Connect with us

EDM Festival News

ESNS festival line-up complete for 40th Edition

Unknown's avatar

Published

on

An emerging European rock or band artist performing a high-energy live set at the Eurosonic Noorderslag (ESNS) festival stage in Groningen, illuminated by bright spotlights.

ESNS (Eurosonic Noorderslag) announces the final 41 artists from all over Europe that will be playing at Eurosonic and Noorderslag. The music showcase festival celebrates its 40th anniversary in 2026, taking place from January 14 to 17 in Groningen. The complete line-up holds 261 confirmed emerging artists. The selection represents 39 countries, more than ever in the history of ESNS.

Eurosonic line-up complete

With Barbora Hora (cz), Chikiss (by), Dina Jashari (mk), Droom Dit (nl), Etceteral (si), Fauna (se), Flo Naegeli (de), Funky Flamingo Fiasco (md), Goldkimono (nl), Hildá Länsman & Tuomas Norvio (fi), Isak Benjamin (se), Man/Woman/Chainsaw (uk-eng), Mount Palomar (uk-nir), N’famady Kouyaté (UK-Wales), Nusantara Beat (NL), Odhran Murphy (UK-Northern Ireland), Saga Faye (SE), Sofía Gabanna (ES), Susobrino (BE), and YĪN YĪN (NL) complete the Eurosonic line-up, which will be performing from Wednesday to Friday at various venues throughout the city of Groningen.

3FM, FunX, NPO Luister Soul & Jazz

Together with media partners 3FM and FunX, ESNS announces five young artists for Noorderslag: Dylisa (FunX), Fit (3FM), Josua Peter (3FM), Lavils (FunX), and XXJULÍA (3FM). Together, they form the line-up for the talent stage hosted by 3FM, FunX, and Sena.
halfpastseven, JUNO, KAGAMI, Kruidkoek & Joost Oomen, QUANZA, and Sunflower have been confirmed for the NPO Luister Soul & Jazz stage at Noorderslag.

Final names for Noorderslag

Dutch talent Alice Olsthoorn, Fellatio, Frank Arnold, Honey I’m Home, Isabel van Gelder, LUNA, Marilu, Naga Kirana, Politie Warnsveld, and Tom Forever will be performing on the final Saturday of ESNS at De Oosterpoort, completing the Noorderslag line-up.

The Party Committee at Noorderslag

Noorderslag gets off to a good start in 2026. Dutch rapper Donnie opens the festival’s Main Hall with a special act, ‘Donnie presents: The Party Committee’. In this show, the biggest Dutch hits of recent years are reviewed, for which the folk rapper invites his musical friends, such as Marco Schuitmaker, Ammar, and Robert van Hemert, onto the stage. With this program, Donnie claims the success of the folk genre in recent years, in which he has played a key role.

Europe Calling

In recent years, ESNS has highlighted individual countries as a focus, but with its new Europe Calling manifesto, the focus shifts to a shared cultural movement. Under this theme, ESNS26 presents a fresh mix of Europe’s most exciting emerging artists. All confirmed artists reflect Europe’s diversity, covering a wide range of genres, languages and cultural roots, from the Arctic North to the Mediterranean and from Central Europe to the vibrant sounds of Eastern Europe. The line-up reflects the full scope of Europe’s thriving music scene.

Tickets for ESNS26 are now available. Purchase a Delegate Pass (at a Late rate – rates will go up soon) or a Eurosonic Noorderslag Festival Ticket.

Founder, Owner & Manager of EDMHouseNetwork. Instant lover of all things electronic dance music from the moment I heard Fatboy Slim and The Prodigy. After pursuing a career as a DJ, creating EDM content quickly became a love of mine and it has been my mission to keep delivering high quality content ever since.

Continue Reading

EDM Festival News

Les Plages Électroniques Announces First Wave of Artists for Its 20th Anniversary Edition

Unknown's avatar

Published

on

A massive crowd at Les Plages Électroniques in Cannes, cheering in front of the main stage, showcasing the high-energy atmosphere of the French beach festival.

Les Plages Électroniques is France’s most iconic beach festival and now it unveils the first wave of artists set to perform at its landmark 20th anniversary edition next August in Cannes. Returning to the sands of the Côte d’Azur, the festival continues its legacy of blending world-class electronic talent with a uniquely Mediterranean atmosphere.

7 August 2026 will see Martin Garrix headline. He is one of the world’s most influential EDM superstars, known for global chart-topping hits and headline performances at the biggest festivals worldwide and will be joined by Nico Moreno,  a leading force in the new wave of industrial techno, recognised for his fast, hard-hitting sets that dominate underground stages across Europe. Mosimann is next and is the Swiss DJ, producer and vocalist celebrated for his hybrid live sets and genre-blending approach, merging house, pop and electronic performance.

