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Oceans set on Sunday, April 16, featured reworked version of songs from across his discography, including Novacane, Pink + White, White Ferrari, Crack Rock, and more. There was a new punk version of the Django Unchained outtake Wiseman and a cover of the Willie Nelson-penned Aretha Franklin song Night Life. He addressed the crowd, hinting that a new album was in the works and paid tribute to his late brother Ryan Breaux.
There was some controversy surrounding the set, when fans online expressed their frustration that Oceans set was one of very few that wouldnt appear on the festivals YouTube stream. His set ended somewhat abruptly. Guys, Im being told its curfew, so thats the end of the show, Ocean said. Thank you so much. As the lights came up, fans booed and chanted we want Frank. The festival was later fined by Indio, California city officials for going over curfew.
Prior to todays cancellation, sources indicated that Ocean had recently sustained an ankle injury and altered the sets overall production on the advice of doctors. It was widely rumored that the changes included scrapped plans for an ice skating rink connected to the stage. Two ice skaters discussed their alleged experience working with Ocean in the week leading up to Sundays performance in a podcast.
Fans had been anticipating Oceans headlining performances at Coachella since 2020, when he was announced as one of the main acts before the festival was canceled for two years in a row due to the pandemic. In August 2021, the events co-founder Paul Tollett revealed the news that Ocean would headline the 2023 edition in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.
This marks the second year in a row a Coachella headliner has dropped out. In April 2022, less than two weeks before he was meant to perform, Kanye West pulled out of the festival. His representatives did not give a reason for the withdrawal, nor did the festival. He was replaced by Swedish House Mafia and the Weeknd, who performed together on Sundays, April 17 and 24. West was later sued for $7.1 million by the Los Angelesbased production and design firm Phantom Labs, which claimed the rapper owed them money for work on his canceled Coachella performance.
Follow along with all of Pitchforks coverage of Coachella 2023.
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