Megan Thee Stallion, 21 Savage, And More Showed Their Experience On Day Two Of Coachella 2022

Coachella’s day-two lineup of hip-hop acts branched out from the two main stages (Coachella stage and the Sahara tent) to encompass some of the smaller tents and even take over some of the corporate activations. This was mostly a good thing but did make seeing some counter-programmed artists a little more difficult than day one. For instance, Flying Lotus playing a set at the Heineken House coincided with catching one of Brockhampton’s final performances at the Sahara stage.

Freddie Gibbs’ Gobi set also crossed Rich Brian’s at Sahara, meaning catching both would have taken a huge chunk out of both as well. For what it’s worth, Gibbs made the most of his placement and probably could have filled the Mojave tent, as his crowd spilled out of the back and sides. Despite not having Madlib – who had to miss the set for other obligations – Freddie smoothly held court himself, bantering with the crowd and his “hype man,” a bunny mascot. His big gag was pretending that the bunny had somehow bum-rushed the stage, a joke that delighted the crowd as much as his high-velocity, one-breath raps.

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Another impressive set was JID’s. The Dreamville firecracker’s set at Sahara was also full to bursting, promising a warm reception for his upcoming follow-up to DiCaprio 2. He didn’t offer many extras on the bigger stage, but his exuberant energy filled the space, while he was cheered on by his Spillage Village compatriots Earthgang from the DJ booth. At one point, fellow Coachella performer Denzel Curry popped out to a massive roar from the crowd. It would have been cool if he could have used the stage more, though.

Something I forgot to mention in my day one recap is how moving most of the hip-hop acts to the Sahara stage was a smart move because it allows for more elaborate stage designs. Brockhampton especially took advantage of this, bringing along the big blue gorilla and canyon set from their tour. While things almost took a turn for the worst when the high desert winds nearly “skinned” the big guy before they could start their set, the crew was able to get things nailed down in time for the rowdy “boy band” to take the stage.

Their second-to-last set as a group showed all the hallmarks of their usual chaotic performances, but the crowd – mostly 20-somethings – gave them more energy than I’ve seen since I first saw Brockhampton at Flog Gnaw in 2017. They certainly stoked this “one night only” energy with repeated declarations that they wouldn’t be reuniting anytime soon. You could tell no one believed them – or maybe no one wanted to believe them – but it is a shame that they seem to be packing it in as they’ve hit their stride as performers.

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21 Savage also used the Sahara tent to the fullest, using LED screens and raised platforms to turn the stage into a subterranean lair, perfect for evoking the menacing, horror-thriller vibe of his favorite movies. Savage, like Lil Baby from day one, showed that he has also entered the league of rap’s most-improved performers, projecting much more force than his laconic raps would suggest. His crowd was one of the biggest of the night, and when Post Malone popped out to perform “Rock Star,” I admit I got a little nervous about a potential crowd control situation.

Fortunately, the crowds at Coachella are a little more mellow than some of the younger bunches at other fests. Another huge crowd that focused more on having fun than pushing forward was the one for Megan Thee Stallion, who preceded day two’s closer, Billie Eilish. Like 21, her set was a briskly-paced showcase for some of her bigger hits. Unlike his, hers incorporated a wardrobe change to a mini-DJ set of some of her mixtape favorites. Her set also included a confrontational new track that seemed to take some verbal jabs at a male antagonist – something that’s sure to have fans buzzing for the next few days.

Other rap acts that made an impact thanks to the new streamlined hip-hop format at Coachella include Isaiah Rashad, who used his time to address the leaked video that surfaced on social media recently, Rich Brian, who double-dipped as part of 88Rising’s main stage set, and Masego, who set the tone early as one of the midday acts on the main stage that drew in masses of curious onlookers. Although there still wasn’t very much discovery on day two – at least, not for me – what I saw was an encouraging survey of rap music that showed how far so many of the top acts have come in the last few years.

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

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Megan Thee Stallion Debuts New Song Slamming Men at Coachella

Megan Thee Stallion is putting the men in check.

