The Mars Volta reaffirm at Pasadena Civic Auditorium that they aren’t resting on their laurels these days & we love them just as much for it

The Mars VoltaBy Josh Herwitt //

The Mars Volta with Kianí Medina, FELIZ Y DADA //
Pasadena Civic Auditorium – Pasadena, CA
November 26th, 2025 //

I will never forget where I was the first time I heard The Mars Volta.

The calendar read June 2003 and I had just completed my freshman year of college thousands of miles away from home. And as my hobbies transitioned from skateboarding to drumming in high school, I had become obsessed with everything that sounded like progressive rock during my formative years. Rush, Pink Floyd and Tool were prog-rock bands I studied closely with great admiration and still do now, with each inspiring me to fall deeper in love with my instrument thanks largely to their authenticity, creativity and virtuosity as musicians.

It was there in the parking lot of our local outdoor mall that my childhood friend from elementary school put on De-Loused in the Comatorium in his car, and within minutes I found myself transfixed. The music was angsty and raw, and even though I have never been a big fan of punk rock, the tone of lead singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala’s voice and vivid, yet surreal imagery that his English and Spanish lyrics painted in a Salvador Dalí sort of way — channeling the agony of losing a bandmate and friend as we would later learn — amid a chaotic frenzy of guitars, keyboards, drums and Latin percussion enticed us right away.

At this point I was not familiar with At the Drive-In or Sparta, so when people find out that TMV are one of my favorite bands all time and quickly suggest that I should listen to the latter, it’s hard to not chuckle inside my head at the suggestion. From our perspective, the difference between them has always been rather stark considering Volta were unlike anything else I had come across in my life. That was, after all, what ultimately compelled me to go out and purchase my own copy of De-Loused the next day.

To state that Bixler-Zavala has a knack for telling stories would be underselling his unique talent to paint pictures and entire scenes through his words, but what made Volta so intriguing throughout those early years and to this day is the unpredictability of it all. Beyond merely Omar Rodríguez-López’s genius and prolificity as a songwriter and guitarist, much of that started to manifest at their concerts with extended renditions of “Drunkship of Lanterns” as well as “Cicatriz ESP” most notably that stretched past the 20-minute mark and fostered a kind of experimentation I had not been exposed to before.

That is, until I drove nearly six hours on a weeknight to catch my first TMV show, which felt like one long jam. And in some ways it really was as I lost myself in the music, with a “Drunkship” opener lasting more than a half hour and marking my official introduction to their live experience. Standing in that hot, sweaty and crowded room, I could see how powerful live music can be. Not just from Bixler-Zavala’s prolonged screams, Rodríguez-López’s ethereal riffs and former drummer Jon Theodore’s thunderous chops that gave off serious vibes of Led Zeppelin, but the chemistry, musicianship and spontaneity of a legendary band all coming together onstage in front of me.

The concept album has long been a format prog-rock bands have taken a liking to, and TMV have not been shy about using it to their benefit beginning with their first two full lengths. While they didn’t totally stick to that script by the time Amputechture arrived in 2006, Rodríguez-López (guitar, direction, backing vocals synthesizers, keyboards) and Bixler-Zavala (lead vocals) have maintained following that strategy since secretly reuniting in 2019 and straying away from the usual prog-rock conventions we had become accustomed to. In fact, the result on 2022’s self-titled was like nothing we had previously heard from the group, with the intention of making a pop-influenced album — to the duo’s standards at least — defying any prior tendencies it had employed when writing and recording. Plus, it shouldn’t be surprising to hear Bixler-Zavala define pop music in an emotional interview with Zane Lowe as “anything that takes the air out of a room and makes you feel like you’re in the trailer of your own movie.” Because for as cinematic as Volta sound, it’s not uncommon for images to form in my own head upon listening to their music. “It always goes back to cinema with this band,” he adds. “I want my music to sound the way movies look.”

