Coachella is ‘struggling to hire headliners’, says Diplo

Coachella is ‘struggling to hire headliners’, says Diplo

In the 2023 edition, Coachella had to replace Frank Ocean with Blink-182

With controversies at the show Frank Ocean and the cancellation of the second presentation, coachella received mixed reviews from the organization. Now the DJ Diploma opined about the festival, one of the biggest in the world, and cited “difficulty in hiring headliners.”

During an interview with The Hollywood Reporterthe musician commented on how the event failed to reach the greatness of other years and, as much as the main attractions are good, they did not achieve the same success as other artists.

“I guess I’m a little too old for the coachella. This year I felt the most old at the festival,” he said. Diploma in the conversation. “It’s really fun. I love going with the general public and seeing new bands. But it’s too much.”

I think they honestly might be having a hard time hiring headliners. Not much left. We’ve kind of left the era of big superhero acts like Red Hot Chili Peppers or daft punk… now they hire artists like Bad Bunny It is blackpink, which are cool, but they’re only the top 40 out there. It’s almost like they’re stadium performers.

Then, the artist explained why he thinks that the festival faces difficulties in hiring the main attractions: “I saw labrinth. It was amazing. I think this represents the real coachella. He’s part of the zeitgeist.”

“But the rest felt like they had to struggle to find things that would be cultural touchstones but also draw a big crowd,” he continued. “I think I once said no jimmy fallon: ‘Coachella is the surviving influencer.’ This year was like that more than ever.”

Finally, Diploma commented on all controversy Frank Ocean: “He really doesn’t care about the fans, about putting on a show for them. It was a show where the skating rink didn’t work and that’s about it… He has one of the best voices I’ve ever heard.”

I really think he just doesn’t care about shows. I think it’s the fault of coachella.

Source: Rollingstone

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