Ohana Festival lands on Eddie Vedder and Earthlings, Kings of Leon, Hozier, Leon Bridges, Green Day & Cage the Elephant for ninth year

Ohana Festival - 2025 lineup

Ohana Festival //
Doheny State Beach – Dana Point, CA
September 26th-28th, 2025 //

With festival season officially underway and warmer days ahead, it’s already time to start looking past summer and turn our attention toward what’s coming this fall.

That means Ohana Festival for those in the know out here, and the three-day event founded by Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder and named a three-time Music Festival of the Year recipient by Pollstar is still going strong at Doheny State Beach nearly a decade after its 2016 debut.

The ninth installment of Ohana will see Vedder return to the stage as a headliner, but unlike his solo appearances in 2023, 2022 and 2021, this time he’s being billed with his Earthlings backing band that boasts former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist and current Pearl Jam touring member Josh Klinghoffer (guitar), Pearl Jam producer Andrew Watt (guitar), the legendary Pino Palladino (bass), Glen Hansard (guitar) and RHCP timekeeper Chad Smith (drums, backing vocals).

While last year’s edition ended up requiring Sting to replace Neil Young & Crazy Horse when an illness struck the band a few months prior, we hope the same won’t transpire again with a lineup that not only features Hozier and Green Day as the fest’s other headlining material but also includes Kings of Leon, Hozier and Cage the Elephant right below them on the bill.

Garbage are back as well after having to cancel their Ohana slot in 2024 due to Shirley Manson’s injury and subsequent surgery, and even though the lead singer admitted then that “time is running out” on her career, there will be at least one more opportunity for SoCal fans to witness the 90’s alt-rockers onstage following their performance at Cruel World in Pasadena next month.

Rainbow Kitten Surprise, Wet Leg, Stereophonics, Tedeschi Trucks Band, James, Lukas Nelson, Royel Otis, Mannequin Pussy, Kim Deal (of Pixies), Margo Price, The Chats and Deep Sea Diver are some of the other big names standing out on the poster when they arrive in Dana Point this September.

Tickets can be purchased starting this Thursday, May 1st at 10 a.m. PT during the festival’s presale, but you must sign up here to receive a code if you want to secure a spot! Both three-day and single-day GA passes will go on sale for $530 and $198, respectively, with three-day and single-day VIP still priced at $1,589 and $624. And of course, we can’t forget to mention the three-day Ultimate VIP option for two at just $10,255 in case you have a trust fund or are looking to go broke quickly.

Ohana fam, are you ready to party or what?!?!

Ohana Festival 2025 - Friday set times

Ohana Festival 2025 - Saturday set times

Ohana Festival 2025 - Sunday set times

UPDATE (September 9th): Set times for Ohana 2025 have been ushered out with the festivities more than two weeks away as Eddie Vedder and the Earthlings and Kings of Leon kick things off at the beach Friday, Hozier and Leon Bridges lead what’s sure to be a soulful Saturday, and Green Day close things out Sunday after Cage the Elephant rock the stage. Three-day passes as well as single-day tickets for both Saturday and Sunday are all sold out at this point, but you can join the waitlist here. Pōmaikaʻi!

The Prodigy channel the spirit of Keith Flint by bringing the ruckus to The Warfield for their first North American headline show since 2017

The ProdigyBy Josh Herwitt //

The Prodigy with Nitepunk //
The Warfield – San Francisco
April 13th, 2025 //

As someone who grew up in the 90’s and whose musical taste was shaped largely by the decade’s zeitgeist, my initial interest in electronic music dates back to the first time I ever heard The Prodigy.

The year was 1997 and the UK group’s seminal album The Fat of the Land had exploded into the mainstream, reaching No. 1 on the charts at home and in the states as music videos for hit singles “Breathe” and “Smack My Bitch Up” frequently played on MTV.

But there was something different about the raw, unapologetic sound crafted by producer, keyboardist, songwriter and founding member Liam Howlett that infiltrated the underground rave scene, eventually making The Prodigy one of the most successful electronic acts of all time with an estimated 25 million albums sold worldwide.