8 August 2026 welcomes Multi-platinum producer and global dance icon Marshmello whose crossover hits have earned billions of streams and collaborations with the world’s biggest artists. Then comes Belgium’s Amelie Lens, one of techno’s most powerful modern figures, known for her hypnotic, high-energy sets and commanding presence on the world’s largest stages. Chart-topping French rapper PLK also brings his signature melodic flow and sharp lyricism to the Riviera while Vladimir Cauchemar is a producer and performer known for his flute-driven trap sound and visually striking aesthetic.

9 August 2026 sees DJ Snake present Pardon My French as the global superstar returns to the Croisette with his famed PMF collective, bringing high-energy bass, trap and dance music to close the festival.

This summer marks two decades since Les Plages Électroniques began as a small local gathering in 2006. Today, the festival welcomes more than 60,000 attendees from around the world and presents over 90 artists annually across six stages spanning the beach, rooftops, the Palais des Festivals and the open sea.

Set between the Bay of Cannes and the Croisette, the festival has become a defining symbol of summer in the South of France with an immersive experience from beach sunsets to late-night afterparties inside the Palais.

The 20th anniversary edition will celebrate the festival’s heritage while pushing forward with enhanced production, new stage concepts, special collaborations and commemorative moments honouring two decades of creativity and connection.

In August 2026, the Croisette will once again transform into one of Europe’s biggest dancefloors as the countdown begins for the festival’s most anticipated edition yet.

Website | Instagram | Tickets

Continue Reading

Editorial

Inside EDC Thailand: What It Really Feels Like Under the Electric Sky

Unknown's avatar

Published

on

The massive Kinetic Field stage at EDC Thailand 2025 at night, illuminated with purple lights, confetti, and fireworks, with a huge crowd celebrating under the Electric Sky.

Inside EDC Thailand: How the Sounds, Lights, and People Create the Feeling of Being Under the Electric Sky

EDC Thailand 2025 unfolded across a wide network of stages, rides, and themed areas, with music carrying steadily across the venue from afternoon into the early hours. Movement between sets felt continuous, while spaces outside the main stages, from kandi exchanges to the wedding chapel, offered moments that stayed with people longer than any single performance. Fireworks brought the field to a standstill more than once, with people pausing together as each sequence filled the sky. As EDC Thailand prepares for a larger venue in 2026, these details remain central to what being under the electric sky in Thailand is actually like.

Under the Electric Sky, Thailand Edition

EDC Thailand unfolded in Phuket in January 2025, with the entrances already active before people fully stepped inside. Performers danced near the gates as groups filtered through, some holding flags from their home countries, others stopping briefly to watch before moving on. The Ferris wheel and merry-go-round were already turning, lit clearly against the night and visible from across the grounds. Music was playing from different directions, overlapping as people moved further in.

Inside, the space revealed itself gradually. Kinetic Field dominated the view with its scale, while CircuitGround, StereoBloom, Bionic Jungle, and the Boombox Art Car pulled attention in different directions depending on where you stood. People moved freely between stages, sometimes circling back to a set they recognised, sometimes stopping simply because something caught their eye. The rides stayed busy, walkways stayed full, and the night moved forward without a clear start or pause. Under the electric sky, EDC Thailand felt lived in from the first hours rather than staged.

The Wedding Chapel: Love and Chaos Combined

The wedding chapel became one of the busiest spots inside EDC Thailand 2025. People lined up in colorful outfits, some carrying inflatable bouquets, others wearing plastic crowns picked up along the way. Couples stepped in one after another, with some clearly together for years and others laughing about having just met that night. The line moved steadily, with people watching, filming, and reacting as each ceremony played out.

Music continued through the vows without stopping. Confetti fell during photos, strangers hugged, and groups shouted from the sides before drifting away. A few couples exchanged kandi rings, while others posed quickly and headed back toward the stages. The chapel stayed active throughout the night, serving as a brief stop between dancing, where people came in, shared a moment, and moved on.

The Rides and the Rhythm

The Ferris wheel rose above the center of EDC Thailand 2025 and stayed visible from most parts of the venue. From the top, stages appeared spread out below, with light patterns moving across the grounds and fireworks breaking above the site. As the wheel turned, the volume shifted slightly, growing quieter at the peak before returning on the way down. People pointed out Kinetic Field, CircuitGround, and other landmarks to friends while the city lights and festival lighting blended into one view.