The Mars Volta

For that reason alone, no one should be shocked to learn that TMV’s ninth and latest studio effort Lucro Sucio; Los Ojos del Vacio, which translates to Filthy Lucre; The Eyes of the Void in English, checks the box as another concept album. Its rollout, however, was unlike anything the outfit had done in the past. Officially dropping in April after being leaked online two months earlier, it wasn’t until Volta debuted the unannounced album in its entirety while opening for Deftones on their 2025 North American headlining tour that we knew for certain there would be new music from them. After a tumultuous breakup that left Bixler-Zavala and Rodríguez-López no longer on speaking terms and an ensuing five-year hiatus, our expectations have been tempered and our hearts filled with the utmost gratitude for anything they are willing to offer us — and the transitions on Lucro Sucio make it easy to get immersed in the magic all happening at once as if an auditory spell has been cast on you.

Yet, what makes TMV so special and had me shedding tears during Lowe’s interview a few years ago with Rodríguez-López and Bixler-Zavala is the brotherhood that they share dating back to their days in El Paso, Texas, before ATDI broke ground as pioneers of the post-hardcore movement. The friendship and partnership they have built was well-documented in the 2023 film titled “Omar and Cedric: If This Ever Gets Weird” featuring Rodríguez-López’s home-video footage and addressing how Bixler-Zavala almost broke that bond after two decades with his self-help venture into Scientology, eventually leading to allegations actor and now-convicted rapist Danny Masterson had sexually assaulted his wife. It was then and there that Rodríguez-López and Bixler-Zavala went their separate ways to work on their own projects, as Rodríguez-López teamed up with Le Butcherettes lead singer/guitarist Teri Gender Bender to form Bosnian Rainbows and Bixler-Zavala focused on launching his solo career. But after 12 months the two were talking to each other again and subsequently working together in a new supergroup they called Antemasque, leaving open the prospect for a Volta reunion down the road.

With a lot of pain in their lives has come not only an immense amount of healing for TMV, but also a renewed sense of autonomy to explore creatively and honestly without any pressure from the outside. The material on Lucro Sucio and 25-date tour surrounding it has demonstrated such quite clearly given that the septet consisting of Rodríguez-López, Bixler-Zavala, Eva Gardner (bass, double bass), Marcel Rodríguez-López (percussion, synthesizers, keyboards), Leo Genovese (keyboards, piano, saxophone), Linda-Philomène Tsoungui (drums) and Gender Bender (backing vocals) as a touring member did not showcase anything except the 18-track LP. Of course, that’s not to say these performances lacked the improvisation that we crave whenever this band takes the stage.

At the historic Pasadena Civic Auditorium on Thanksgiving Eve, that aforementioned feeling of being totally consumed by the music — this time with more jazz and electronic flourishes — returned as Volta veered off the beaten path on several occasions. I was well aware that we wouldn’t be hearing the older tunes, but knowing the run time on Lucro Sucio is less than one hour, it seemed very likely these songs would not be strictly played note for note (that was what we were hoping for at least). And despite letting the album grow on me over a number of listens this year, it couldn’t prepare those of us in the building for the myriad of twists and turns the Grammy winners would uncork over the course of 90 minutes.

When we give artists the space to create, it can open the doors to new ideas and allow humans the opportunity to unlock another dimension of curiosity. “The music has always healed us,” Rodríguez-López explains toward the end of Nicolas Jack Davies’ two-hour documentary.

It has always been the glue that has kept them together through so many ups and downs filled with both love and loss, making them an inseparable force and one of the finest singer-songwriter combinations in rock ‘n’ roll history. No, we didn’t get to witness an epic “Cassandra Gemini” off 2005’s Frances the Mute that remains near the top of TMV catalog, but the journey they took us on this evening nevertheless was spiritual and transcendent.

We understand that Volta aren’t and won’t be for everyone. For us, they will be remembered as one of the most inspiring acts to ever do it and the fact that they are releasing any music in 2025 is a blessing after everything they have endured over their careers. Whether it’s a small miracle or simply kismet, we think Bixler-Zavala might have put it best in “Omar and Cedric” when he said, “I’m glad that God put us in the same place at the same time.” When you hear that and reflect on how easily none of it could have happened, you realize how lucky we are to have had them at all.

Setlist:
Lucro Sucio; Los Ojos del Vacio
Fin
Reina tormenta
Enlazan las tinieblas
Mictlán
The Iron Rose
Cue the Sun
Alba del orate
Voice in My Knives
Poseedora de mi sombra
Celaje
Vociferó
Mito de los trece cielos
Un disparo al vacío
Detrás de la puerta dorada
Maullidos
Morgana
Cue the Sun (Reprise)
Lucro sucio

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