The Pretty Reckless are currently on the road with AC/DC, wrapping their second show of the run after a night in São Paulo.
For a band that built its identity in dark, heavy alternative spaces, stepping onto a stadium stage alongside one of rock’s most enduring legacy acts feels like a full circle moment.
Fronted by Taylor Momsen, The Pretty Reckless have spent the past decade carving out their own lane, one defined by grit, weight, and unapologetic intensity. Sharing a bill with AC/DC places them in front of a global crowd already primed for distortion and volume.
But the pairing makes sense.
Both bands operate on power. On tension. On riffs that don’t ask permission.
From early footage circulating online, the scale of the São Paulo show speaks for itself: massive stages, walls of sound, and an audience that stretches far beyond the barricade. It’s the kind of environment that either swallows an opener or sharpens them.
The Pretty Reckless sound sharpened.
Momsen’s presence carries in large rooms. The band’s heavier catalog cuts cleanly through stadium air. Songs that feel brooding in club settings expand when amplified against tens of thousands.
This tour marks another milestone in the band’s evolution, not just as a modern hard rock act, but as one capable of holding space alongside legends.
As the run continues, the scale will only grow.
And so will the rooms they command.
Inside the scene. Outside the noise.




