HARD SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES ARTIST ADDITIONS TO 2026 LINEUP

Featuring 1tbsp, B3K b2b Boys Noize, ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U, RØZ

Joining Previously Announced:

2hollis, Amelie Lens, Brutalismus 3000, Charlotte de Witte, Confidence Man, DJ Snake (Hip-Hop Set), Frost Children, HYPERBEAM (Odd Mob x OMNOM), Interplanetary Criminal B2B Main Phase, Kali Uchis, Knock2 B2B Zedd, Mau P, RL Grime, salute, Sammy Virji, Shygirl Presents Club Shy, Six Sex, Snow Strippers, Tiga, Tokischa, Underscores, Vintage Culture, VTSS, Zack Fox

+ Many More

To Be Hosted at Hollywood Park, adjacent to SoFi Stadium

August 1-2, 2026 in Inglewood, CA
 

HARD Summer Music Festival reveals a new round of artist additions for its highly anticipated return to Inglewood on August 1-2. HARD Summer is returning to Hollywood Park, the expansive entertainment complex adjacent to SoFi Stadium and YouTube Theater.

HARD Summer’s latest lineup additions further expand an already expansive bill, bringing a wave of eclectic talent into the fold. Among them is breakout experimental Japanese producer and DJ ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U, whose genre-defying sets are as thrilling as they are unclassifiable. The lineup also features a rare and explosive B3K B2B Boys Noize set, where Brutalismus 3000’s rave ready sonics collide with the inimitable selections of Boys Noize. Rounding out the additions are fast-rising Latin production duo RØZ and the alternative dance stylings of 1tbsp.

These newest additions join a powerhouse lineup of previously announced HARD Summer artists including 2hollis, Amelie Lens, Charlotte de Witte, Confidence Man, DJ Snake (Hip-Hop Set), Frost Children, HYPERBEAM (Odd Mob x OMNOM), Interplanetary Criminal B2B Main Phase, Kali Uchis, Knock2 B2B Zedd, Mau P, RL Grime, salute, Sammy Virji, Shygirl Presents Club Shy, Six Sex, Snow Strippers, Tiga, Tokischa, Underscores, VTSS, Zack Fox, and many more.

Since its debut in 2007, HARD Events has evolved into a defining fixture of Southern California’s festival landscape. The event is renowned for its genre-spanning programming, with a curatorial ethos always on the pulse, and an unmistakable visual identity that celebrates Los Angeles’ raw, grungy, city energy. Each summer, HARD welcomes a diverse, style-forward crowd to experience a collision of electronic and live music culture, reflecting the city’s layered musical landscape. Over time, HARD Summer has cemented its place as one of the West Coast’s most influential mid-year festivals and the largest electronic music event in Los Angeles.

HARD Summer continues to prioritize meaningful connections with the communities that surround it. Since 2023, the festival’s HARD Pre-Game initiative has partnered with more than 17 businesses across Greater Los Angeles, including four Inglewood-based establishments in 2025, underscoring its ongoing commitment to supporting its home city and the local businesses that shape its cultural fabric. Local businesses interested in partnering for this year’s edition of HARD Summer’s ‘HARD Pre-Game’ can submit inquiries through this application here. More details will be revealed on this year’s Pre-Game program in the coming months.

Two-day GA, GA+, and VIP festival passes are currently on sale. For more information on pass types and additional festival details, visit HARD Summer’s official website.

MUTEK MONTREAL ANNOUNCES FORUM PROGRAMME FOR 2026 WITH CAROLINE MONNET, CLAIRE L. EVANS, FAIT POMS, MARGARET MCGUFFIN, MINDY SEU, NEW MODELS

Talks by Caroline Monnet, Claire L. Evans, Fait Poms, Margaret McGuffin, Mindy Seu, New Models, Tati au Miel, Tracy Rector, and Zach Blas Plus an expanded MUTEK Market.

MUTEK Forum, a gathering for bold ideas in digital creativity, returns August 26-28 with a three-day programme of radical imagination and curated exchange, showcasing and critically exploring creative practices across research, creation, and interdisciplinary collaboration. MUTEK Forum brings together artists, studios, institutions, researchers, technology professionals, digital experts, and curators, nurturing interconnection between music, artificial intelligence (AI), extended reality (XR), ecology, media art, gaming, and design.

Running alongside the Forum, the 2026 edition also marks a significant expansion of MUTEK Market, MUTEK's marketplace for digital creativity, with a dedicated trajectory and space for curated 1:1 matchmaking and ecosystem-building between creatives and delegates from around the world.

This year's edition moves to an exciting new home: Atrium et Studio-Théâtre des Grands Ballets and Édifice Wilder - Espace danse, two adjoining flagship performing arts venues in the heart of the city’s cultural ecosystem.

