Coachella
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The Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festivalâs first of two weekends has now sold out of general admission tickets, according to promoter Goldenvoice. Once known for selling out on the same day that the lineup was released, this year, the festival took exactly 27 days, four hours and 38 minutes to sell approximately 125,000 tickets […]
No Doubt and Sublime will each reunite at this yearâs Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival for the first time in years, but thereâs one massive reunion promoters couldnât pull together: the Talking Heads.
Last September, festival curator and Goldenvoice president Paul Tollett traveled to the Toronto International Film Festival for a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Talking Headsâ seminal concert film, Stop Making Sense. For the first time in over 30 years, David Byrne sat alongside his former bandmates Jerry Harrison, Chris Frantz and Tina Weymouth to discuss the film project in a live panel moderated by Spike Lee.
Tollett tells Billboard he had traveled to Toronto to potentially discuss having the Talking Heads perform at Coachella and met with members of the band and their representatives, but that he âsensed there were no shows happening, so I didnât make an offer.â
Tollett emphasized that he never broached the subject of payment with the band and ultimately went home empty-handed. He would not discuss how much he was willing to pay for a reunion show at Coachella, though a source familiar with how much artists are paid to headline the mega-festival says the gig could have earned the group as much as $10 million.
Shortly after Tollett returned from his trip, a second offer came through, this time from Live Nation. The promoter told the Talking Heads it was willing to pay the band $80 million to headline six to eight festival gigs and headlining slots, sources close to the group say. The Talking Heads ultimately rejected that offer as well. Live Nation declined to comment when asked about the offer.
Ever since Janeâs Addiction agreed to reunite at Coachella in 2001, the Indio, Calif., music festival has become the go-to platform for reunion gigs, with acts like Siouxsie and the Banshees, the Pixies, Rage Against the Machine, The Specials and dozens more all finding a way to come back together for one more show in the desert. But as the event ages â itâs now in its 23rd year â and competition in the festival market intensifies, pulling these kinds of comeback concerts together has become increasingly difficult.
More than two months after the Toronto Film Festival, in early December, Tollett found himself at the center of a controversial dispute around Sublimeâs reunion. Mike âCheezâ Brown, who managed the group Sublime with Rome, had learned that music manager Kevin Zinger with Regime Music Group had joined forces with Vandals bassist and musician-turned-executive Joe Escalante to stage an official Sublime reunion with original bassist Eric Wilson, original drummer Bud Gaugh and late singer Bradleyâs Nowellâs son, Jakob Nowell, on vocals.
Brown also learned that Zinger and Escalante were targeting Coachella for the bandâs first major reunion show and called Tollett to discuss. Just months earlier, Tollett had booked Sublime with Rome atop the Cali Vibes reggae festival, slated for this February in the bandâs hometown of Long Beach, Calif.
While Tollett and many other festival talent buyers had heard about the effort to launch a Jacob Nowell-fronted reunion, at the time Brown called him, Tollett had not yet submitted any offers for the group, who had not yet performed live together. A test gig eventually came together weeks later as part of a charity event, and by late December, Sublime with Rome and the new Sublime had reached a settlement. Brown and Sublime with Rome agreed to end the bandâs 13-year run after it played the festivals and dates they had already booked for 2024, while the newly re-formed Sublime would prepare for its first comeback gig as a band, scheduled for Apr. 13 at Coachella.
The No Doubt reunion, largely negotiated in late December and early January, would turn out to be easier and more straightforward than Sublime and the Talking Heads.
It was Tollett who initiated talks with Stefaniâs manager, Irving Azoff, about the idea. The discussion with bandmates dragged out longer than expected as talks delved into band business outside of the reunion, but eventually, the group agreed to reunite in large part because of its long relationship with Goldenvoice, who promoted some of the bandâs first shows. The $10 million payday would be significant for bandmates Adrian Young, Tony Kanal and Tom Dumont, whose current band, DREAMCAR, is led by AFI singer Davy Havoc and booked to play Goldenvoiceâs Cruel World festival in May.
For her part, Stefani was already booked to play Cali Vibes in February when she agreed to play Coachella. A source close to Stefani tells Billboard not to expect a major No Doubt tour to follow the one-time reunion set, as she already has plans in place for the second half of the year to promote new solo music she plans to release this summer.
