Sabrina Carpenter headlined the Coachella main stage on Friday April 10th, and “Espresso” did exactly what it always does, lodged itself immediately and refused to leave. The live video crossed one million views within hours of going up on the official Coachella channel, with “House Tour” close behind. Those are headliner numbers by any reasonable measure, and Carpenter carried the weight of that slot with genuine ease. This is an artist who spent 2025 becoming one of the biggest names in pop, and Coachella 2026 is the kind of moment that cements it.
Video: Teddy Swims Stops Coachella’s Main Stage Cold With “Mr. Know It All”
Teddy Swims brought his full voice to the Coachella main stage on April 10th, and “Mr. Know It All” was the vehicle. The live video is up now on the official Coachella channel, and it captures exactly what makes Swims such a compelling live performer: a raw, unguarded soul voice that doesn’t need production tricks to fill a space that size. Main stage Coachella is a serious platform, and Swims handled it like he belonged there completely.
Video: KATSEYE Take the Sahara Stage by Storm With “Pinky Up” at Coachella 2026
KATSEYE hit the Sahara Stage at Coachella on Friday April 10th and the numbers say everything: Their performance of “Pinky Up” one of the fastest-moving clips from the entire weekend. That’s not a fluke. It’s a fanbase showing up with real intent for a group that has spent the past year building momentum on a genuinely global scale. The Sahara tent was the right room for this, high energy, tightly choreographed, and built for exactly the kind of pop spectacle KATSEYE deliver without breaking a sweat.
Video: The xx Deliver a Spine-Tingling “I Dare You” on the Main Stage at Coachella 2026
The xx took the Coachella main stage on Friday April 10th and reminded everyone within earshot why they’ve always occupied a category entirely their own. Their performance of “I Dare You” is now streaming via the official Coachella YouTube channel, and it’s the kind of live footage that holds up well beyond the festival moment itself. Sparse, controlled, and emotionally loaded, the track lands with the quiet intensity that has defined this band since their 2009 debut, and the desert amphitheatre setting only amplifies it.
Alan Jackson’s “Last Call: One More For The Road — The Finale” Brings Country Royalty to Nashville for One Last Night
Alan Jackson is going home to say goodbye. The country music legend has announced “Last Call: One More For The Road — The Finale,” a star-studded farewell concert set for June 27, 2026 at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium. Tickets go on general sale April 15. The lineup joining Jackson on stage includes Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Luke Combs, Riley Green, Cody Johnson, Miranda Lambert, Jon Pardi, Keith Urban, Carrie Underwood, and Lee Ann Womack.
Jackson wrapped his final road show in Milwaukee in 2025, telling the crowd he had one last thing left to do. “I just felt like I had to end it all where it all started,” he said. “That’s in Nashville, Tennessee. Music City.” The farewell is the close of a touring career that began 40 years ago when Jackson and his wife drove to Nashville with a U-Haul trailer chasing a dream that turned into one of the most successful runs in country music history, more than 75 million records sold, dozens of number ones, and a catalog that defined neotraditional country for an entire generation.
The decision to step away is personal and health-driven. Jackson revealed in 2021 that he has Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a chronic neuropathy condition that affects balance and mobility. He’s also been clear about wanting to spend more time with family, including a growing number of grandchildren. “I don’t want to be away like I had to be in my younger days,” he said when he announced the farewell tour in 2024. For Jackson, this isn’t about leaving music. It’s about choosing what comes next.
The June 27 show at Nissan Stadium will be the punctuation mark on a career built entirely on Jackson’s own terms. He never chased crossover trends, never reinvented himself for new audiences, and never needed to. The music held. The fans stayed. And now, the man who drove into Nashville four decades ago with nothing but ambition gets to leave it on a stage surrounded by the genre he helped shape.
John Nolan, Character Actor and Uncle to Christopher and Jonathan Nolan, Dies at 87
John Nolan, the British stage and screen actor whose six-decade career bridged the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Nolan cinematic universe, died Saturday at the age of 87. The Stratford-Upon-Avon Herald first reported his passing. No cause of death was disclosed.
Born in Westminster on May 22, 1938, Nolan trained at the Drama Centre London and built his foundation in classical theater, performing with the Royal Court Company and the RSC before establishing a long television career in Britain. He played the title role in the 1970 BBC miniseries Daniel Deronda, starred across two seasons of the environmental drama Doomwatch, and earned recognition for his stage work under director Trevor Nunn at the National Theatre. He was, by all accounts, a theater man first.
