The government of Colombia has offered a reward of 200m pesos ($53,000; £40,000) for information about the killing of eight people in south-western Nariño province.
Four gunmen burst into a party held at a house in Samaniego on Saturday and shot dead seven men and one woman.
The victims were part of a group of about 20 revellers.
The motive for the attack is not clear but there are a number of drug gangs active in the border area with Ecuador.
The group said they had decided to organise the party after an annual music festival was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.
They gathered at the empty house of the grandmother of one of the organisers to drink beer and listen to music, according to the father of one of the victims.
Some received messages over WhatsApp telling them to stop and minutes later, four armed men burst onto the property on motorbikes and opened fire. Most of those killed had either just graduated from high school or were at university.
The only woman to be shot dead, Laura Michel Melo Riscos, was planning to study medicine. Óscar Andrés Obando Betancourt was studying sport in the city of Cali.
Murder rates have fallen since the government signed a peace deal with Colombia’s main rebel group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), in 2016.
2019 had among the lowest number of homicides since 1975, according to figures from Colombia’s ministry of defence.
But breakaway factions of the Farc remain active in rural areas of the country, where they engage in extortion and drug trafficking.
The country’s second-largest rebel group, the National Liberation Army (ELN) is also still active as are a number of right-wing paramilitary groups originally founded to fight the left-wing rebels.
Despite the fall in homicide numbers, human rights and land rights activists have been killed by their dozens.
But armed attacks such as on those gathered in Samaniego are unusual and reawaken memories of darker times in Colombia when its armed groups would carry out mass killings, especially in rural areas where there was no or little presence of the security forces.