The Prodigy, for starters, were the only electronic act at the time to feature not just vocalists, but also dancers as full-time band members. In fact, it wasn’t until Howlett met dancers Keith Flint and Leeroy Thornhill during one of his early DJ gigs at a nightclub in Braintree that the project came to fruition — with the band’s name being conceived from the Moog Prodigy synthesizer that Howlett used to make some of the music he would originally share with them on a mix tape requested by Flint.

And unlike their fellow Big Beat peers in The Chemical Brothers, The Crystal Method and Fatboy Slim that all formed shortly after The Prodigy unveiled their debut EP What Evil Lurks in 1991, incorporating more traditional rock instrumentation in the form of guitars, keyboards and drums with other burgeoning art forms — turntablism, sampling and beatboxing for instance — that were gaining traction across the music industry was what separated them from the rest and continues to be an integral part of the sonic formula they have followed over the past 34 years.

For as long as I have been a fan of The Prodigy and lived in Los Angeles though, it always surprised me that I had never seen them perform live. Even in a city with no shortage of live music and entertainment options every night of the week, there haven’t been many opportunities to catch Howlett and company in the flesh with the band limiting its trips across the pond.

The Prodigy

Then in 2019, those prospects suddenly looked much more bleak after Flint was found dead in his North End home at the age of 49. The Prodigy, having just released their seventh album No Tourists less than six months prior, were a couple of months away from touring the U.S. for the first time in a decade, and with the shows — none of them on the West Coast — immediately canceled, no one knew sadly if they would ever get back out there again.

So, when Goldenvoice announced The Prodigy would play a Coachella sideshow in between their two performances at the festival this year, I knew that might be my only chance to finally cross them off my bucket list. That meant driving almost 400 miles north to SF for their first North American headline date since 2017, but after snagging tickets to the first show at The Warfield that quickly sold out as well as a second performance they added subsequently for the previous night, it felt like the odds were stacking up in my favor.

When I arrived at the 102-year-old vaudeville theater before the doors had opened, there were already two lines of people going down Market St. in either direction. This was technically the add-on gig, and while there were tickets available for those who wanted to purchase a seat in the balcony section, the floor area downstairs had filled up by 8 p.m. when Nitepunk hit the decks to kick off the evening.

An hour later, and it’s fair to say the place was completely packed to the gills with the clock nearing 9 p.m. The roar of the crowd that greeted The Prodigy as they walked out provided us with a pretty good indication things were about to go off, and it didn’t take longer than a minute for such to transpire. The opening notes to “Breathe” sent the pit into an absolute frenzy that didn’t let up for the next 75 minutes as Howlett and Maxim (vocals, beatboxing) plus touring members Rob Holliday (guitars, bass) and Leo Crabtree (drums, percussion) powered through a setlist that covered most of the project’s catalog. We do wonder why no material from 2004’s Always Outnumbered, Never Outgunned made the cut by the end of the set, but the ensuing “Voodoo People” on 1994’s Music for the Jilted Generation was still a treat to hear live. Other highlights included a melody of older tracks — which began with “Climbatize” before transitioning to “Everybody in the Place” and “Warrior’s Dance” — along with a tribute to Flint during “Firestarter” that earned loud cheers from the audience at the outset.

Stadium anthems “Light Up the Sky” and “Invaders Must Die” offered visceral moments for everyone to sing along to when it came time for the chorus in each song, but the energy never waned regardless of the brief encore break that put a pause on the party. Returning with “Smack My Bitch Up” is one way to ensure that doesn’t happen and the final stretch that saw “Take Me to the Hospital”, “We Live Forever” and “Out of Space” was another, leaving us mostly out of breath when we exited the building.

