Bad Bunny Returns To Headline Weekend 2 Of Coachella

Bad Bunny returned to Coachella this weekend to headline night one of the final weekend of the festival. The artist performed on a platform on the huge stage, flanked by dancers and surrounded by massive screens displaying a backdrop of a sky full of stars. The performance was also live-streamed on Youtube. It was clearly a huge production, and fans showed their enthusiasm with a constant dull roar of cheering throughout the set. The singer performed all of his hits, including tracks from his latest album, 2022’s Un Verano Sin Ti. Bad Bunny looked enthusiastic about the set, hyping up the crowd at every chance he got. It is unknown if his alleged girlfriend, Kendall Jenner, was in attendance. However, she did make it out to last weeks performance.

For those unfamiliar, Bad Bunny is a Puerto Rican rapper, singer, and songwriter who has made a name for himself in the Latin and American music scenes. He is known for his unique blend of reggaeton, trap, and Latin pop. Bad Bunny has become a global phenomenon over the last few years. He first gained popularity with his debut single “Soy Peor” in 2017 and has since released multiple chart-topping albums and collaborated with various artists, including Cardi B, J Balvin, and Drake. Bad Bunny has won multiple awards for his music, including a Grammy Award and Latin Grammy Award, and continues to push boundaries in the music industry with his unique style and artistic vision.

Bad Bunny Brushes Off Harry Styles Drama

Bad Bunny also headlined weekend one of Coachella. While his performance went off without a hitch, there were some technical issues. Additionally, a bit of unexpected drama hit social media after the set ended. Bad Bunny, or rather his team, seems to have started a war with Harry Styles fans. During his performance, the screen behind the singer was displaying various pictures and tweets, many of them from fans. Unfortunately for Bad Bunny, this included one tweet that threw shade at pop star Harry Styles. It read, “Good night, Benito could do ‘As It Was’, but Harry could never do ‘El Apagon’.” Of course, Harry Styles fans took this and ran with is, as they often do, leading to a firestorm.

Bad Bunny and his team responded to the backlash very quickly to explain that it was all a misunderstanding. “Our intention is to create light hearted designs that embody Bad Bunny’s personality and amplify the experience he presents as a performer,” his team said. “The request from the artist during the visuals for ‘El Apagón’ performance was to use the image only and not text from the tweet, which we take responsibility for and correct it for Friday’s performance.” So, as it stands, the inclusion of the tweet was accidental and not something Bad Bunny approved. Did you check out Bad Bunny’s weekend 2 performance? What did you think? Sound off in the comments!

Frank Ocean Dropping Out Of Coachella Reportedly Cost The Festival Millions

Goldenvoice, the promotion company behind Coachella, reportedly lost millions as Frank Ocean pulled out of the festival’s second weekend, according to Billboard.

The losses come mainly in the form of the cost of the giant ice pad that was to be employed during Frank’s performance and went unused due to his last-minute ankle fracture and in tickets for the second weekend that could go unsold due to the news of Frank’s cancelation.

Billboard‘s sources say Goldenvoice is looking for another use for the ice pad; although it cannot be used as a public skating rink, there may be a use for it in another artist’s set.

Frank was to be paid $8 million for the two weekends and despite Frank dropping half of that fee with his cancelation, replacement headliners Blink-182 will need to be paid, as well as the recently booked combo of Four Tet, Fred Again…, and Skrillex.

Goldenvoice still stands to make a profit from the festival, though, despite Frank’s set accruing additional costs including fines from Indio for going over curfew (about $133,000 over the weekend) and the energy needed to keep the rink cool (and melt it down). According to Billboard, the promoter averages $115 million in ticket sales across both weekends and another eight figures on concessions.

What Time Does Bad Bunny Perform At Coachella 2023 Weekend 2?

