Editorial
EDM Festivals February 2026 You Can’t Miss
EDM Festivals February 2026 keeps the global calendar firing on all cylinders, as we enter the 2nd month of the new year.
EDM Festivals February 2026 are set to keep the global festival calendar firing on all cylinders, blending Latin American mainstages, underground winter raves, and sun-soaked destination events. From Mexico City and Medellín to snowy bass arenas and tropical beach parties, here’s your guide to the top EDM festivals happening this February.
CORE Medellín 2026
Dates: February 20-21
Location: Medellín, Colombia
Tomorrowland’s CORE concept lands back in Colombia, bringing its signature fusion of nature, storytelling, and melodic electronic music. Expect deep house, organic grooves, and immersive stage design set against lush Colombian landscapes.

Ultra Buenos Aires 2026
Dates: February 14 – 15
Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
Ultra returns to Argentina with its iconic production and high-energy South American crowd. They come with a stacked lineup of global headliners and regional stars delivering big-room, techno, and house across massive stages.

EDC Mexico 2026
Dates: February 20 – 22
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
One of the largest editions of EDC in the world, EDC Mexico takes over Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez with jaw-dropping production and a lineup packed with festival favorites. Fireworks, carnival rides, and nonstop energy make this a must-attend festival.

A State of Trance (ASOT) 2026
Dates: February 27 – 28
Location: Rotterdam, Netherlands
Armin van Buuren’s A State of Trance returns to celebrate 25 years of ASOT with a euphoric celebration of trance music. Expect emotional melodies, massive laser shows, and a crowd united by uplifting energy and timeless anthems.

Palm Tree Festival Aspen 2026
Dates: February 21 – 21
Location: Aspen, Colorado, USA
Palm Tree Festival brings its luxury-meets-lifestyle vibe to the mountains, combining electronic music with alpine scenery. Expect polished production, après-ski energy, and a curated lineup designed for dancing in the snow.

Palm Tree Festival West Palm Beach 2026
Dates: February 14
Location: West Palm Beach, Florida, USA
From snow to sand, Palm Tree Festival continues in Florida with beachside stages, warm-weather vibes, and house-forward sounds. Sunset sets and tropical energy define this coastal edition.

Lost In Dreams Vancouver 2026
Dates: February 15
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Insomniac’s melodic bass festival Lost In Dreams arrives in Vancouver for the very first time with emotional sets, cinematic visuals, and heart-on-your-sleeve energy. Expect future bass, melodic dubstep, and euphoric singalong moments.

We Belong Here Miami 2026
Dates: February 27 – Mar 1
Location: Miami, Florida, USA
We Belong Here returns to Miami with its signature blend of dance music and elegant beachside production. Known for sunset sessions and immersive atmospheres, this is a refined alternative to traditional festival chaos.

Skyline Festival 2026
Dates: February 28 – Mar 1
Location: Los Angeles, California, USA
Skyline Festival brings underground house and techno to the heart of LA. Expect warehouse-style production, city skyline views, and a lineup curated for true dancefloor lovers.

Excision Presents: The Thunderdome 2026
Dates: February 6-8
Location: Tacoma, Washington, USA
Bass music reaches maximum intensity as Excision Presents returns with The Thunderdome. Known for massive LED walls, earth-shaking sound systems, and exclusive sets, this is one of the heaviest indoor events of the year.

Let It Roll Winter Festival 2026
Dates: February 20 – 21
Location: Prague, Czech Republic
The world’s biggest drum & bass brand Let It Roll takes over winter with a dark, high-energy indoor edition. Expect relentless BPMs, immersive visuals, and one of the most passionate DnB crowds on the planet.

S2O Australia 2026
Dates: February 28
Location: Brisbane, Australia
The world’s wettest party arrives down under as S2O brings its water-soaked EDM spectacle to Australia. Massive drops, water cannons, and festival-sized production make this one of the most unique experiences of the month.