Coachella has always flexed its muscle as one of the worldâs most influential music festivals by booking big-name reunions and comeback shows that fans canât see anywhere else. The desert fest hosted the reunion of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg (and the now-fabled 2Pac hologram) in 2012 and the return of Outkast in 2014. Prince […]
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Source: Christopher Polk / Getty / Coachella 2024
The Coachella 2024 lineup is here, and itâs stacked.
The official Coachella 2024 lineup is here, and this yearâs headliners will include meanie Doja Cat, hater of top rapper lists Tyler, the creator, and Lana Del Rey.
The ridiculously expensive music festival that sees music fans, rich folks, and influencers flock to the Coachella Valley will take place over two weekends, April 12 to April 14 and April 19 to April 21.
Del Rey will headline two Fridays, Tyler will bring his unique energy on Saturdays, and Doja will shut it all down on Sundays.
Coachella 2024 attendees will also see No Doubt reunite. It will mark the first time the âSpiderwebsâ band has taken the stage together in almost ten years.
Other big names on the incredibly stacked lineup include Hip-Hopâs new favorite booty shaker Ice Spice, Lil Uzi Vert, Lil Yachty, J Balvin, Peso Pluma, JhenĂ© Aiko, Jon Batiste, Skepta, Grimes, Victoria Monet, Tinashe, Blxst and more.
For those who donât have the coins to be in the desert getting their âinfluencyâ flicks off, donât worry because YouTube will once again be the official live stream partner of the musical festival.
Fans head to the official Coachella page to catch live streams of the performances and get exclusive backstage access without worrying about desert dust getting all in their mouths and eyes.
Like it always does, the entire festival will take place at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, and ticket presale begins on January 19; good luck if you are attempting to make it out to California.
You can check out the entire Coachella 2024 lineup below.
Coachella 2024âs lineup is stacked with Latin and/or Spanish-language acts set to perform in the desert this year. Peso Pluma, who in 2023 was a surprise guest during Becky Gâs set, returns to Coachella, and this time heâll be performing his own set on April 12 and 19. The two Fridays will also feature performances […]
Coachella has the enviable reputation as a place where vintage acts put aside their differences, bands bury the hatchet, legends return to the spotlight.
Janeâs Addiction, Pixies, Pavement, Rage Against the Machine, Outkast and The Stooges all famously got the bands back together in the California desert.
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This year itâs No Doubtâs turn to keep that reputation intact.
The lineup for Coachella 2024 is suitably stacked, with Lana Del Rey, Tyler, The Creator and Doja Cat listed as headliners; and the likes of Peso Pluma, Lil Uzi Vert, Blur, Ice Spice, J Balvin, Jhené Aiko and scores more join the bill.
The big surprise is the inclusion of No Doubt, which is set for a first reunion concert in nine years.
âWeâll see you in the desert this April!!!,â reads a statement on the bandâs social accounts, an announcement thatâs now trending.
Earlier, Gwen Stefani, bass player Tony Kanal, drummer Adrian Young and guitarist Tom Dumont teased a comeback with a video posted to their socials. âJust a Girlâ plays over the clip, in which Stefani reminisces about the good old days. The singer fires off a text to Kanal, and the four bandmates assemble for a Zoom call. âDo you wanna do a show?,â she asks. The answer, as we now know, is a solid yes.
Next year marks the 30th anniversary of No Doubtâs hit third album Tragic Kingdom, which featured breakout singles including âJust a Girl,â âSpiderwebsâ and âDonât Speak,â and which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in Dec. 1996, more than a year after its release.
Last year, âDonât Speakâ entered the Billion Views Club on YouTube, marking the bandâs first video â and one of less than 20 released in the 1990s â to reach that milestone. Also in 2023, No Doubt issued their 1995 sophomore LP The Beacon Street Collection on vinyl for the first time.
Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival 2024 will play out over the two weekends of April 12-14 and 19-21. Festival passes will be available at Coachella.com starting on Friday (Jan. 19).
Click here to check out tickets for either weekend. Passes are divided into three tiers and priced at $499-$549 for general admission and $1,609 for VIP. Camping passes start at $149.
