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London’s Junction 2 Shares Full Lineup For 2026 Festival

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London’s Junction 2 has shared its full lineup for 2026. Celebrating its 10th anniversary this year, the three-day festival returns to Boston Manor Park in Brentford with another deep performance roster of techno heavyweights, stretching across two weekends on July 25-26 and August 2. Night one invites a curated showcase from London’s famous fabric nightclub, […]

The post London’s Junction 2 Shares Full Lineup For 2026 Festival appeared first on EDM MANIAC.

Insomniac’s Lost In Dreams Festival Reveals 2026 Lineup

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Insomniac’s Lost In Dreams festival has revealed its 2026 lineup. The flagship event from the promoter’s melodic label and event series will return to Los Angeles State Historic Park on July 11-12, featuring over 30 performances spanning melodic bass, progressive house, and other subgenres on the lighter side of dance music. This year’s lineup is […]

The post Insomniac’s Lost In Dreams Festival Reveals 2026 Lineup appeared first on EDM MANIAC.

A Weekend in Paradise: CRSSD Fest Spring 2026

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CRSSD Fest returned to San Diego’s Waterfront Park for its spring 2026 edition, to perfect weather and unmatched vibes. Despite the recent California heatwave, Saturday and Sunday of the festival were a cool 75 and sunny — setting the stage for a weekend in paradise. Once again executing an impressive production with thoughtful amenities, CRSSD Fest showed us […]

The post A Weekend in Paradise: CRSSD Fest Spring 2026 appeared first on EDMTunes.

Lollapalooza Drops Star-Studded 2026 Lineup Including John Summit

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Lollapalooza returns to Grant Park from July 30 to August 2, 2026, and while the festival continues to wear its multi-genre crown, this year’s electronic lineup is as stacked as ever. Anchored by hometown hero John Summit, the dance side of Lolla feels more intentional than ever, signaling a continued shift toward club culture bleeding […]

The post Lollapalooza Drops Star-Studded 2026 Lineup Including John Summit appeared first on EDMTunes.

Spotify & Liquid Death Team Up for an Urn That Plays Music After You Die

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With all the crazy stuff going on these days, it takes a lot to stand out. Spotify and Liquid Death‘s morbid collaboration for an Urn that will play music for your ashes after you die is certainly making some waves. The eternal playlist urn features a discreet Bluetooth speaker built into the lid. You can […]

The post Spotify & Liquid Death Team Up for an Urn That Plays Music After You Die appeared first on EDMTunes.

Volyri, RESZ - Better Now

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? Stream | Download ↪︎ https://ffm.to/vbqjwo ? Subscribe For Daily Music https://nightbluemusic.ffm.to/nightbluemusic ? ? No Copyright Playlist ↪︎ http://bit.ly/NB3NoCopyrightPlaylist ? Demos / Music Submission ↪︎ https://nightbluemusic.portal.district.biz ? Volyri ? ► https://soundcloud.com/volyrimusic ? RESZ ? ► https://www.instagram.com/resz.wav Make sure to show your support to helloimtea for their awesome artwork ^_^ ? Background Image ↪︎ https://www.pixiv.net/en/users/8449701 https://x.com/helloimtea_ If we did not properly credit your artwork or if you'd like us to not use your artwork please send us an email to nightbluemusic@nightblue3.net and we will correct it immediately! ❗️ For business inquiries and other issues please contact nightbluemusic@nightblue3.net ❗️ Volyri, RESZ - Better Now

Milky Chance are a blueprint to staying relevant through viral content in 2026..

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The German duo share a new remix – the latest viral hit of the bands illustrious career How many indie bands of the nineties and noughties are still around? And how any of them, have genuinely kept themselves relevant in the TikTok era? Not so many, that’s why German duo Milky Chance, are a band [...]

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The post Milky Chance are a blueprint to staying relevant through viral content in 2026.. appeared first on Magnetic Magazine.

Dune Is Turning Streaming Data Into A Tradable Asset. Can It Work?

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Attack Magazine - Podcast - Feat Images Dune

The Manchester-based startup is building a platform where fans can buy stakes in artists tied to streaming performance, raising bigger questions about value, ownership, and speculation in music.

Dune is built on a simple but provocative idea. What if streaming data was not just something artists chased, but something fans could own?

Founded in Manchester by music entrepreneurs Paul Knowles and Paul Bowe, the company has developed a platform that allows users to buy tradable stakes in artists. The value of those stakes rises and falls based on daily streaming performance, turning listener activity into something that can be bought and sold.

In practice, fans can back artists early, track their growth, and potentially benefit as their streams increase. It reframes streaming numbers as more than passive metrics and positions them as a new kind of asset.

The concept arrives at a time when the industry is already deeply shaped by data. Streams influence visibility, algorithmic reach, and revenue. Dune pushes that logic further by turning performance itself into something tradable.

On paper, it offers a new form of participation. Fans are no longer just listeners, but stakeholders. Artists gain another potential revenue stream. Streaming, long criticised for low payouts, is repositioned as something that can generate value in new ways.

But whether it actually works is less clear. The industry has only recently moved past the rise and fall of NFTs, and while Dune is not built on Web3 and operates as a centralised platform, it risks being grouped into the same wave of hype-led experimentation.

Tying financial value directly to streaming performance risks amplifying existing behaviours. If streams already drive decision-making, adding financial incentives could intensify the focus on virality, short-term growth and algorithmic gaming.

There is also the issue of volatility. Streaming numbers are unpredictable and often shaped by factors outside an artist’s control, from playlist placement to platform changes. Building a market on top of that introduces risk, particularly for fans entering as investors rather than supporters.

The cultural shift may be just as significant. When fandom becomes financial, the relationship between artist and audience changes. Support becomes transactional. Whether that strengthens engagement or distorts it is still an open question.

Dune is positioning itself as part of a broader rethink of how music creates and distributes value in the streaming era. It sits at the intersection of music, data and finance, a space that is becoming increasingly active but still largely undefined.

We spoke with the team behind Dune on the latest episode of the Dune podcast, where they break down how the platform works and what it could mean for artists and fans.

Find Dune online, on Instagram, on the App Store and on the Play Store.

Listen to the podcast on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

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