SYMBIOTIC FREQUENCIES

MUTEK Forum 2026 unfolds under the theme Symbiotic Frequencies, an acknowledgment that something is shifting in the web of relations between bodies, technologies, and ecosystems, and that we are all entangled in it, whether we chose it or not. Existing boundaries between disciplines, cultures, and intelligences are dissolving, giving way to multiple, overlapping networks that cut across technology, climate, geopolitics, and art. From spatial audio to Indigenous epistemologies, from AI to living systems, frequencies are becoming the sites where matter, meaning, and intelligence converge. MUTEK Forum brings together the practitioners, thinkers, and builders who are not waiting for the future to arrive, but growing it from the ground up.

To spark interdisciplinary exchange, the Forum will break down the silos in digital creativity by organizing each day into themed chapters. Day 1: Storytelling: Expanding Realities, presented by the Canada Media Fund (CMF), will explore new narrative forms and immersive experiences. Day 2: Technology: Future Interfaces will examine transformative technologies shaping creative expression. Day 3: Sound: Collective Resonance expands sonic practice as a collective and corporeal experience, examining spatial audio, sound systems, and best practices for the music industry. Each day will feature dedicated networking opportunities, including industry meetups and evening cocktails.

AN ENRICHING AND ECLECTIC TALKS PROGRAMME

This year's MUTEK Forum presents a bold and forward-looking programme spotlighting influential voices at the forefront of creation, technology, and cultural transformation across different formats, including performance lectures, keynotes, panels, workshops, and masterclasses.

(Artificial) Intelligence, Myth and the Non-Human

What counts as intelligence, and who gets to decide? From the sexual origins of the Internet to the religious unconscious of Silicon Valley, a series of performance lectures and keynotes brings together artists and thinkers who refuse and challenge the dominant myths we’ve built around technology, and reach instead toward more embodied forms of knowing that computation has yet to account for.

MUTEK is delighted to present the Canadian premiere of the acclaimed A Sexual History of the Internet. LA and NYC-based artist and technologist Mindy Seu (Cyberfeminism Index) will offer an interactive lecture-performance based on her eponymous book, released on Metalabel, examining the reciprocal relationships between technological development and sexuality to reveal the ubiquitous and unexpected origins of our digital tools. Berlin-founded media platform and podcast network New Models, focusing on the intersection of art, technology, politics, and internet culture, will present Vibe-ocracy in the Psyber Age. In a joint-keynote, the co-founders Caroline Busta and Lil Internet will contemplate frameworks for navigating a new media environment in the age of vibocracy, tracing how algorithmic media, propaganda, and cybernetic feedback loops have replaced information with execution — and where vibes are mathematically measured.

Currently featured in the Whitney Biennial 2026, artist, writer, filmmaker, and University of Toronto Assistant Professor Zach Blas, whose practice contends with computational technologies, their industries, and the powers that constitute and animate them, will present the lecture-performance Does an AI God Have an Ass? From the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel to Silicon Valley's techno-religiosity, Blas traces historical connections to reveal the erasure of embodiment in AI fantasies and the religious unconscious lurking beneath. Award-winning writer and musician Claire L. Evans, will explore alternative AI ecologies with her talk Brainless: How The World Thinks. Evans invites us to question traditional conceptions of intelligence by looking beyond the neural networks of the human brain to ask what nature's “brainless” minds, from slime molds to cells to ant colonies, can teach us about the future of AI and the many shapes intelligence can take.

Story, Memory and Indigenous Futures

Talks, project presentations, and case studies will centre artists, studios, and practitioners rewriting the narratives embedded in our cultural institutions, technologies, and histories, and imagine what becomes possible when those stories change.

Tio'tia:ke / Mooniyang / Montréal based multidisciplinary artist Caroline Monnet, of Anishinaabe and French ancestry, works at the intersection of cinema and visual art to confront colonialism's legacy through Anishinaabeg methodologies. At MUTEK Forum, she will be in conversation about her film projects, exploring what is transformed, lost, and preserved in the passage between analog and digital. Filmmaker, activist, and curator Tracy Renée Rector will present the award winning Encoded: Change the Story, Change the Future, an Indigenous augmented reality (AR) unsanctioned intervention at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that brought together seventeen Indigenous artists to reframe the narratives of North American art and history, asking which stories are told, which are missing, and how they might be reimagined. Elsewhere in India, the transmedia collaboration of Murthovic and Thiruda, making its Canadian debut at MUTEK Forum, will present a talk that links their speculative reimagining of Indian cultural narratives to climate futures, AI, location-based entertainment, and live electronic performance.

For the first time, MUTEK Forum welcomes The Lumen Prize, the world's leading award for art created with technology, celebrating its 15th anniversary this year, as a partner. A 2026 finalist will be featured in this year's programme, offering a rare preview of the prize's most exciting work before the winners are announced in November. This new partnership also opens the door to broader community connections between the two organizations' networks, with more to be announced. 