After much anticipation and as much speculation, the Coachella 2024 lineup was released Tuesday (Jan. 16). The Southern California festival will feature headliners Lana Del Rey, Tyler, The Creator and Doja Cat, with the rest of the bill featuring, as always, a strong contingent of dance/electronic acts. The dance artists getting highest billing include Justice, […]
The 2024 Coachella lineup officially arrived on Tuesday (Jan. 16), with Tyler, the Creator, Doja Cat and Lana Del Rey leading the pack as this yearâs headliners.
Del Rey will take the stage on Friday (April 12 and 19), with Peso Pluma, Lil Uzi Vert, Justice, Bizarrap, Deftones, ATEEZ, Everything Always, Peggy Gou, Young Miko, Sabrina Carpenter and more also set to perform. Tyler, the Creator will then headline on Saturday (April 13 and 20), with Blur, Ice Spice, Gesaffelstein, Sublime, Jungle, Dom Dolla, Bleachers, Grimes, Jon Batiste, LE SSERAFIM and more also on the bill. Doja will round out the weekend on Sunday (April 14 and 21), alongside J Balvin, Jhené Aiko, Khruangbin, Carin León, John Summit, Lil Yachty, DJ Snake, LUDMILLA, the Rose and more.
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No Doubt is also on this yearâs lineup, marking the Gwen Stefani-led groupâs reunion for the first time in nine years.
Last year, Bad Bunny, BLACKPINK and Frank Ocean headlined the festival, with Ocean pulling out for weekend two and Blink-182 taking over. 2024 festival passes will be available at Coachella.com starting on Friday (Jan. 19) at 11 a.m. PT. Click here to check out tickets for either weekend. Passes are divided into three tiers and priced at $499-$549 for general admission and $1,609 for VIP. Camping passes start at $149.
A limited number of passes are available on Vivid Seats and a few other ticket sites. Enter code: BB2024 to save $20 off purchases of $200 or more at Vivid Seats.
See the full Coachella lineup via the festivalâs Instagram post below.
Anyone who has attended a music festival has experienced the frustration of attempting to send and receive calls and texts amid tens of thousands of other phone-wielding fans. Messages often donât go through, arrive an hour after being sent or show up en masse when the night is over, creating confusion and leaving meet-ups unmet.
Anyone who has attended many of the leading U.S. music festivals over the past few years has likely noticed improvements, however, with cell service approaching real-time efficiency. This isnât a fluke, but the result of focused improvements in how service is provided both generally and at music-related mass gatherings specifically.
âFrankly, I consider phone conductivity kind of like running water these days. Venues have to have it,â says Matthew Pasco, who as vp of information for the Las Vegas Raiders oversaw construction of the distributed antenna system (DAS) at Allegiant Stadium, which has hosted major tours from Taylor Swift, Metallica, The Rolling Stones and Garth Brooks since opening in summer 2021.
Thatâs because while cellphones used to just be a way of connecting with (or trying to connect with) friends at shows, theyâre now seen as part of the concert and festival experience, with mobile ticketing, venue apps and digital payment systems demanding fully functional coverage. Connectivity also fosters greater safety, allowing fans in need of assistance to dial out during emergencies. Social media is another important consideration, with coverage at events now expected to keep up with the ballooning data demands of TikTok, Instagram and even fans livestreaming entire shows, as has happened recently on tours by Swift and Bruce Springsteen. According to Verizon, at Governors Ball 2022, its subscribers alone used roughly 14.5Â terabytes of data, which equates to one person streaming 3Â million songs continually for over 10 years. So, too, do fans arrive with phones, Apple Watches and iPads Ââ and the expectation all of them will work.
Until recently, cell coverage has been wonky at big events as the demands of smartphones collided with networks designed before devices burned through so much data. With upwards of 125,000 people squeezed into a square mile (the size of Coachellaâs site), all of whom texting and posting simultaneously, carriers â primarily AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile in the United States â would often overload. Event organizers, who sought to solve this by providing Wi-Fi, found those networks crashed easily due to high volume.
Enter Irvine, Calif.-based tech company MatSing. Founded in 2005, the company builds antennas that, instead of reflecting signals like a traditional antenna, refracts them, creating multiple independent signals beamed in multiple directions. Instead of implementing 10 individual antennas, an event can then employ one ÂMatSing lens antenna that creates 10 separate coverage sectors and allows multiple carriers to utilize it.