Bad Bunny is undoubtedly one of today’s global superstars. That status can be credited in large part to the success of his 2022 album Un Verano Sin Ti. The project was a mainstay on the charts and it set multiple records along the way. Since its release, Bad Bunny performed several shows that gave fans from all over the opportunity to hear those songs live. That trend continues with Bad Bunny’s headlining gig at Coachella’s 2023 festival. After headlining the showcase last weekend with Frank Ocean and Blackpink, Bad Bunny will return this weekend to fulfill his full Coachella duties alongside Blackpink, Fred Again.., Four Tet, and Skrillex.

A day before Coachella kicked off its second weekend, they revealed the official set times for weekend two. Thanks to that, we now know that Bad Bunny will perform at 11:00 p.m. PT on Friday, April 21. His performance will take place on the Coachella Stage following sets by Gorillaz (8:35 p.m. to 9:45 p.m.), Burna Boy (7:05 p.m. to 7:50 p.m.), Becky G (5:35 p.m. to 6:20 p.m.), Pusha T (4:20 p.m. to 5:05 p.m.), Doechii (3:20 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.).

Don’t worry at all if you’re unable to make your way to Indio, California. Coachella will livestream the performances on YouTube with each stage having its own feed, barring any exceptions.

To prepare for Bad Bunny’s upcoming headlining performance, you can revisit his setlist from weekend one here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Latto Drops Single “Put It On Da Floor”: Listen

Latto is back with a new single. Last weekend, the rapper performed at the first weekend of Coachella. It was a weekend marked with messy mishaps, cancelations, late arrivals, and more. Latto, however, really gave it her all, and she did so without any real missteps. There was, however, the issue of her bringing up her previous beef with Nicki Minaj. At the end of her set, Latto took a few shots at the Queen before leaving the stage. “Pussy ho, let a bitch know,” she said. “We tired of the subtweets this year.” The two had seemingly moved on from their squabble, but it would appear that the the rivalry is still very much alive.

Latto’s previous single, “Lottery,” was released a few months ago. The song features Latto speaking about how lucky her partner is to have gotten her. It charted at number 83 on the Billboard Hot 100. The rapper’s new song, however, is much cattier in tone. The rapper performed the new single during her Coachella set, and fans were quick to point out that the lyrics could be about Nicki. Whether or not that is true remains unconfirmed.

Latto Is Tired Of Fighting Sneaky

Latto’s new single is all about how she isn’t going anywhere. She also talks quite about about how she’s tired of people trying to throw shade and be sneaky, hence the title. While there is no clear cut Nicki shade, it’s pretty obvious that some of the lyrics are about her given the timing. However, Latto really does shine on this song, and for the most part, the lyrics don’t seem to have much to do with Nicki.

The chorus is catchy, but that’s usually the case with Latto’s hooks. “I done done it all, feel like Shawty LO / Laughin’ to the bank but shit is not a joke,” the rapper quips. “Say she got a problem, imaginary smoke /Bitches said it’s up then put it on the floor.” What do you think of Latto’s new song? Let us know in the comments.

Quotable Lyrics:

Bitches like to run their mouths
But I’m the type to run the fade
When your diamonds hit like this
You don’t ever see the shade

Here Are The Coachella Set Times For 2023: Weekend Two

It’s almost time for Coachella: Weekend Two. This weekend will be a little bit different from the first weekend.

For one, Frank Ocean will not be performing this weekend, as he has dropped out following last weekend’s polarizing performance. Blink-182 will also be performing on Sunday, instead of Friday. Festival goers who are attending this weekend can begin planning who they will see performing, as set times were revealed hours ago.

Check out the set times for this second weekend below. All times are p.m. and PT.

