top of page

Locos Por La Musica

  • Dec 4, 2025
  • 2 min read

Valencia is about to crack open its calendar, fall backwards through time, and slam head-first into the soundtrack of its youth. Locos por la Música rolls into town on Saturday, December 13, and this year the festival isn’t just returning—it’s evolving, mutating, supersizing. After its 2019 debut at La Fonteta, the organizers clearly decided nostalgia needed more horsepower. So for its second Valencia edition, they’re unleashing it inside the mighty Roig Arena, the city’s newest, loudest, most futuristic live-music beast.

And they’re coming armed with seven straight hours of Spanish pop-rock royalty—no filler, no downtime, no mercy.


From 5 p.m., the Roig Arena becomes a nostalgia pressure cooker. One by one, the heavyweights march out:

  • Revolver, with their eternal guitar-driven pulse.

  • Seguridad Social, Valencia’s own kings of fiesta-rock.

  • Los Rebeldes, bringing that rockabilly swagger still sharp as a razor.

  • La Guardia, melodic storytellers of an entire generation.

  • Amistades Peligrosas, provocative, theatrical, unmistakable.

  • Girasoules, shooting joy like confetti from a cannon.

  • Rafa Sánchez, iconic voice, immortal presence.


It’s not a lineup—it’s a living museum of the anthems that defined the 80s and 90s, stitched together into one marathon celebration. If you grew up with a cassette in your Walkman or a burned CD from your cousin, this night will feel like a homecoming.


Locos por la Música isn’t just another nostalgia fest. It’s a traveling cathedral for people who treat music like oxygen—fans who don’t just remember the past, they inhabit it. After selling out events in major cities across Spain, the festival has become the annual pilgrimage for those who want to dance with their memories and scream old lyrics like they’re brand-new.


Behind the curtain is Sena Productions, with sponsorship from Aena and Binter, and a proud partnership with Fundación Asindown, whose mission for real inclusion of people with Down syndrome and intellectual disabilities gives the festival a heartbeat underneath the amplifiers.


Moving the festival to Roig Arena is a power move. It’s bigger. It’s brighter. It’s built for events that don’t just want to entertain—they want to detonate. Picture thousands of voices singing “Chiquilla,” “Pero a tu lado,” “Sabor de amor,” “Devuélveme a mi chica”—a tidal wave of collective memory smashing into one perfectly acoustic bowl.

If you’re looking for a quiet Saturday, run. Hide. Leave town.But if you crave a seven-hour sprint through three decades of Spanish pop-rock history, this is your mothership.


On December 13, Valencia won’t just host a festival—it’ll hold a giant family reunion with every anthem you ever loved blaring at full volume. Expect tears. Expect dancing. Expect hoarse voices on Sunday morning. Locos por la Música isn’t a concert.It’s a multigenerational riot of joy. And Valencia? Valencia is ready.


For tickets and more information: Roig Arena



© 2026 Rhyan Paul. Documenting the decline of western civilisation since 1989.

bottom of page