From Latin America’s largest stages to underground winter raves and tropical beach festivals, February 2026 proves there’s no offseason in dance music. Whether you’re chasing warmth, bass, or melodic moments, this month delivers global energy in every direction.
Make sure to visit our EDM Festival News section to stay up to date.
Editorial
ClutchLoop II Is Here — And It’s Taking Phone Security to the Next Level
If you’ve ever been to a festival — and let’s be honest, most of us have — you’ve probably heard at least one horror story about someone losing their phone in the crowd. Between filming sets, coordinating meetups with friends, and navigating massive festival grounds, your phone has become an essential.
That growing concern is exactly what inspired ClutchLoop. The company originally launched its anti-theft phone tether as a simple solution to help festival-goers keep their devices secure in crowded environments without sacrificing accessibility.
Now, the brand is taking the concept a step further with the introduction of ClutchLoop II, an updated version of its phone tether designed to improve both security and everyday usability.
A Smarter Design
At its core, ClutchLoop works by attaching a phone to a retractable tether that connects to a bag, belt loop, or piece of clothing. This allows users to pull their phone out to film, text, or check directions while keeping it physically secured to them at all times.
ClutchLoop II introduces several upgrades aimed at making the system stronger and easier to use. The redesigned model features a reinforced retractable steel cable along with an improved anchor system that attaches securely to most phone cases.
The updated design also includes a magnetic locking mechanism that helps keep the phone in place when it’s not actively being used. This added stability can be especially useful in crowded environments where phones are frequently pulled out to capture videos or photos.
Moving Beyond Festivals
The launch of ClutchLoop II moves beyond festivals and into everyday life. As smartphones continue to function as cameras, wallets, navigation tools, and digital tickets, the importance of keeping them secure extends far beyond music events.
Grab yours here or use code ‘EHNCLUTCHED’ at checkout!
Editorial
Dance Music and Depression: An Emotional Connection
Dance Music and Depression: An Emotional Connection Through Movement, Memory, and Shared Experience
For many people, dance music is more than entertainment. It becomes a way to process emotion, release tension, and feel connected at times when mental health feels fragile. This experience now has growing support in research. A systematic review and meta-analysis titled Effect of Dancing Interventions on Depression and Anxiety Symptoms in Older Adults by Tiago Paiva Prudente, Eleazar Mezaiko, Erika Aparecida Silveira, Túlio Eduardo Nogueira, and colleagues found that structured dance interventions were associated with significant reductions in depressive symptoms compared with control groups. Although the study focused on dance instead of specific music genres, it supports the idea that moving to music can play a meaningful role in emotional health. For people who turn to dance music during difficult periods, the combination of rhythm, movement, and shared experience can offer a form of emotional support that feels personal, physical, and deeply real.
How Movement to Music Can Help Ease Depression
Clinical and behavioral research shows that rhythmic movement affects multiple systems linked to depression, including sleep regulation, stress hormones, and emotional processing. Regular movement to music has been associated with reductions in cortisol, improved serotonin activity, and better emotional regulation, all of which are commonly disrupted in depressive states. In practice, this means that movement to rhythm can shift the body out of prolonged stress response and into a more stable physiological state. Unlike exercise alone, dance adds emotional and social layers that affect motivation and emotional engagement, which is why people who struggle to maintain regular physical activity often find it easier to move when music is involved.
@bobby.hendrickson EDM can cure depression?! 😢 . #edmmusic #edmlife #edmlifestyle #edmfestivals #edmfestival #housemusic ♬ original sound – bobbyhendrickson
This becomes visible in real dance music contexts. At events such as Anjunadeep Open Air, Boiler Room, or extended house and melodic techno sessions at venues like Club Space Miami, people often describe feeling mentally lighter after hours of movement, even when arriving emotionally heavy. The structure of dance music helps here. Tracks repeat patterns, slowly evolve, and provide predictability alongside variation, which supports emotional grounding rather than cognitive overload. Over time, this combination of movement, sound, and shared experience creates a form of emotional release that many people return to not just for enjoyment, but for relief.
Why Familiar EDM Songs Can Become Emotional Anchors During Depression
