Connect with us

Festivals

Bonnaroo Announces 2025 Schedule

Published

on

Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival has unveiled the complete schedule for this year’s edition of the internationally acclaimed camping festival, taking place June 12-15, 2025 on the Bonnaroo Farm, located just 60 miles southeast of Nashville in Manchester, TN. Full details can be found now at www.bonnaroo.com.

Bonnaroo 2025 will boast a spectacular assortment of can’t-miss highlights over four unforgettable nights, with bonus fun starting Wednesday in the campgrounds. Spanning multiple main stage performances on Thursday, June 12 (including a headline set by Luke Combs, Bonnaroo’s first ever country headliner), three completely unique sets across various stages from the one and only King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, an array of appearances by John Summit (including a Friday, June 13 performance on the main WHAT Stage), and of course, Bonnaroo’s world famous SuperJam, this year hosted and curated by Remi Wolf and set for the THIS Tent on Saturday, June 14 at 8:45 pm, along with many more unforgettable performances.

The upcoming Bonnaroo will also feature more opportunities to dance the night away than ever before, with a star-studded After Hours lineup featuring late night live performances from Dom Dolla, Glass Animals, Justice, Insane Clown Posse, Megadeth, Arcade Fire Presents “Santa Pirata,” JPEGMAFIA, and an epic sunrise set from Gorgon City, along with pop-up parties, surprises, and shenanigans – including the hugely popular Frick Frack Blackjack and the Super Queer Ultra Gay Pride Party (presented by House of Yes with Boyyyish) – guaranteed to keep the action going around the farm long after midnight and into the early hours of the morning.

Late nights will also be lit up by this year’s debut of “The Infinity Stage,” a brand-new, one-of-a-kind venue – presented in partnership with Polygon Live – boasting spatial sound, synchronized lights, and an unprecedented three-dome, open-air design to create the world’s largest, most immersive, 360° spatial audio experience. This year will further see a special lineup of undiscovered artists and rising stars performing on the influential WHO Stage, now located at Outeroo’s Plaza 7.

1-Day and 4-Day GA, GA+, VIP, Platinum and Roo Insider tickets remain available, but most ticket types are trending to sell out in advance of the festival. Layaway Plans starting at 50% down are still available while supplies last. For complete details – including a variety of camping and parking options (with Primitive Car Camping trending to sell out soon) – please visit www.bonnaroo.com/tickets.

Festivals

Governors Ball 2026 Release Daily Schedules

Published

on

gov-ball-souvenir-ticket.jpg

The set times are in. Governors Ball Music Festival just dropped its daily schedules for June 5–7, and the usual game begins: mapping your day, picking your battles, and accepting you can’t see everything.

Friday, June 5

Day one leans indie-pop into rap by night. Lorde closes the main stage at 8:30, opposite the tail end of Baby Keem(7:30–8:30). That’s your first big call: polished pop spectacle or Keem’s high-energy set.

Earlier, things get messy in a good way. KATSEYE (6:35–7:30) overlaps with Pierce the Veil (5:30–6:30) bleed, and The Beths (6:00–7:00) sit right in between. Indie fans will feel that pinch.

Midday conflicts are lighter, but The Dare (4:00–4:45) vs. Arcy Drive (3:30–4:15) creates a small fork in the road.

If you’re pacing yourself, the cleanest run is late afternoon into Mariah the Scientist (4:45–5:30), then pick your lane.

Saturday, June 6

Saturday is the most chaotic on paper. Stray Kids headline at 8:30, directly after Kali Uchis (7:30–8:30). That transition is smooth if you stay put.

The real trouble hits earlier. Major Lazer (6:30–7:30) collides with Blood Orange (5:30–6:30) and the start of Amyl and the Sniffers (7:30–8:30). Dancehall vs. alt-R&B vs. punk. Pick a mood and commit.

Mid-card is stacked with clashes: Ravyn Lenae (4:00–4:45) overlaps with Jane Remover (3:30–4:15), and Snow Strippers (4:45–5:30) runs right into Wet Leg (4:45–5:30). That last one is a true coin flip, two buzzy acts at the exact same time.

Sunday, June 7

Sunday might be the strongest day top to bottom. A$AP Rocky closes at 8:45, opposite the end of JENNIE (7:45–8:45) and Freddie Gibbs & The Alchemist (7:45–8:45). That’s the toughest final hour of the weekend.

The lead-up is just as tight. Dominic Fike (6:45–7:45) overlaps with Clipse (5:45–6:45) and Hot Mulligan (6:15–7:15). Three different crowds, same window.
Earlier, Japanese Breakfast (4:00–4:45) and Holly Humberstone (3:15–4:00) form a nice back-to-back if you stay mobile, but Between Friends (2:30–3:15) cuts into that flow.

The takeaway

Friday is manageable. Saturday is conflict-heavy. Sunday is stacked late.
If you hate missing songs, plan short splits. If you want full sets, accept you’ll miss something big. That’s part of the deal, and honestly, half the fun.

Continue Reading

Festivals

PNE Summer Night Concerts Announce 2026 Lineup

Published

on

PNE Summer Night Concerts 2026

Vancouver’s summer concert calendar is locking into place. The annual Summer Night Concerts are set to return to the Pacific National Exhibition from August 22 through September 7, bringing live music back to one of the city’s biggest seasonal events.

This year carries a bit more weight than usual. The series will debut at the brand-new Freedom Mobile Arch, a 10,000-seat outdoor amphitheatre built for large-scale performances. The venue promises better sightlines, improved sound, and a more immersive setup for fans. It’s a major shift for the fair, which spent much of last year dealing with construction that limited its footprint and contributed to a drop in attendance.

Now, with the full site back in action, organizers are aiming for a reset. The 2026 lineup leans into that idea, mixing legacy acts with newer names across genres like rock, pop, hip-hop, and electronic.

Headliners include Blue Rodeo, The Guess Who, The Beaches, Nelly, and Zedd, alongside artists like Mt. Joy, Train, and Barenaked Ladies. Special performances include Cynthia Erivo backed by the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, as well as appearances from Punjabi Virsa, Weird Al Yankovic, Earth, Wind & Fire, Pierce the Veil, Sarah McLachlan, and Boy George & Culture Club.

The full schedule runs nightly:

  • Aug. 22: Blue Rodeo
  • Aug. 23: The Guess Who
  • Aug. 25: The Beaches
  • Aug. 26: Nelly
  • Aug. 27: Zedd
  • Aug. 28: Mt. Joy
  • Aug. 29: Cynthia Erivo with VSO
  • Aug. 30: Punjabi Virsa
  • Sept. 1: Train
  • Sept. 2: Barenaked Ladies
  • Sept. 3: Weird Al Yankovic
  • Sept. 4: Earth, Wind & Fire
  • Sept. 5: Pierce the Veil
  • Sept. 6: Sarah McLachlan
  • Sept. 7: Boy George & Culture Club

Tickets start at $49 plus fees and include admission to the PNE Fair. Presale began April 19, with general on-sale launching April 20 through TicketLeader.

New venue, full fairgrounds, and a lineup that leans both nostalgic and current. After a quieter year, the PNE looks ready to feel busy again.

Continue Reading