His connection to his nephews Christopher and Jonathan Nolan brought him to a vastly wider audience. He appeared in Christopher’s debut feature Following in 1998, then as Wayne Enterprises board member Douglas Fredericks in Batman Begins and The Dark Knight Rises, and again in Dunkirk in 2017. On television, Jonathan cast him as the enigmatic former MI6 agent John Greer in Person of Interest, a role he played across 27 episodes from seasons two through five. His final screen credit was Dune: Prophecy in 2024.
Christopher paid tribute directly: “My uncle John was the first artist I knew, and he taught me more than anyone about the search for truth in acting and the joys of creative achievement. I miss him terribly.” His wife, actress Kim Hartman, described him as “a free spirit, who always knew what he wanted and acted on his own terms, the only truly original thinker I think I ever knew.” He is survived by Hartman, their children Tom and Miranda, and grandchildren Dylan and Kara.
Soulive Make a Long-Awaited Return With ‘Flowers’, Their First Album in 15 Years
Fifteen years is a long time between records. Soulive have spent that stretch doing other things, building other projects, living other musical lives, and ‘Flowers’ arrives with the relaxed confidence of a band that never doubted it had another album in it. Recorded at Flóki Studios in northern Iceland under executive producer Chad Pike, it’s the sound of Eric Krasno, Alan Evans, and Neal Evans picking up exactly where they left off, and then going somewhere new.
The album moves through jazz, funk, R&B, and blues with the ease of a group that has spent 25-plus years internalizing all of it. Opener “XI” sets the mood immediately, a deep, haunting groove with Krasno’s reverb-drenched guitar oozing swagger over the Evans brothers’ locked-in rhythm. “Baby Jupiter” gets the body moving, “3 Kings” pays tribute to B.B., Freddie, and Albert King with the kind of blues fluency that only Krasno can deliver, and “Basher”, a nod to Don Cheadle’s Ocean’s Eleven character, showcases the trio’s stop-start telepathy at its most playful.
The sole vocal appearance comes from Grammy-winning soul artist Van Hunt on “Flowers at Your Feet”, a Parliament-influenced centrepiece that broadens the album’s palette without disrupting its flow. The closing stretch, from “Pikes Place” through the symphonic warmth of “Window Weather”, lands like the payoff of a well-earned journey. This is an outfit still operating with borderline telepathy, and ‘Flowers’ captures that bond in full.
Soulive have two dates at Ardmore Music Hall outside Philadelphia on April 24 and 25. Limited opportunities to hear this material live, so the window is tight.
‘Flowers’ is out now.
Upcoming Dates:
April 24, Philadelphia Area, PA, Ardmore Music Hall
April 25, Philadelphia Area, PA, Ardmore Music Hall
Beach Boys Legend Brian Wilson Gets a Rare Live Collection Out for Record Store Day
The Brian Wilson estate has been doing right by the legend’s catalog, and ‘On Tour 1999-2007’ is the latest proof. Released by Oglio Entertainment as a Record Store Day exclusive on April 18, the live album draws from eight years of Wilson touring with his celebrated backing band, capturing a period that reminded an entire generation exactly what made him one of the great figures in American music.
Only 2,000 copies are being pressed, which tells you everything you need to know about how quickly this one will move. The backing band assembled across these recordings is remarkable in its own right: Darian Sahanaja on keyboards and musical direction, Jeff Foskett on guitar and vocals, Probyn Gregory handling trumpet, French horn, and keyboards, Paul Mertens on woodwinds, and orchestral contributions from The Stockholm Strings ‘n’ Horns. These were not casual live shows.
The tracklist pulls from deep in Wilson’s catalog, touching ‘Friends’ and “Meant For You”, “Busy Doin’ Nothin'”, “Desert Drive”, and a version of “She’s Leaving Home” that carries real weight in this context. The selection reflects the kind of setlist curation that made Wilson’s late-career touring so affecting for audiences who saw it firsthand.
Oglio Entertainment recently released a revamped 25th anniversary edition of ‘Live at the Roxy Theatre’, originally from 2000, making this the second significant archival release from the Wilson vaults in short order. ‘On Tour 1999-2007’ is available at independent record stores worldwide on April 18, in strictly limited quantities.
‘On Tour 1999-2007’ Tracklist:
Side A:
This Could Be The Night
Our Prayer/Gee/Heroes & Villains
Melt Away
The Night Was So Young
Desert Drive
Busy Doin’ Nothin’
Side B:
Drive In
Marcella
Good Timin’
Forever
Meant For You
Friends
Johnny B Goode
She’s Leaving Home