During her Coachella set in Indio, Calif. on Saturday (April 16), the Hot Girl debuted a brand new song. On the empowering anthem, which samples Jodeci’s “Freak’n You (Remix),” Meg reps for the ladies while calling out a “f**k ni**a.”

“This song is very motherfu**in’ personal to me and it’s to whom it may the f**k concern and I really feel like my ladies gon’ f**k with me on this one,” said Megan, who previously teased the track on Twitter.

“I’m the only reason that your goofy ass got bitches,” she raps. “Damn, I can’t believe I used to let you f**k me / I’d rather be in jail before a broke ni**a cuff me.”

She drives it home on the hook: “Because dick don’t run me, I run dick / Ni**a, yeah, you’s a bitch.”

While she didn’t mention any names, there is speculation that she is addressing Tory Lanez. In February, Tory sent a tweet where he claimed that he was sleeping with Megan and her best friend, who was in the car when she was shot.

“Good D*ick had me fu**ing 2 best friends …. and I got caught,” he tweeted. “That’s what I apologized 4 . … it’s sick how u Spun it tho …”

At the time, Megan fired back. “Fu**ing two best friends… Ni**a you shot me you know whats what you were apologizing for,” she told Tory.

Tory was temporarily taken into custody for the tweet, a violation of the discovery protective order and personal contact order. He was released after posting $350,000 bond. He later released his song “Mucky James” on which he seemingly addressed the incident.

“I was at a high in my career / You think I’d come out here and ******,” he raps. “And if you think I would do that shit, you on some stupid shit / I don’t need to do that shit.”

Isaiah Rashad Acknowledges Sex Tape Leak During Coachella Performance

Isaiah Rashad delivered a powerful moment at Coachella.

Making his debut at the festival’s Sahara tent on Saturday (April 16), the TDE rapper opened his set with a video montage addressing the speculation about his sexuality. The clip included soundbites from interviews with Joe Budden, Boosie, and The Game, all weighing in on a leaked video showing Rashad being intimate with other men. But while it may have been an attempt to hurt his career, it backfired and he received an outpouring of support.

“The purpose of doing that was to embarrass him. However, it backfired,” said one voice, while Game asked, “Why is you still worried about what another man is doing?”

Rashad then ran through hits like “RIP Young” and “Headshots (4r Da Locals).” He also brought out his TDE labelmate Doechii for “Wat U Sed” and “Crazy,” while SiR joined him for “Rope // rosegold.” At one point, he appeared to shed a tear while performing “Wat’s Wrong.”

Before ending his set, an emotional Rashad thanked his fans for their support. “I see all the messages and all that sh*t, all the positivity,” he said. “Y’all ni**as done kept me alive these last couple months.”

All The Best Festival Fashion At Coachella 2022

After three years away, Coachella returned to Indio, CA this weekend. And while some might have expected young fans to rage across the polo fields with all the angst of two previous cancelations in the rearview mirror, the sense on site was a lot more tepid, as if everyone wanted to get their feet wet before fully diving in. It’s far too early to say if the past few years have changed Coachella’s identity or changed how young people approach these massive cultural events, but the initial sense is that things have slowed down a little, and the traditional revelry has given way to something more appreciative and understated.

All that said, the fashion-forward appeal of Coachella remains. There were costumes and skin, lots of transparent lace and vibrant colors. With years of opportunities to show off festival fashion squandered by a pandemic, fans dressed their best and made 2022’s edition count. Below we have some photos of our favorites, who returned to one of the world’s best festivals with a commitment to show off exactly why Coachella is what it is. As they prepared for a day that included Harry Styles, Arcade Fire, Lil Baby, and more, everyone looked predictably great with the giant art structures and palm trees as a backdrop.

Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores
Coachella 2022 Fashion
Philip Cosores

Lil Baby, City Girls, And Cordae Showed A Broad Cross-Section Of Hip-Hop On Coachella’s First Day

With the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival returning for the first time in three years, it looks like the organizers’ have adjusted their hip-hop strategy. While in past years, the festival has gambled a bit more on rising stars in the genre like Aminé and Dej Loaf, this year, the focus shifted to providing more established stars like City Girls, Cordae, and Lil Baby.

