While a good part of the electronic calendar continues to grow based on macro-events and increasingly extensive posters, there are festivals that have decided to move in the opposite direction. one of them is RIT/MO Holidayl, who will return May 29 and 30 to the Natural Site of the Ermita de los Tres Juanesin Sierra Elvira (Granada)keeping intact its idea of a human-scale festival for the most restless clubbing lovers.
Just fifteen minutes from Granada, the event has been consolidating itself as one of those refuges for those who continue to understand electronic music as club culture rather than as a massive spectacle. With limited capacity and very careful programming, RIT/MO has managed to attract in recent years some of the most respected figures on the international underground circuit, placing Sierra Elvira on the map of European clubbing for a weekend.
The 2026 edition will bring together 21 artists, with names as recognized as John Talabotkey figure of contemporary Spanish electronic music, or the Japanese selector DJ Masdacommon in some of the most demanding clubs on the international circuit.
One of the most anticipated moments will come with the meeting in the cockpit. Lena Willikens and Vladimir Ivkovic, two selectors who have already left memorable sessions in previous editions of the festival and who will once again share a booth in a b2b that promises to become one of the most unpredictable passages of the weekend.
The poster is completed with artists such as Aurora Halal, Binh, Kim Ann Foxman, Konduku, Sleep D, Sugar Free either Vladacommon names in festivals and venues that mark the pulse of global electronics.
Beyond the poster, a good part of the festival’s character is defined by the place itself. The programming is divided between two stages: a main one next to the historic building of the venue and another hidden among trees in a forest area that has become one of the hallmarks of the event. There, with natural light filtering through the trees for a good part of the day, some of the sessions most remembered by those who repeat each year take place.
At a time when many festival experiences tend to resemble each other, Rit/mo continues to focus on something much simpler: good music, careful sound, natural surroundings and a format that allows you to enjoy electronic music without rushing. A small clubber parenthesis at the gates of Granada.