Friday, April 21

Juliet Medoza — 12:00 @ Yuma
Dave From The Grave — 12:00 @ Sonora
Record Safari — 12:30 @ Mojave
Desert Cahuila Bird Singers — 12:35 @ Gobi
Chris Stussy — 1:00 @ Yuma
Mimi — 1:00 @ Outdoor Theatre
The Murder Capital — 1:10 @ Sonora
Jupiter And Okwess — 1:10 @ Gobi
Lewis OfMan — 1:40 @ Mojave
Yimbo — 1:40 @ Sahara
Kyle Watson — 2:00 @ Yuma
Lava La Rue — 2:00 @ Sonora
¿Téo? — 2:10 @ Gobi
The Comet Is Coming — 2:30 @ Outdoor Theatre
Domi & JD Beck — 2:40 @ Mojave
Dombresky — 2:50 @ Sahara
Soul Glo — 2:55 @ Sonora
Oliver Koletzki — 3:00 @ Yuma
Gabriels — 3:10 @ Gobi
Doechii — 3:20 @ Coachella Stage
Saba — 3:40 @ Outdoor Theatre
DannyLux — 3:40 @ Sonora
Benee — 3:45 @ Mojave
Malaa — 3:55 @ Sahara
Dennis Cruz + PAWSA — 4:15 @ Yuma
Overmono — 4:15 @ Gobi
Pusha T — 4:20 @ Coachella Stage
Yungblud — 4:45 @ Outdoor Theatre
Magdalena Bay — 4:50 @ Sonora
Muna — 4:50 @ Mojave
Vintage Culture — 5:00 @ Sahara
Nora En Pure — 5:30 @ Yuma
Tobe Nwigwe — 5:30 @ Gobi
Becky G — 5:35 @ Coachella Stage
TV Girl — 5:55 @ Sonora
SG Lewis — 6:00 @ Outdoor Theatre
Wet Leg — 6:00 @ Mojave
MK — 6:05 @ Sahara
Yves Tumor — 6:45 @ Gobi
Idris Elba — 6:45 @ Yuma
Burna Boy — 7:00 @ Coachella Stage
Jamie Jones — 7:15 @ Sahara
Blondie — 7:20 @ Mojave
Kaytranada — 7:25 @ Outdoor Theatre
Sasha Alex Sloan — 7:40 @ Sonora
The Garden — 7:55 @ Gobi
Mochakk — 8:15 @ Yuma
Gorillaz — 8:30 @ Coachella Stage
Two Friends — 8:35 @ Sahara
Uncle Waffles — 8:45 @ Sonora
Angèle — 8:50 @ Mojave
Whyte Fang — 9:05 @ Gobi
Testpilot — 9:45 @ Yuma
The Chemical Brothers — 9:45 @ Outdoor Theatre
Metro Boomin’ & Friends — 9:50 @ Sahara
FKJ — 10:15 @ Mojave
Ashnikko — 10:20 @ Gobi
Bad Bunny — 11:00 @ Coachella Stage
Maceo Plex — 11:15 @ Yuma