This isn’t a bad thing at all, though. While day one of the 2022 Coachella Festival only sported a handful of rap acts, by honing in on more proven quantities, the festival offered an excellent cross-section of samples of where the genre currently is, with one or two glimpses at where it could be going.

Lil Baby
Philip Cosores

Whereas rap acts are usually spread pretty evenly around the festival grounds, this year, it appears there was a more streamlined concept. The majority of the rap acts who appeared did so on the Sahara stage; the only two exceptions were Princess Nokia and Lil Baby. Nokia was upgraded from the tiny Sonora tent to the main stage, albeit for an early afternoon set, while Lil Baby played a primetime set on the main stage that felt too early in hindsight.

Lil Baby
Philip Cosores

Lil Baby’s impressive set appeared to incorporate some of the lessons he’d learned during his recent Back Outside arena tour. The set design was more ambitious, depicting a busy trap house motel, and Baby’s performance was much more fluid and animated, suggesting that he’s grown in confidence and settled into himself as a showman. Though it was light on guests, Gunna did appear to perform “Drip Too Hard” and “Pushin P,” to a predictable massive crowd pop.

However, when compared to the much more low-key Daniel Caesar set that followed, it felt like Baby perhaps should have been the penultimate performer ahead of Harry Styles. The drop in energy coincided with a drop in temperatures as the desert wind picked up; I think going with the higher energy set into the headliner could have improved the reception of both.

Lil Baby
Philip Cosores

Meanwhile, on the Sahara stage, a strong lineup started with City Girls, running through Cordae, South African DJ Black Coffee, Baby Keem, and Big Sean. The only thing that seemed out of order was not starting with Cordae. His live band-backed set was as strong as any I’ve seen, but by the time he hit the stage, the exuberant crowd from City Girls had thinned considerably.

Understandably, curating a massive festival like this takes work. But it does seem that a more experienced hand could have benefitted the sequencing for the hip-hop acts to keep the energy building. Fans who enjoyed upbeat renditions of tracks like “Twerkulator” and “Said Sum” (with surprise guest Moneybagg Yo) didn’t stick around to watch Cordae perform Lost Boy staples like “Thanksgiving” and From A Bird’s Eye View cut “C Carter” — maybe they should have because Cordae’s versatility is always impressive and perhaps City Girls fans would enjoy high-energy fare like “Scottie Pippen” and “Kung-Fu.”

While I’m sure there’s at least some overlap between Cordae’s fans and those of City Girls, that part of the Venn diagram is thin enough that booking them back-to-back wound up appearing awkward – at least, until Cordae’s more hardcore fans and curious heads finally filled the Sahara tent back up.

city girls coachella 2022
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What did work well was concentrating the hip-hop acts to one or two stages and spreading them out sufficiently enough to allow someone interested mostly in seeing hip-hop to take in most of the sets. I missed Baby Keem, but only because I was so curious to see how Daniel Caesar would handle the big stage with some mellow tunes (the answer is “not well,” but not because his performance wasn’t good. It was just stuck after an electrifying performance from Lil Baby). Ideally, this could be the strategy in the future, too.

Obviously, spreading the acts more evenly between the main stage and Sahara could encourage more movement for hip-hop heads to check out other genres, while omnivores wouldn’t have to zigzag all over the polo grounds. Instead, the hip-hop acts could simply be a home base to return to at either end of the field. As long as someone in booking has a grasp of where acts are in their careers and how their respective sounds compare and complement each other, this new, streamlined strategy could make finding hip-hop at the biggest festival easier and more enjoyable than ever.

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

Big Sean Brings Out Jhené Aiko and YG, Debuts New Song at Coachella

Go big or go home.

Two years after the festival was canceled in the wake of the pandemic, Big Sean made his long-awaited Coachella debut with a stellar set in Indio, Calif., on Friday (April 15).

His 45-minute performance at the Sahara tent, one of the highlights of Day 1, opened with “Paradise” before continuing with his standout verses from “Mercy” and “Clique” during which he shouted out Kanye West and the whole G.O.O.D. Music crew.

“To go to performing for 15 people, not knowing who the f**k I am, to all the way performing for Coachella for you tonight, this shit is a dream come true,” the Detroit rapper said as he reflected on his journey from recording songs in Mike Posner’s mother’s basement.

