The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Stagecoach promises varied lineup

Beyond the headliners, you can find genre-crossing acts and artists of color

- By Kelli Skye Fadroski kfadroski@scng.com

It’s time to dust off the boots and break out the cowboy hat as the Stagecoach Country Music Festival makes its return to the Empire Polo Club in Indio from Friday through May 1 with headliners Thomas Rhett, Carrie Underwood and Luke Combs.

For the first time in three years, the sprawling festival grounds — which will be transforme­d into a more honky-tonklike setting following two weekends of Stagecoach’s sister fest, the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival — will welcome country music fans with three days of music, savory barbecue, craft beer and cocktails, line dancing, art installati­ons, equestrian demonstrat­ions and other attraction­s.

“It feels so wonderful to be back in the saddle,” Stagecoach talent buyer Stacy Vee said of finally bringing the event back after years of COVID-19 pandemic cancellati­ons.

“This is what we love,” she continued. “We care about this event, we care about each other and all we’ve wanted to do is be back on the festival sites. We’ve missed each other, we’ve missed the artists, the fans and the culture. This is our life and we’re all so excited to just get back to doing what we love.”

Maren Morris, The Black Crowes, Smokey Robinson, Brandi Carlile, Tanya Tucker, Brothers Osborne, Lee Brice, Midland and more will also perform. Though the top-tier reserved seating and VIP passes are mostly sold out, fans can still purchase general admission passes for $379-$459 at stagecoach­festival.com.

Here’s what you need to know before you go, what’s new and what’s returning this year:

A more diverse lineup

For its 14th installmen­t, the Stagecoach lineup is more musically and culturally diverse. The roster, which features more than 50 acts performing across three major stages each day, boasts a number of Black and Latino acts and several LGBTQ performers.

“We’re building a country music festival for today and how a country music festival should look and sound like today,” Vee said. “There are so many artists out there that are unique and are working so hard and they deserve the recognitio­n.”

Country and soul singer Yola, who will perform on the Palomino Stage on May 1, is a Black British woman who has worked with artists like Massive Attack and The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach. She’s also one of the rare artists to perform at Coachella and Stagecoach in the same year.

R&B legend Smokey Robinson will make his first-ever Stagecoach appearance, headlining the Palomino Stage on May 1. Rhiannon Giddens, a founding member of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, singer and multiinstr­umentalist, also will be at the Palomino on May 1. Singer, songwriter and banjo player Amythyst Kiah is opening the Palomino Stage on Friday, while country rapper and producer Breland closes out the opening day of the fest by hosting the first-ever Friday Late Night in Palomino after-party. Latin altcountry band The Mavericks, with hits like “What a Crying Shame” and “All You Ever Do Is Bring Me Down,” will also be at the Palomino on May 1.

Up-and-coming performers including singer, songwriter and rapper Shy Carter, who has written songs for Kane Brown, Tim Mcgraw and Keith Urban, and country singer and pianist Reyna Roberts will be featured on the Siriusxm Spotlight Stage on Saturday.

There’s also strong queer representa­tion at the festival, with Grammy Award-winning singersong­writer Carlile headlining the Palomino Stage on Friday. T.J. Osborne of The Brothers Osborne delivered a tearful acceptance speech at the Grammy Awards in Las Vegas last month as the duo won an award for the song “Younger Me,” which he wrote about coming out as gay last year. The duo will hit the Mane Stage just before Carrie Underwood on Saturday. Masked country singer-songwriter Orville Peck, who is gay, also performed at both weekends of Coachella and will host the Saturday night after-party at the Palomino at Stagecoach; Peck said this type of representa­tion at a major country music festival is important.

“Stagecoach is arguably the most mainstream country music festival that happens in the states, so I think it makes sense that it would be a space that would now need to start incorporat­ing diverse artists that exist in country music and not

STAGECOACH COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL

When: Where: Tickets: just like this stigma of Nashville-born kind of whatever artists,” he said. “It is a very diverse genre. It always has been and it always will be, so it makes sense that Stagecoach would need to reflect that.”

What's new

Following DJ Diplo’s lively 2019 Sunday evening afterparty on the Palomino Stage, promoters have extended the after-hours festivitie­s, and Late Night in Palomino will take over after the headlining sets on the Mane Stage each evening. Breland kicks things off Friday night, followed by Peck on Saturday, and Diplo will once again close out the festival on May 1.

“There will be a couple of surprises in my set,” Peck assured. “Just keep looking over your shoulder.”

Though Coachella fans have been able to tune in to Youtube for nearly a decade to check in on the festival happenings and performanc­es, Stagecoach has finally partnered with the video channel to offer livestream­ing and exclusive content from throughout the three-day event via the festival’s official channel.

The Compton Cowboys, a crew of 10 Black horseback riders who hail from Richland Farms, a small ranch in Compton, will make their Stagecoach

debut. They’ll be showing off their horses, doing riding demos and sharing their stories on-site.

Returning favorites

Television host and restaurate­ur Guy Fieri will once again run the Stagecoach Smokehouse and bring in top barbecue pitmasters from all over the country to serve up a variety of flavors and styles of barbecue. He’ll also lead live demos throughout the day and offer tastings.

Singer-songwriter Nikki Lane, who also owns the vintage fashion store High Class Hillbilly in Nashville, Tennessee, is back with Nikki Lane’s Stage Stop Marketplac­e, which will include a variety of vendors, a shaded cocktail bar and the Stage Stop Horseshoe Stage, which will spotlight several singer-songwriter­s.

The Siriusxm Spotlight Stage, located in front of the Mane Stage and behind reserved seating, will return to highlight up-and-coming talent including Ryan Griffin, Walker Country, Caylee Hammack, Laci Kaye Booth, Hailey Whitters and Callista Clark.

Fans can also step out of the heat and into the air-conditione­d Honky Tonk Dance Hall, where dancers of all levels can learn how to line dance and two-step to music courtesy

of a variety of DJS.

 ?? PHOTO BY MATT MASIN ?? The Stagecoach Country Music Festival returns for three days, Fridaymay 1 at the Empire Polo Club in Indio.
PHOTO BY MATT MASIN The Stagecoach Country Music Festival returns for three days, Fridaymay 1 at the Empire Polo Club in Indio.

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