Was it everything we could have asked for? Maybe if they had dropped “Diesel Power” we could say yes unequivocally, but knowing that the original date at The Warfield ended up being canceled the following night after Howlett spent the next day in the hospital on an IV drip, we feel fortunate to have gotten any taste of The Prodigy while they were here in California. Because with a record-breaking streak of seven straight No. 1 albums back home and new tunes currently being worked on, there remains hope among us “party people” it might not be too long before their return to the U.S. and you can bet we will be ready whenever and wherever that is.

Setlist:
Breathe
Voodoo People
Omen
Climbatize / Everybody in the Place / Warrior’s Dance
Beyond the Deathray
Firestarter
Light Up the Sky
Roadblox
Poison
No Good (Start the Dance)
Get Your Fight On
Invaders Must Die

Encore:
Smack My Bitch Up
Take Me to the Hospital
We Live Forever
Out of Space

Jumping ahead of schedule again, Coachella shares 2025 set times for both weekends while also adding Weezer & Ed Sheeran

Coachella 2025

Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival //
Empire Polo Club – Indio, CA
April 11th-13th & April 18th-20th, 2025 //

As the calendar flips from March to April, those of us who are live music fans in Southern California know that means we are only days away from Coachella’s next installment.

The 24th edition of Goldenvoice’s signature event is almost here, and though the renowned concert promoter has been known to wait closer to the festival to release set times, it has jumped a few days ahead of schedule, which organizers also did by unveiling this year’s lineup in November rather than January shortly after celebrating the new year. There’s still several days to go before Coachella’s first weekend, but check out the full schedule below before heading to the desert next week.

What’s different in 2025 is set times for both weekend are being revealed beforehand, but much like in 2024 with Vampire Weekend (Weekend 1) and Kid Cudi (Weekend 2), 2023 with blink-182 (Weekend 1 and 2) and Four Tet x Fred again.. x Skrillex (Weekend 2), and then of course in 2022 with Arcade Fire (Weekend 1) for the first time, there will be two more special guests, both on a Saturday at the Mojave Tent, as Weezer rocks Weekend 1 and Ed Sheeran fills a similar afternoon slot for Weekend 2.

That’s not likely to be the only surprises in the desert, though. With acclaimed hip-hop DJ and producer Mustard hitting the massive Sahara Tent at 11:50 p.m. on Friday while Lady Gaga headlines the fest for the second time in her career after replacing Beyoncé in 2017, we can only guess that Kendrick Lamar will be making an appearance after the two linked up in New Orleans less than a couple of months ago for the award-winning emcee’s Super Bowl LIX halftime show.

The other piece of news that comes with the schedule drop is which day Travis Scott will be performing. Originally booked to headline in 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic put the kibosh on such plans and the disaster that would unfold a year later at Astroworld Festival (or Diastroworld as we like to call it), the chart-topping rapper — listed toward the bottom of the poster similar to how No Doubt, Calvin Harris and Swedish House Mafia were the last three years despite being labeled this time as some sort of visionary who “designs the desert” rather than someone who merely returns to it — will follow Saturday headliner Green Day on the main stage and begin his special set at 11:40 p.m.

So, who’s making the trek out to the Empire Polo Club? If you are, tell us: what’s your biggest conflict and which act are you most excited to see? And don’t forget to bring plenty of sunscreen and water.

WEEKEND 1 SET TIMES

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 1 - Friday set times

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 1 - Saturday set times

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 1 - Sunday set times

WEEKEND 2 SET TIMES

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 2 - Friday set times

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 2 - Saturday set times

Coachella 2025 - Weekend 2 - Sunday set times

MAP

A few days later, Coachella has put out this year’s map and the big change is Quasar trading places with the Do LaB. While both of the aforementioned stages focus specifically on showcasing electronic music, the location change does signal an upgrade for Quasar after last year’s debut by now having its own designated area/corner. If you are looking to dance in more comfortable temperatures though, the air-conditioned Yuma Tent on the other side of the polo fields by 12 Peaks is always a good option day or night.

Coachella 2025 - map

If you are still thinking about going, you can hop on the waitlist here or purchase tickets here along with whatever camping and parking passes are left.

Happy Coachella!