The crowd, which spilled far beyond the Sahara tent, went wild when YG hit the stage for “Big Bank.” Later, Jhené Aiko joined her boyfriend for their collaborations “Beware” and “I Know.” The TWENTY88 duo put their real life chemistry on display as they cozied up on stage.

In addition to fan favorites like “Dance (A$$)” and “Blessed,” Sean Don debuted a new song called “Find the Light,” which he was working on up until the night before.

He took it back to 2011 with his first Finally Famous single “My Last” before closing with “I Don’t F**k With You” and “Bounce Back” while the crowd sang along to every word.

Sean’s Coachella set may be just the inspiration he needs to go back on the road. “Now I wanna go on tour,” he tweeted after Friday’s show.

Anitta Brought Out Snoop Dogg And Saweetie For Her Vibrant Coachella Debut

Anitta is having quite the big week. Just a few days ago, the Brazilian singer released her fifth album Versions Of Me. The project arrived three years after her fourth full-length effort Kisses. After celebrating the release of Versions Of Me, Anitta brought her talents to Coachella for a flavorful set with some special guests. She made her entrance to the stage with Snoop Dogg by her side and later on she brought out Saweetie so that they could do a brief performance of their collaboration, “Faking Love.” Elsewhere, Anitta’s backup dancers later got into a “funk battle” with Diplo who was spinning on the DJ booth.

Anitta’s Versions Of Me features her viral TikTok track, “Envolver,” which she also performed during her debut set at Coachella. Versions Of Me itself arrived with 15 songs and features from Ty Dolla Sign, Afro B, Khalid, Saweetie, YG, Cardi B, Myke Towers, and more. Anitta’s Coachella performance also comes after she and Saweetie stopped by The Late Late Show With James Corden to perform “Faking Love.”

You can watch a clip of Anitta’s Coachella set in the video above.

Versions Of Me is out now via Warner Records. You can stream it here.

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

Lil Baby Preforms New Track “In A Minute” At Coachella

Lil Baby Headshot

Lil Baby has been telling us that he’s coming all year long. I guess now we have a reasonable timetable. A few days ago, his tweet of “I’m coming” appeared on a billboard, and now he’s already back with new music. That took no time. The 4PF CEO made this happen with “In A Minute,” which is the track title he performed for fans for the first time during Coachella.

Last week, the Atlanta native dropped two new tracks, “In A Minute” and “Right On.” It’s uncertain when Lil Baby plans on dropping a project, but it’s clear that he’s serious.

Although he hasn’t got a project from Baby since he teamed up with Lil Durk for their collaborative album Voice Of The People last year, he’s still been active. He recently did two Nicki Minaj joints, “Do We Have A Problem” and “Bussin,” respectively. He dropped a fire verse for Polo G’s “Don’t Play,” and Vince Staples featured him on his “East Point Prayer.”

Lil Baby is coming. He’s even bringing Ed Sheeran with him. He confirmed it in a tweet.

The post Lil Baby Preforms New Track “In A Minute” At Coachella appeared first on The Source.

Watch Harry Styles Perform ‘As It Was’ Live For The First Time At Coachella 2022

Harry Styles is one of the biggest names on the Coachella bill this year, especially after Kanye West dropped out pretty last minute. Luckily for pop fans, both Harry and Billie Eilish will be holding down the fort in Indio this weekend, along with late addition, The Weeknd, who replaced Yeezy in the eleventh hour. Tonight, for the first night of the festival, it’s all about Harry, and since the release of his first new single, “As It Was” was a huge success, it’s likely going to be a fantastic show.

Then again, we already know all about Harry’s incredible live performances, spaces that become safe havens for his fans, and a place where he also expresses himself in a way he often holds back on social media and elsewhere. During his set tonight, listeners were all queued up to get the first live rendition of “As It Was,” and Mr. Styles did not disappoint. Check out footage of the song’s live debut up above, and keep an ear out for more from this set. There’s always the chance that friends like Stevie Nicks will show up, or that another new song from his upcoming album, Harry’s House, gets aired out.