City have mixed rap, punk, and hard rock with street-level humor and protest bite.
Thirty years of protest hooks
The anniversary frame is the story: the same four members still swap bass, guitars, and drums, and the catalog now reads like a civic playlist.What you will likely hear
Expect bilingual hooks and fast gear changes, with likely highlights like Gimme Tha Power, Frijolero, Voto Latino, and a fierce encore of Puto. Crowds tend to be two or three generations deep, with students, veteran rock en espanol fans, and locals from Mexican and Latin diaspora corners mixing at the rail. A neat quirk: the band often rotates instruments mid-set, which changes the attack on riffs and keeps the rhythms jumpy. Another bit: the title of debut Donde Jugaran las Ninas parodied a pop classic and sparked retail bans that pushed the band to do street shows early on. You might also catch quick nods to golden-age hip-hop intros or a clipped cumbia groove between songs when they reset levels. To be clear, details on songs and staging here are our read on recent patterns and the 30-year theme, not locked facts.The Molotov Scene: Shirts, Chants, and Shared Memory
The scene around a Molotov show leans practical and loud: soccer jerseys, beat-up Vans, workwear, and vintage tees from 90s rock en espanol.
What the room looks like
You will see flags from Mexico and Central America, plus homemade signs quoting punchlines and protest bars.Rituals and keepsakes
Chant moments pop on the big hooks, with terrace-style whoa-ohs on Gimme Tha Power and a collective bounce during Voto Latino. People swap stories about first hearing the band on censored radio or taped CDs, and the mood flips between jokes and serious talk about today. Merch skews bold and satirical, with parody logos, throwback fonts, and anniversary prints that nod to Donde Jugaran las Ninas. Expect a mix of pit energy up front and a steady groove in back, with most folks staying locked in through the encores. After the house lights, many stick around comparing setlist notes, trading stickers, and planning the next time Molotov come through.How Molotov Make It Hit Live
Live, Molotov ride a thick bass-and-kick pocket, with guitars cutting in blocks that answer the rap cadences.
Punch, pocket, and pace
Vocals slide from spit-fire verses to shouted group hooks, and the quick handoffs keep breath and pacing tight.Details that matter
Arrangements often trim intros so choruses hit faster, then stretch breakdowns so the room can chant before the last push. The band swaps instruments, which subtly shifts tone colors; a different right hand on bass can make the same riff feel more percussive. You may hear a lo-fi mic or megaphone color on Frijolero to echo the record, along with a fuzzed bass that thickens the low end. A small but real habit: they sometimes drop keys a half-step live so the crowd can belt without strain and the riffs sound heavier. Lights tend to flash in bold blocks to match the stop-start hits, but the mix leaves space for lyrics to cut through.If You Like This, You Likely Ride With Molotov
Fans of Rage Against the Machine will recognize the riff-first protest stance and the chant-ready callouts that Molotov push in both languages.