10/05/2026
As Rocka Rolla Events turns 20 years old today, I’ve been reflecting on the journey that brought us here…
20 Years of Rocka Rolla Events. What a ride it’s been.
From empty venues and uncertain nights to packed shows and unforgettable memories… this journey has tested every part of me. There were nights filled with doubt, moments that broke me, and phases where nothing seemed to go right. Times when giving up felt like the easier choice. But somehow, through all the chaos and struggle, the music never let me walk away.
Every setback shaped me. Every failure taught me something. And every small win reminded me why I started in the first place.
Through every high and every fall, there were people who stood strong beside me musicians who trusted the vision, promoters who took chances, sponsors who believed in the madness, and well-wishers who kept the fire alive when it was almost fading. This journey was never mine alone. It belongs to every single one of you who showed up, supported, and believed. I owe you more than words can ever express.
There were years when it felt like we were pushing against a wall… trying to build something in a space that didn’t fully exist yet. But I held on. I kept going. Because I believed — truly believed that the music scene would grow. That it would become bigger, louder, and impossible to ignore.
And today, standing here after 20 years… I can finally say we’re close.
Closer than we’ve ever been. Closer to something I’ve been dreaming about all my life. Something powerful. Something game-changing. Something really BIG
What makes this even more emotional for me is realizing that my journey in music actually began more than three decades ago. I organized my very first gig back in 1992 long before Rocka Rolla Events was even born. Back then, there were no big platforms, no roadmap, no guarantees… just pure passion, madness, and an unstoppable love for music.
From those early days in ninities to building Rocka Rolla into what it is today, I’ve given my heart, soul, time, energy, and life to this scene. I’ve watched generations of musicians rise, audiences grow, and a culture slowly find its voice. And even after all these year