
High-octane Argentine street punk built on neighborhood pride and raw energy. Anthemic, gritty, and unapologetically working-class soundtracks for the mosh pit.
2 Minutos sounds like a riot in a bottle. It is the sonic equivalent of a humid night in a Buenos Aires suburb, where the smell of asphalt and cheap beer mixes with the roar of distorted guitars. The music is fast, relentless, and built on the foundational three-chord structure of classic punk, but it carries a distinct South American weight. It is the sound of a community speaking its truth through megaphones and overdriven amps.
What makes them distinctive is their hyper-local focus. While many punk bands aim for global rebellion, 2 Minutos found their power in the specific streets of Valentín Alsina. Their songs are populated by real people: the neighbor who turned out to be a cop, the friends at the corner bar, and the daily grind of the Argentine working class. This grounded reality, delivered through Mosca's gravelly, shouting vocals and massive gang-vocal hooks, creates a sense of belonging that few bands can replicate.
Start with their 1994 debut, Valentín Alsina. It is a definitive document of Argentine punk history, containing their biggest hits and the rawest expression of their neighborhood-centric philosophy. It captures a specific moment in time when the band transformed from local legends to the first Argentine punk act to conquer international stages like the CBGB.
2 Minutos or Dos Minutos are a punk rock band from Valentín Alsina, Buenos Aires, Argentina. They have released ten albums since first receiving a contract by Phonogram in 1994. The band have toured mostly around Latin America.
Cassette uses generative AI to enrich its catalog. How we use AI →