Welcome! If you've come for access to
moe. 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 moe. presale passwords.
There are 12 upcoming presales! To get notified when new presale tickets are added scroll down and locate the performance you are looking for.
Rebubula Roots with moe.
moe. came up in Buffalo in the early 90s, blending bar-band grit with elastic jams and sharp songcraft.
From Bars to Big Rooms
The big recent chapter is guitarist Chuck Garvey's 2021 stroke and measured return, which has reshaped dynamics and lent shows a grateful, patient edge.What the Night Might Sound Like
Expect a two-set night that favors long suites and hard turns, with anchors like Rebubula, Buster, and Akimbo showing up often. The room skews multigenerational, from college kids near the rail to longtime fans comparing scribbled set notes and eyeing tapers' mic trees by the board. You will notice calm focus during builds, then fast smiles and head-nods when a riff locks and the pocket fattens. A neat bit of lore: Jim Loughlin first drummed for the band, then returned as a percussion and MalletKAT wizard, opening new textures without crowding the guitars. Another nugget: the Warts and All series captures full shows with minimal edits, a window into how the band solves musical puzzles onstage. Treat the set and production notes here as informed hunches, since moe. is known to flip scripts night to night.The moe. Scene in Living Color
The scene blends vintage moe.down tees with flannels, patched caps, and beat-up sneakers made for long sets.
Wear Your Story
Around the soundboard, you will spot mic stands and fans comparing setlist scribbles, while the rail hosts dancers who ride every kick-drum push.Rituals Without the Fuss
Merch highlights include enamel pins, poster variants with deep-cut jokes, and small-run prints nodding to Upstate roots. Expect a good-natured "Chuck!" chant before solos and a raised-can singalong during Happy Hour Hero. People trade show histories in patient tones, swapping tales about first versions, segue hunts, and favorite Rebubula drops. It feels like a traveling clubhouse where respect for the music leads, and the social part follows as a steady hum between songs.How moe. Builds the Climb
Vocals rotate between Rob Derhak, Al Schnier, and Chuck Garvey, so moods shift from rough-hewn to honeyed without losing bite.
Built on Interlocking Parts
The two guitars often split roles, one chipping out tight rhythm while the other climbs in singing lines, then they swap so the texture keeps breathing.Peaks That Earn Their Punch
Rob's bass usually rides a pick for extra attack, which snaps the groove forward and gives the drums room to swagger or sprint. Arrangements favor long arcs where a small riff grows into a theme, gets deconstructed, and returns as a cheer-worthy tag. A subtle habit worth watching is the drop-to-a-whisper move, where the band resets the key feel via bass hints and rebuilds the hook from a new angle. Jim Loughlin's MalletKAT and hand percussion add bell-like tops and sampled thumps that cue transitions without stepping on the string parts. Visuals tend toward saturated color washes that swell with the music, saving the brightest looks for the final peaks or encore punches.If You Ride with moe., These Bands Fit Your Map
Fans of Phish often vibe with moe. because both balance playful detours with sturdy rock backbones.