Saturday, April 22

Talon — 12:00 @ Yuma
Triste Juventud X Totem — 12:00 @ Sonora
Juicewon — 12:50 @ Mojave
Francis Mercier — 1:00 @ Yuma
Kershawn The Don — 1:00 @ Gobi
Horsegirl — 1:00 @ Sonora
Tiffany Tyson — 1:40 @ Outdoor Theatre
Scowl — 1:45 @ Sonora
Saish K — 1:50 @ Sonora
Chloé Caillet — 2:00 @ Yuma
AG Club — 2:10 @ Mojave
Elyanna — 2:20 @ Gobi
BRATTY — 2:40 @ Sonora
Marc Rebillet — 2:50 @ Coachella
Rebelution — 2:55 @ Outdoor Theatre
Colyn — 3:00 @ Yuma
Snail Mail — 3:10 @ Mojave
Flo Milli — 3:20 @ Sahara
UMI — 3:25 @ Gobi
Destroy Boys — 3:35 @ Sonora
Earthgang — 4:05 @ Outdoor Theatre
070 Shake — 4:10 @ Coachella Stage
Yung Lean — 4:15 @ Mojave
Mathame — 4:15 @ Yuma
Kenny Beats — 4:20 @ Sahara
Ethel Cain — 4:30 @ Sonora
Dinner Party — 4:30 @ Gobi
Hiatus Kaiyote — 5:15 @ Outdoor Theatre
Mura Masa — 5:20 @ Mojave
Charli XCX — 5:25 @ Coachella Stage
DJ Tennis + Carlita — 5:30 @ Yuma
Elderbrook — 5:30 @ Sahara
The Linda Lindas — 5:35 @ Sonora
Shenseea — 5:45 @ Gobi
Remi Wolf — 6:25 @ Mojave
Sofi Tukker — 6:35 @ Outdoor Theatre
The Breeders — 6:40 @ Sonora
Jan Blomqvist — 6:45 @ Yuma
Diljit Dosanjh — 6:50 @ Sahara
Yaeji — 6:50 @ Gobi
Rosalía — 6:55 @ Coachella Stage
Jai Paul — 7:40 @ Mojave
Sunset Rollercoaster — 7:55 @ Sonora
WhoMadeWho — 8:00 @ Yuma
Tale Of Us — 8:05 @ Sahara
Eladio Carrión — 8:10 @ Gobi
Boygenius — 8:10 @ Outdoor Theatre
Bakar — 9:00 @ Sonora
Blackpink — 9:20 @ Coachella Stage
Underworld — 9:05 @ Mojave
Monolink — 9:25 @ Gobi
$uicideboy$ — 9:30 @ Sahara
Hot Since 82 — 9:30 @ Yuma
Nia Archives — 10:00 @ Sonora
Eric Prydz Presents Holo — 10:20 @ Outdoor Theatre
Chromeo — 10:40 @ Gobi
Labrinth — 10:40 @ Mojave
The Kid Laroi — 10:45 @ Sahara
Keinemusik — 11:00 @ Yuma
Calvin Harris — 11:40 @ Coachella Stage
Donavan’s Yard — 11:45 @ Gobi

Sunday, April 23

Minus The Light — 12:00 @ Yuma
Eric Sanchez — 12:00 @ Sonora
Briggs — 12:40 @ Briggs
Muezette — 12:45 @ Mojave
Airrica — 1:00 @ Yuma
Gabe Real — 1:00 @ Outdoor Theatre
Conexión Divina — 1:00 @ Sonora
Sir Skrause — 1:40 @ Sahara
Ali Sethi — 1:50 @ Gobi
Los Bitchos — 1:55 @ Sonora
LP Giobbi — 2:00 @ Yuma
Paris Texas — 2:05 @ Mojave
Los Fabulosos Cadillacs — 2:10 @ Outdoor Theatre
Joy Crookes — 2:45 @ Gobi
El Michels Affair — 2:55 @ Sonora
Pi’erra Bourne — 3:00 @ Sahara
TSHA — 3:00 @ Yuma
IDK — 3:05 @ Mojave
Stick Figure — 3:20 @ Outdoor Theatre
Glorilla — 3:40 @ Coachella Stage
Fousheé — 3:40 @ Gobi
Gordo — 3:55 @ Sahara
Sleaford Mods — 4:00 @ Sonora
Noname — 4:10 @ Mojave
Big Wild — 4:30 @ Outdoor Theatre
Cassian — 4:30 @ Yuma
Romy — 4:45 @ Gobi
Porter Robinson — 4:45 @ Coachella Stage
Momma — 5:05 @ Sonora
Latto — 5:05 @ Sahara
Weyes Blood — 5:15 @ Mojave
Rae Sremmurd — 5:55 @ Outdoor Theatre
2manyDJs — 5:55 @ Gobi
Sasha & John Digweed — 6:00 @ Yuma
Alex G — 6:00 @ Sonora
Kali Uchis — 6:00 @ Coachella Stage
Jackson Wang — 6:10 @ Sahara
Christine And The Queens — 6:25 @ Mojave
Dominic Fike — 7:05 @ Outdoor Theatre
Cannons — 7:10 @ Gobi
Mareux — 7:15 @ Sonora
Jai Wolf — 7:25 @ Sahara
Björk — 7:30 @ Coachella Stage
Camelphat — 7:30 @ Yuma
Willow — 7:45 @ Mojave
Knocked Loose — 8:10 @ Sonora
DRAMA — 8:15 @ Gobi
Fisher + Chris Lake — 8:35 @ Outdoor Theatre
A Boogie — 8:40 @ Sahara
The Blaze — 8:55 @ Mojave
Adam Beyer — 9:00 @ Yuma
Sudan Archives — 9:10 @ Sonora
Blink-182 — 9:20 @ Coachella Stage
DPR LIVE + DPR IAN — 9:20 @ Gobi
Boris Brejcha — 9:45 @ Sahara

Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

The Best Coachella 2023 Performances Were Reflections Of Pure Joy

One of the best moments of Coachella 2023’s first weekend came at the very end of Boygenius’ set. As the trio of Phoebe Bridgers, Lucy Dacus, and Julien Baker wrapped up a performance that oscillated between delicacy and rambunctiousness, they closed with “Salt In The Wound,” from their (nearly) universally adored new album, The Record. With Bridgers and Dacus twirling around each other, the two fell to the ground in a laughing fit, as much in their own world as on the Coachella grounds. Then, they spotted Baker still playing guitar and crawled to her, trying to drag her down to their level as Baker soloed above them.

It wasn’t necessarily a moment that was unique to Coachella — the trio pulled a similar move at their Fox Theater show a few days before — but the effect here was much more giddy and silly. The pure joy that was demonstrated as the three members laughed together exemplified why they are so beloved in the first place, the idea of giving the audience a glimpse into what it is ostensibly like hanging with the band: lots of laughs, people being their true selves, caring little about what others think or say, community over everything. At that moment, it didn’t matter that the performance was a bit underattended or that it evoked skepticism of indie’s place at Coachella in the year 2023. It felt like the most inclusive inside joke ever conceived, performed under one of the biggest spotlights that the music world offers.

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Throughout the weekend, it often wasn’t often the most packed sets that provided moments like this, but the ones where the artist didn’t give in to the pressure of the moment. There was The Linda Lindas, the local group of industry-connected teens that fought through a host of technical issues (and featured Best Coast’s Bobb Bruno trying to help them through it). For a band this young (the oldest is 18, the youngest 12), it wouldn’t have been surprising to see them defeated, but instead, they manifested joy. It was the kind of spirit rarely seen on the professional level and usually reserved for practice spaces and garages, where the point is being there and playing songs with your buds rather than serving an audience or a career. The band jumped, skipped, hopped, yelled, and danced their way into the hearts of the Sonora tent’s spectators.

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There was Yaeji, the Korean-American Godmode affiliate who broke free of the DJ sets she typically performs at festivals. When her stage stood completely bare except for a microphone stand, it begged the question as to whether things were running extremely late. But instead, Yaeji explored the world of performance art to support her latest With A Hammer, dancing freely and striking stunning poses in silhouette in front of bright backgrounds. She incorporated DIY-adjacent production, where an office chair became a vehicle for expression, where she couldn’t help but laugh in her interactions with her small dance team. Yaeji, playing the small Gobi stage at the exact time Rosalía performed on the main (more for the livestream, though, than the actual Coachella attendees), didn’t have a large audience, but it didn’t matter. She knew that if she was having a blast, so would her fans.