âFestivals are the hardest thing to create coverage capacity for,â says MatSing executive vp Leo Matytsine. âThat was our best way of getting a foot in the door.â
The first music carrier to use MatSingâs technology at a festival was AT&T at Coachella in 2014. âPeople actually got connectivity that year,â says Matytsine. âAfter that, Verizon and T-Mobile saw what was deployed, and it started to snowball because the technology worked.â Indeed, itâs how networks function â or donât â in high-demand settings like festivals that typically cause carriers to lose subscribers, making performance at mass gatherings crucial to customer retention.
MatSing sells its 150-plus antenna models directly to carriers, and they are now permanently installed at 32 U.S. stadiums, arenas, raceways and venues including the Hollywood Bowl, with temporary deployments at myriad Super Bowls, presidential inaugurations and festivals including South by Southwest, Austin City Limits, Lollapalooza, Outside Lands, New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and Burning Man. The lattermost employs one antenna â incorporated by law enforcement as a safety measure, but which provides many attendees with service â while Coachella uses a few to cover its entire festival grounds. Prices vary depending on size and range from a couple of thousand for smaller models to tens of thousands of dollars for larger ones.
Carriers have also caught up with demand. While companies previously deployed mobile cell towers (along with MatSing tech) at mass gatherings to supplement coverage, Verizon representative Karen Schulz notes that âthe network has evolved significantly over the past several years.â Improvements include fiber network expansion, carrier aggregation (which lets data flow freely across multiple spectrum bands) and U.S. deployments of high-speed 5G networks starting around 2019.
Unsurprisingly, venues themselves are now building and retrofitting to suit coverage requirements. Allegiant paid for the venueâs eight-figure DAS to maintain ownership over this asset, which the three major carriers rent out. (âI donât want to sign away all the plumbing in my building so every time someone flushes the toilet, someone else gets paid,â says Pasco.) This DAS system also utilizes 28 MatSing antennas that hang from the roof around the ring of the stadium and service the 60,000-capacity bowl. (This option was chosen over deploying mini antennas under every seat, an option Los Angelesâ 3-year-old SoFi Stadium went with for its DAS.) At Allegiant, traditional cellular antennas have been installed in walkways, VIP suites and other areas MatSing antenna signals canât reach. The stadium also offers Wi-Fi that has a 60% to 70% adoption rate among fans.
Some older stadiums and arenas, which are often âcement monstrosities,â says Pasco, âreally struggle with deploying premium DAS systems because they donât have the pathway to run cabling.â When such retrofits happen, theyâre often âa little bit ugly,â he says.
However this coverage is implemented, its evolution is fostering increased connectedness among individuals in massive crowds, between attendees and venues themselves and with audiences well outside the confines of a show. This festival season, attendees might not even have to ask, âHey, U there?â
When the sun goes down on the first Friday of Coachella, an electrifying energy surges from the desert field. Shaking off the heat from the sun, festival goers reignite for the day as the grounds visually light up around them. Palm trees and art pieces glow, and crowds flow from stage to stage like moths pursuing light.
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In the Gobi, a large tent lined with chandeliers, a crowd has gathered, entranced by a cube of LED screens blacked out with turquoise text that reads, âHello⊠I am Whyte Fang.âÂ
Following this introduction, the set rumbles to life, jumping from experimental bass to techno to elements of trance and drum ân bass. A mix of Whyte Fang originals from her recently released Genesis album make up a majority of the hour, from the wobbling â333â to the punchy âTransport God.â In a highlight moment, Brooklyn rapper Erick the Architect, one of the albumâs few collaborators, joins Whyte Fang on stage for a live rendition of âSCREAM.âÂ
A collage of visuals flirt between the futuristic and the bizarre â a swirl of swiveling robotic eyes pulse in time with the beat before transforming into a swath of glittering snakes, then butterflies, then spiders that scuttle across the screens. We see flashes of a blacklight-lit figure outlined in neon: neon embellishments glow in her hair, on her jacket, her sleeves, her pants, and most prominently, in an X on her exposed pregnant belly.
Whyte Fang never picks up the microphone to speak to the crowd, communicating only through a vocoded voice and text on the stageâs screens. Besides occasional glimpses of the neon-adorned figure at the decks, the artist is mainly represented by an illustrated head with long hair and fairy-like ears who makes several appearances throughout the show visuals. Leading up to the show, the Whyte Fang project reportedly experienced a 2,000% bump in streaming on Spotify.