Nearby, the merry-go-round drew a different pace. People sat quietly as it rotated, phones in hand or resting at their sides, watching the lights circle overhead. Some stayed on for more than one round before stepping off and rejoining the flow toward the stages. Both rides remained active throughout the night, offering a change in perspective without pulling people fully away from the music playing across the grounds.

Kandi Culture and Connection

Kandi trading at EDC Thailand 2025 followed the full PLUR exchange rather than a quick handoff. People stopped, faced each other, and went through the hand movements together before swapping bracelets. It happened in walkways, near stages, and sometimes in the middle of conversations that started with a simple question or nod. The exchange was deliberate, even in busy areas.

Many bracelets carried words like “PLUR,” “Sawasdee,” or “Stay Kind.” After the exchange, people often stayed for a moment, said a few words, or danced together before moving on. Nearby, totems were raised above the crowd, helping groups reconnect after splitting up and serving as clear markers in packed areas. Kandi trading remained part of how people interacted throughout the night, not as a performance, but as a shared habit that required attention and presence.

The Fireworks and Finale Moments

Fireworks were something people actively waited for across all three days at EDC Thailand 2025. Each night ended with a fireworks show, and by the second day, people were already checking the sky as the sets came close to closing time. Groups stopped walking, some turned their backs to the stages to see better, and others climbed onto barriers or shoulders. When the first fireworks went up, the movement across the venue slowed almost immediately.

The last night was different. Before The Chainsmokers came on, a special fireworks sequence ran for around six minutes, longer than the previous nights and clearly set apart. People stayed put instead of drifting between stages, watching the entire thing play out without rushing anywhere else. When it ended, there was a brief pause before the stage lights shifted and the set began. It felt like the final breath before the weekend pushed forward again, something everyone seemed to take in at the same time.

Photo by Skyler Greene skygreene.com

What Stayed With People

Looking back at EDC Thailand 2025, what stayed with people were not headline moments but repeated, familiar scenes. The Ferris wheel turning above the site late into the night, the wedding chapel line circling back on itself, kandi exchanges happening in walkways between Kinetic Field and CircuitGround, and the pause that spread across the grounds when the fireworks began. These were the moments people talked about while leaving, not tied to any single set or stage.

As EDC Thailand moves into a larger venue in 2026, those details set the standard. The first edition showed how the festival worked when music, rides, rituals, and shared pauses existed side by side. From the PLUR exchanges to the final fireworks, the experience came together through how people used the space rather than what was scheduled on it.

That is what being under the electric sky in Thailand actually meant.

Continue Reading

EDM Festival News

Insomniac & OFF2 Announce Lost In Dreams Festival Canada Debut

Unknown's avatar

Published

on

A view of the Lost In Dreams festival main stage at night, featuring intense blue laser lights and colorful fireworks over a massive crowd of fans.

Insomniac has confirmed its first Canadian event, bringing the acclaimed Lost In Dreams brand to the Greater Vancouver area on February 15, 2026, during the Family Day long weekend. The debut comes in partnership with OFF2, one of Canada’s premier electronic music promoters, marking a significant milestone as both teams introduce a new era of melodic and vocal-driven experiences to Canadian audiences.

The festival will make its national debut at Tradex in Abbotsford, BC, anchored by a standout lineup led by ILLENIUM, whose phoenix emblem was quietly slipped into the announcement video before fans quickly uncovered the hint. He’ll be joined by Dabin and Sabai, alongside Elephante, TELYKAST, Koji Aiken, and OBLVYN, forming a bill that reflects both the emotional depth and global flavor that reflect the Lost In Dreams vision.

Since launching, Lost In Dreams has grown into one of Insomniac’s most recognizable festival concepts, championing the melodic, vocal-led corner of electronic music. What began as a flagship event in Los Angeles has evolved into a full ecosystem, spanning a record label under the Insomniac Music Group umbrella and stage takeovers at major festivals including EDC Las Vegas and Nocturnal Wonderland. The Vancouver edition now becomes the brand’s second flagship festival and the first to take place outside the United States.

For OFF2, the partnership marks a major step in elevating Canada’s presence on the global dance music map. The collaboration blends OFF2’s established legacy of Canadian events with Insomniac’s internationally renowned creative direction, promising a world-class production built around immersive staging, cinematic visuals, and artists who embody the emotional pull of melodic electronic music.

Lost In Dreams Vancouver is set to become a landmark moment for the Canadian dance community, a new West Coast destination event that brings fans together for a night of powerful performances, soaring vocals, and the unmistakable Insomniac experience.

Fans can sign up for exclusive updates, presale details, and more at lostindreams.co/vancouver.

Continue Reading

Trending