For many people experiencing depression, familiarity provides stability when motivation, focus, and emotional regulation feel disrupted. Well-known EDM tracks such as “The Nights” by Avicii, “Don’t You Worry Child” by Swedish House Mafia, and “Summer” by Calvin Harris work in this context because their structure, melodies, and emotional direction are already known. The listener does not need to process something new or make sense of unfamiliar sounds. The brain follows a recognised pattern, which reduces mental effort at a time when decision-making and emotional processing often feel exhausting. This predictability allows engagement without pressure, making it easier to return to these tracks during difficult periods.
These songs also carry emotional clarity without requiring introspection or explanation. “The Nights” by Avicii is commonly associated with urgency and freedom, “Don’t You Worry Child” by Swedish House Mafia centres reassurance and release, and “Summer” by Calvin Harris evokes warmth and forward motion such as the passing of time during pivotal moments in ones life. Even when lyrics are present, they are direct and uncomplicated, which matters during episodes of depression when complex emotional narratives can feel overwhelming. Beyond personal memory, these tracks are tied to shared cultural moments such as festivals, radio, and collective experiences that many listeners recognise instantly. Returning to them does not just recall a sound, but a time when connection felt possible. For people struggling with depression, that reminder alone can make dance music feel less like entertainment and more like a reliable emotional anchor.
When Dance Music Becomes More Than Just a Night Out
So the next time you find yourself reaching for dance music when things feel heavy, it is worth recognising that this instinct is not random or shallow. For many people, dance music becomes a reliable place to land when emotions are hard to name and energy feels low. It offers rhythm without pressure, emotion without interrogation, and connection without obligation. Whether it is putting on a familiar Avicii track alone at night, letting a Swedish House Mafia chorus play through headphones on repeat, or standing in a crowd where the music carries the weight for you, the experience serves a purpose that goes beyond distraction. Dance music does not promise to fix depression or replace professional support, but it can offer moments of steadiness when everything else feels unstable. In that sense, calling it a lifeline is not exaggeration. It reflects how music, movement, and memory can quietly support people through periods when simply staying present is already an achievement.
Editorial
yetep’s ‘ÿ’: A Debut Album For The Books
If you already know yetep, you know he’s one of EDM’s most promising acts. If not, let his debut album introduce you to one of the USA’s fastest rising artists. Blending melodic bass, future bass, and emotive EDM, ‘ÿ’ marks yetep’s first LP, released via Insomniac’s ‘Lost In Dreams’ label.
Blurring lines between multiple genres, the album is a journey through freedom and curiosity, one that reflects yetep’s musical beginnings.
Speaking about ‘ÿ’s concept, the artist says: “I started my music career making mixes on SoundCloud and posting them on Tumblr, just playing whatever I loved with no genre rules at all. That freedom is what made me fall in love with music in the first place. With this album, I wanted to bring that same energy back.”
“Rather than starting with a strict concept, I wanted to let the project develop naturally and feel open, the same way my relationship with music began,” he adds.
Consisting of 13 tracks, the production is also a representation of yetep’s evolution as both an artist and a community leader. Each track stands on its own, yet together they paint a complete picture that captures the DJ’s path so far.
Standing at the centre of the album is a spirit of togetherness and love, fuelled by the DJ and producer’s deep involvement within his community. yetep constantly provides aid to homeless youth and raises awareness around mental health through his Common Unitÿ charitable initiatives.
“At its core, this album is about connection and honesty, and creating space for listeners to take away whatever the music means to them,” mentions the artist about his debut album, ‘ÿ.’
yetep: The Journey To ‘ÿ’
‘ÿ’ arrives following a long rollout which began in May 2025 with the release of the album’s lead single, ‘Hate It When It’s You.’ Finally putting out his first full-length project, yetep steps into a pivotal new era, expanding his artistic boundaries while remaining connected with the values that have shaped his rise.
Originally from Seoul, Korea and now based in Los Angeles, the artist attracted a global following through a series of monthly mixes posted on SoundCloud.
Moreover, the unique, emotional depth behind his sound helped him cement his reputation as a producer, with support from names such as Seven Lions, Dabin, and Adventure Club.
Since his first official release, yetep’s productions have become a regular presence on renowned labels including Monstercat and Lost In Dreams, the latter of which released his album on February 27.
Even though a written format of yetep’s journey could go on for pages, there is no better introduction to this artist other than listening to his debut album, his most expansive and personal statement so far.
Listen to ‘ÿ’ by yetep now, available on all platforms worldwide.
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