
Arizona Showed Up Early for Wooli at Rawhide
Something we learned right away is that when Wooli comes to the desert, you don’t stroll in late. Rawhide was already stacked early, with fans lining up for merch before the openers even had a chance to warm the system. By the time the sun dipped, the stage was primed for a full-scale bass riot.
Capocino Brought the Heat Early
Capocino came out swinging, flipping “Tipsy” into a filthy bass cut before running that Nate Dogg “Talk to Me Girl” remix. It felt like LA lowrider energy collided with the desert rave scene. Nothing but heaters, no filler to be found.
ProbCause Turned Rawhide Into a Rap Show

Chicago’s own ProbCause kept it unpredictable from the moment he stepped on stage. The anime visuals behind him gave the whole set an offbeat, colorful edge, while his raps cut sharp over booming basslines. He flipped “Feel Good Inc” into a crowd favorite that had people moving like they’d been waiting all week for it. When he dropped lines like “feeling good feeling lifted, turn the bass up” you could feel the energy spike through the pit.
At one point, the hook “we got the sound to rock your system” had both him and the entire crowd chanting it back and forth, turning Rawhide into one big echo chamber of hype. It was the kind of moment that sticks with you after the lights come up. And as if that wasn’t enough, he pulled out a brand-new collab with Griz, giving Arizona a first listen that left fans grinning and already talking about what’s next.
Autumnhate b2b Mad Dibs Got Reckless
Autumnhate and Mad Dibs rolled up looking like a UK mob in Peaky Blinders hats. Italian and British flags flashing on the visuals, they threw down a “Harlem Shake” drop that rattled the crowd into chaos. One of those sets where you just look around and laugh at how unhinged it feels.
Level Up Brought Party Mode to the Desert
Level Up’s set hit different. She cracked the crowd wide open with a “Party Rock Anthem” remix, then kept the pressure high with her Allveycat collab. A surprise “Since You’ve Been Gone” remix had thousands screaming word for word like it was emo night, not a bass show. And the “Chapel Roam Stop the Feeling” flip? Pure madness.
Wooli Closed Rawhide With Authority
Then Wooli hit the stage, and the energy instantly flipped from rowdy to electric. Nobody commands a crowd the way he does. The first few drops cracked open Rawhide like a thunderclap, and by the time his “Where Is My Mind” remix rolled out, the entire desert was locked in. Thousands of voices turned into one giant chant, bodies thrashing in sync as dust clouds rose into the air like smoke signals to the bass gods. Every track felt deliberate, every build-up like he was winding a spring tighter just to let it explode on the drop. A full-on bass sermon where Wooli wasn’t just performing, he was leading. Rawhide shook under the weight of it, the desert answered back, and Wooli stamped his name into Arizona once again as one of the heaviest hitters in the game.
Legendary Verdict
The Wooli Rawhide event was everything a bass fan could want and then some. From the moment fans lined up for merch before sundown, the energy was undeniable. Every set stacked momentum until Rawhide felt like it might burst, and Wooli’s closer sealed it as an instant classic. If you ever get the chance to catch him live, don’t hesitate. This is the kind of show that reminds you why you fell in love with live music in the first place.