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This could be seen in some of the bigger moments, too. Despite being their first show back together in nine years, Blink-182 didn’t change a thing for their Coachella set, still acting like potty-mouthed teens despite the seriousness they’d endured in the interim. Weyes Blood was self-aware enough to know that her brand of orchestral indie wasn’t a direct fit for a hot Sunday afternoon in the desert, so she punctuated her set with wry wit and self-deprecating humor, making sure the set remained fun even when the songs were sad. And Latto proved that even political statements can be served in entertaining ways, as she blended raunchy raps with visuals that demanded autonomy for women’s bodies.

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Largely, Coachella has become the place to put on the best show of your life. Artists like Kali Uchis and Metro Boomin took the assignment seriously and loaded their sets with standout production and guests galore. Even early afternoon performances often include dance teams, elaborate lighting concepts, and impressive staging. But with a year that concluded with the most joyless performance imaginable, where the artist seemed more interested in collecting his paycheck and fulfilling his contractual obligation, these times where the artists seemed to be rediscovering why they do it in the first place stood bright. It’s possible to play both for yourself and for your fans — something Frank Ocean might one day learn — and the larger the scale in which this is achieved, the most impressive. It’s why Blackpink’s headlining set will ultimately stand out as the best of this year’s headliners, because they make the spectacle look fun, like it was what they were born (pink) to do.

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These moments of joy, also, are what separates attending from livestreaming. While YouTube can give you the feel of a performance and show you what’s happening, that shared emotion of being in the same space stays on the polo fields. Year after year, while people knock Coachella for changing — I prefer evolving and growing — it only takes one trip out there to realize that it’s still expertly curated, featuring some of the most exciting rising and established acts in music, and full of moments of pure joy. All you have to do is look.

Check out some exclusive photos of Coachella 2023 below.

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Boygenius

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Jai Paul

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Yaeji

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Wet Leg

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The Chemical Brothers

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Soul Glo

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Saba

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Pusha T

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Muna

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Metro Boomin w/ John Legend

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Gorillaz

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Doechii

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Becky G

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Coachella

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Remi Wolf

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Shenseea

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The Linda Lindas

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Yung Lean

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Hiatus Kaiyote

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Willow

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Weyes Blood

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Kali Uchis w/ Tyler The Creator and Omar Apollo

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Porter Robinson

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Latto

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Knocked Loose

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Jackson Wang

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Dominic Fike

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Alex G

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Dinner Party

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CoacSome artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Benny Blanco Thinks Frank Ocean’s Ill-Fated Coachella 2023 Set Was The ‘Best Performance Of The Weekend’

Frank Ocean’s Coachella 2023 performance from last weekend has received criticism. Even Ocean himself wasn’t fully satisfied with the show, as he later said in a statement, “It was chaotic. There is some beauty in chaos. It isn’t what I intended to show but I did enjoy being out there and I’ll see you soon.”

That statement, by the way, was part of the announcement that Ocean was pulling out of his headlining performance at the festival’s upcoming second weekend.

Not everybody hated Ocean’s performance, though. Justin Bieber wrote of it, “I was blown away by Frank Oceans Coachella performance,” adding, “It made me want to keep going and get better as an artist.” Now, Bieber collaborator Benny Blanco has also weighed in and he agrees.

A TMZ reporter caught up with Blanco yesterday (April 19) in Beverly Hills, and when they brought up the backlash Ocean has faced, Blanco said of the performance, “I loved it. It was incredible. […] So inspiring on so many levels. Incredible. One of my favorite shows I’ve ever seen.” He also called the set the “best performance of the weekend.”

Blanco seemed unaware of the criticism Ocean was facing, as he noted, “I don’t read the internet.” The video ends with Blanco avoiding questions about Ocean’s canceled second-weekend set and whether or not he should have “sucked it up” and performed through his injury.

How Doechii’s Debut Coachella Performance Came Together In Two Weeks

Doechii has always been a phenomenal performer. After experiencing her pop out at Isaiah Rashad’s The House Is Burning listening in 2021 where I had to ask multiple people “Who is that?,” she dazzled at her own listening where she put on what can only be described as a performance art show for an eye-captivating performance of her song “Crazy,” complete with sticks and electrifying choreography.