While Whyte Fang may have felt the need to introduce herself at Coachella, to most, she is already well known as her alter-ego Alison Wonderland, the Australian producer whoâs become a superstar of the electronic scene, playing the worldâs biggest dance music festival, becoming a regular at storied venues like Coloradoâs Red Rocks (where she breezily sold out two nights in a row in 2022) and scoring a pair of No. 1 LPs on Top Dance/Electronic Albums.
As Alison Wonderland, the artist born Alex Scholler also earned the title as the highest billed female DJ in Coachellaâs history. Since then, she has continued to reign as a coveted headliner on festival lineups, like this monthâs EDC Las Vegas, where sheâs set to perform for the last time in the foreseeable future, as she is currently eight months pregnant with her first child. (The father is her longtime partner, director Ti West.)
Flash forward two weeks after Coachella, and Scholler has exchanged her neon Whyte Fang look for her more signature oversized t-shirt and sweatpants. In the comfort of her L.A. home , she sits on her couch with her fluffy black dog, Molly. Over a takeout order of veggie dumplings from Din Tai Fung (an L.A. favorite for soup dumplings and Taiwanese eats, and her latest pregnancy craving), she shares that her mom recently came to visit from Australia to see her perform at Coachella and help her prepare a room in her house for the baby, whoâs set to arrive in a few weeks.
âIf I drink some water, you might be able to feel some kicking,â Scholler says with a smile, chugging a gulp of water to demonstrate. At eight months pregnant, itâs a cherished moment of calm. Her past few months, however, have been anything but. Here, she shares the story of resurrecting Whyte Fang, performing while pregnant, and what the future looks like.
Whyte Fang is obviously such a fully formed concept. What is the projectâs origin story?
Whyte Fang was my original production name I had been producing as before I ever released music as Alison Wonderland. I was DJing as Alison Wonderland, but the music was coming out as Whyte Fang. I really wanted to have no face. I already felt judged for how I looked and how I presented myself as Alison, and I wanted my music to be taken seriously. Whyte Fang did get some attention back in the day â it was picked up by local radio stations [in Australia] and BBC Radio 1 played me, and I was a finalist in a producer competition. Flume and I were both finalists in that competition actually, and we both lost.Â
Whyte Fang
Peter Don
Where did you take the project from there?
When I signed as Alison and started releasing music, I always wanted to eventually go back to Whyte Fang â but when I did, I wanted it to be executed exactly how I envisioned it. At the time, I just didnât have the resources, and didnât feel experienced enough as a producer to really reach what was in my head. I knew there was a vision and I could see it, but it didnât feel like the right time.Â
It finally felt like the right time to shift my focus to Whyte Fang now â Iâd done an EP and three albums as Alison Wonderland. Iâm not really the face of Whyte Fang, and Iâm not really the voice of it either. The music I make with Whyte Fang is darker and more industrial. Itâs detached from my personal life. I do make beats like I do with Whyte Fang, even as Alison, but people who have interviewed me in the past have always said those songs sound so different, but itâs not really. Those types of songs just donât shine because songs with me singing or that are more pop are the ones that shine with my Alison project. So I wanted to give those songs a proper home.Â
When did you begin focusing on Whyte Fang again?
Iâd say it started in a more intense way after I released Loner [in 2022.] Most of the Genesis album was made within the last year.
So, while pregnant?Â
While pregnant, yes. A lot of the tracks were made while I was pregnant and I was feeling super creative. So many people told me I was going to lose my creativity and I was not going to feel the same, and I was really scared of that. Then as soon as I got pregnant, it felt the opposite.Â
I hadnât felt the flow like that in a long time. I had just released an album that was so emotionally heavy, so it felt good to create stuff that was a bit more detached to my personal journey in terms of lyrics and working with other vocalists. I also love working with other vocalists, and I feel like this kind of project is where that makes sense for me.Â
With Whyte Fang, I just saw it. I knew the colors. I knew Whyte Fang was green and red. I knew what she looked like. I knew when she was performing, I didnât want to be speaking. When I do the live show, she narrates occasionally. She has her own thing going on thatâs greater than us humans, you know?Â
What went into the preparation for Coachella?
I worked with Tyler [Lamptrees], who does visuals for all my projects. Heâs the only person Iâve ever worked with who visually sees whatâs inside of my brain. Itâs so rare to see something materialize like that when youâve had such a strong vision. When we started working on the show around August 2020, we didnât even have Coachella yet. My goal was to get Coachella so I could show people what this was on a bigger, not genre-specific scale. I was so fortunate to get it â but then when I found out I had Coachella, there wasnât an album finished yet. I thought to myself, âThis is what I want to do. I need to finish this body of work.â It was a kick up the butt to really get this album done. I look back and think, âHow did I make an entire show and an album while pregnant?â But I did.
Were there any certain things or special accommodations you had to make to adjust to pregnancy through the process?
There were things I was supposed to do, that I didnât⊠like rest. I think the best thing I actually did for my pregnancy was to keep living my life and letting the baby cook while living my life. I think it wouldâve been a lot more intense for me if I had stopped.Â
I definitely donât feel the same while pregnant. I was definitely exhausted at certain points, but I pushed through it because I had this vision that was so strong. If I really did feel like I needed a day off, I would take it, but I just knew this was something I had to finish.Â
After your Weekend 1 show, a statistic came out about Whyte Fang becoming the biggest-growing Spotify artist at Coachella in advance of their performance, with a 2,000% increase in streams on the service. Can you talk about that?
I never expected that! I was nervous no one would hear it. Every artist feels that, especially when you put a lot of effort and love into something. But this was the best surprise.Â
I still havenât processed it properly. The fact that people are listening to an entire album in 2023 means so much to me as well, because I made this as an album. It wasnât just meant for a single, itâs a journey. Genesis is a journey.Â
Performing while eight months pregnant with your belly out was such a powerful moment during the show.
I feel like a bad bâch playing while eight months pregnant. It hasnât been an easy road for me to become pregnant, so that in itself was a big achievement for me. Iâm so proud that I got here. I never thought I would physically be able to become a mother. Itâs so special for me, and I want to embrace it and be present in this moment as much as I can.Â
Whyte Fang
Peter Don
You shared a post recently about how early in your career, people in the industry warned you about becoming a mother and how it could affect your career.Â
Yeah, I was once told by someone in the music industry that I worked with that he hoped I would never become pregnant because it would ruin my career. Those words have rung so loudly in my ear, especially during these past few months.
It may have been the best thing anyoneâs ever said to me, because it made me go, âwell fâk you, watch this.â Being pregnant doesnât define you, it just expands you. Literally. [Laughs.] Becoming a mother and having a family doesnât define me. I donât consider it a negative in any way. Itâs just an add-on in my life, which is exciting and a new journey.Â
When I posted that on Instagram, a lot of other artists â big female artists who arenât even in my genre â responded and said âthank youâ and told me that they have also been so scared about wanting to become pregnant, thinking that it might end their career too. A lot of people I was shocked to hear from, because I didnât even think theyâd know who I was. I spoke to Grimes about it, and she was like, âHonestly, itâs punk rock.â And I agree.Â
Youâre set to play EDC in a few weeks, which will be your last show for a while. How are you preparing?
My doctors are a little concerned about it. Iâm going to be in and out for the set, and Iâll have a chair ready for me to sit on.Â
Everyone has been asking me if Iâm sure I want to do this â and look, if I canât because of medical reasons, I wonât fight that. Iâm getting checked two days before to make sure. But I love playing music. It brings me joy, itâs not a burden. So being able to do what I love, that doesnât feel hard to me.Â
Physically, itâs a lot. There will be no jumping. But again, I have an amazing team that is going to look after me, and Insomniac and EDC have always been super supportive to me and to women in general, so I know Iâm in good hands. I am supposed to double in size though, so if you see a waddling bowling ball walking your way, make way.Â
Whatâs next? Maternity leave?
For Whyte Fang, I plan to tour the show and more music will come out. Iâm taking a few months off and then Iâll be back for Red Rocks in October. I did have to cancel two festivals so I could take a maternity leave, but those were the only two shows I had to cancel. The festivals were incredibly understanding and obviously I look forward to making them up.
I actually found out that I was pregnant the day I played Red Rocks last year, so that will be a very poetic, full circle moment for me. I want to bring the baby to Red Rocks and be like, âThis is where it all started for us!â