@uproxx

who’s been loving Crazy ✋🏾 @iamdoechii #doechii #crazy #newmusic

♬ original sound – UPROXX Music

Three years later, Doechii is impressing at Coachella and this time around I, along with the audience who for some may have been their first introduction to the TDE talent, got to know the rising star a little better. As the sun began to set, she opened up to thousands with not only her music but also some things about herself. Like, she’s from Tampa, Florida and that’s why she’s the Swamp Princess.

I got the blessing to speak to Doechii after her performance to learn even more about her and all the ingredients that came together for her Coachella debut.

“I went to a performing arts high school, so a lot of my background came from just my experience and my training there,” Doechii told Uproxx backstage. “So a lot of that kind of prepared me for Coachella right now. I had a dope high school experience. It was like High School Musical.”

And it makes sense. Everything Doechii does is with precision.

“I was in chorus, and I also did the jazz musical tech,” she added. “I learned how to write music and music theory.”

We also learn that “Crazy” is a song inspired by a few women in the music industry who people labeled as crazy when they were on the rise and a super meaningful.

“It was Missy Elliott, myself, and Nicki Minaj. I think just those women and how they came up in their careers, a lot of people didn’t really believe in them at first. That resonates with me because I feel like that was me in the beginning of my career. I just felt like it was nice to pay homage to them.”

Doechii
Philip Cosores

To prep for Coachella, Doechii and her team developed the concept months ahead and rehearsed for two weeks straight.

“My band and I, and my background dancers, we rehearsed every day for two weeks,” she said. “And we just prepared, worked hard, and that’s how we got the show.”

From her blazing energy to her coordinated outfit with the matching contacts, everything was immaculate about her show. The energy she shared with the audience was majestic and divined with the rhythms of her unreleased track “Pacer” (#droppacer) and a slower song titled “Stress,” to which she offered a short 3-breath meditation session after.

“Sometimes you just feel it in the moment, and you just need to take a breath,” she said. “That’s it. I feel like I do that all the time. Just take a breath. So why not do it on stage?”

As far as “Pacer,” apparently it’s coming but she wouldn’t tell me when (I tried ya’ll).

“I can’t tell you,” she asserted. “We haven’t announced the date yet.”

Of course, I probed about the album, and yet —

“Album? Can’t tell you.”

But, there’s a tour and 2023 is looking like that year.

“It’s going to come out this year for sure. It’s almost done. So it’s definitely going to come out this year. I’m just not going to release the date,” she reiterated to me. “Look forward to the album, look forward to a tour this year, and I’ll actually be on Pharrell’s festival (Something In The Water).”

On “Stress,” we get to experience Doechii’s vocal abilities, and on her latest single “What It Is (Block Boy),” which is quite different from what we’re used to getting from her and serves as a digestible tidbit for those who have yet to catch on yet. The crowd went up for this one and so did I.

“I just thought it would be a really nice summer anthem to put out,” she said. “It’s something universally known. A lot of people know it. So that’s really how the song came about. It was just fun and upbeat, and I thought it would be a great song to perform.”

But, that was just for fun. Doechii is a rapper, period. Expect her to do what she wants musically, but always expect her to rap.

“I don’t know if we’re going to get more of that particular sound,” she told me of “What It Is.” “I just wanted to try it, vibe out. But after that, we’re back to rapping.”

As someone who admittedly didn’t get it at first, but am naturally intrigued by anything outside the box, I do know Doechii will never leave me (or the audience) empty-handed when she hits the stage. For Coachella, her intentions were clear.

“My intention for myself is to just release,” she told me. “But ultimately, I believe that when people come to events like this, they’re coming because they need something. They’re looking for something. You don’t know who’s in the crowd or what they’re going through. So whatever they’re looking for, that feeling of love and connection is what I want to leave them with.”