Sound Systems and Embodied Listening

From the sound system as philosophy to the loudspeaker as political instrument, MUTEK Forum brings together builders, engineers, researchers, and artists for whom sonic culture is inseparable from power, access, and community. This year's Forum places a special focus on sound systems and embodied listening, celebrating the tactile, physical, and deeply human relationships we hold with sound. 

In collaboration with Honeydrip and MORPH, a queer and femme-led collective reclaiming sound system culture and technical spaces, MUTEK Forum is presenting a dedicated track of programming exploring sound systems culture and embodied sonic experience, alongside the Sound System Lab, a dedicated showcase highlighting the city’s vibrant community of builders and operators featuring systems by Myco Audio, Pomelo, Hi Five, and more.

Oakland-based sound engineer, manufacturer, and DJ/producer Fait Poms will give a talk to share insight from designing and building custom loudspeakers, bringing a socially engaged perspective to sound that centres the amplification of countercultures and marginalized voices, developed through her work with Eris Drew and Octo Octa's T4T LUV NRG Soundsystem and Envelope Sound System. Also on the program, multi-sensory artist Salima Punjani shares her experience as a social practice artist building relational, multisensory environments using vibrotactile technology. Rooted in disability arts practice, her work explores vibration as an invitation into more attentive and embodied modes of engagement — into the body, into shared presence, and into the joy and pleasure of listening together. The Afrosonic Innovation Lab presents its creative research on sound systems in partnership with Sonic Street Technologies (SST), a practice-based research initiative examining the Global South and subaltern dimensions of recorded music technologies, investigating how Jamaican sound systems tools have been shaped by specific social, economic, and cultural conditions, and how they continue to function as instruments of empowerment, identity-building, and resistance across communities worldwide. Also in the the Sound System Lab, multidisciplinary artist Tati au Miel will offer an interactive workshop centered on active listening and performative prompts, inviting participants to respond to a sonic mise-en-scène, exploring intentional pacing, deep listening, and electromagnetic frequencies in an intimate, immersive setting. 

A session on spatial sound and immersive audio will bring together leading voices in the field, including William Russell, co-founder and artistic director of spatial sound studio MONOM (Berlin), and Dr. Lea Luka Sikau, Head Curator for Sound and Music at the ZKM Center for Art and Media (Karlsruhe), among others.

Practice, Process and Making

A series of sessions at MUTEK Forum pulls back the curtain on the creative practices shaping digital culture today. Music curator and project coordinator Chloé Gatignol will present Courts Circuits (Paris), an initiative led by Technopol with DJs for Climate Action France and Music Declares Emergency France, will challenge us to rethink how electronic music artists travel, locally and internationally, towards more sustainable touring practices. Margaret McGuffin, CEO of Music Publishers Canada, will join a conversation on AI, music, and the industry changes, with a focus on the licensing frameworks, transparency tools, and creative solutions being built right now. Milieux Institute for Arts, Culture and Technology (Concordia University) are once again contributing to MUTEK Forum, bringing in student-led research-creation works that explore the thresholds of our encounters with machines in a collective interactive performance.

This year's programme also offers a closer look into the creative worlds of artists performing and exhibiting at MUTEK through a series of workshops and masterclasses revealing their processes, methods, and evolving practices, alongside Q&As hosted by Nyshka Chandran, Senior Editor at Resident Advisor. For the second year in a row, MUTEK is teaming up with multidisciplinary production house DASA, to host daily artist-led masterclasses with performers from the festival lineup. Among them, sound artist and instrument maker Evicshen leads a hands-on workshop on building contact microphones, introducing participants to vibration-based listening through object surfaces and guiding them in the construction of their own devices.

World Creation Studio, an artist-run nonprofit based in Tio'tia:ke / Mooniyang / Montréal supporting experimental and interdisciplinary work in digital, sound, and immersive art, presents a special edition of final-bounce, an event series bringing together music producers, composers, and sound artists through a shared platform for listening and exchange. Hosted by multidisciplinary artist Malte Leander and featuring international MUTEK artists, the session invites artists to share unreleased material, opens the floor to participant demos and works-in-progress, and closes with a curated selection spotlighting what is currently emerging in Montréal's electronic music scene.

Canadian Mexican artist and award winning video game director Paloma Dawkins offers an exploration of digital world-building through interspecies communication, presence practices and auto-ethnographic approaches based on her projects Geopresence and Glitch Garden, raising questions about kinship within future technologies and accessibility across different sensory worlds.

The full talks programme will be published in mid-June. 

MUTEK Market, a curated networking and professional development programme connecting artists and creative studios with international presenters, curators, and industry leaders, returns in 2026 in a significantly expanded form, responding to a pivotal moment of transition in the digital creativity ecosystem. 

Curated networking is at the heart of MUTEK Market's expanded offering. A dedicated Market space at Édifice Wilder - Espace danse will serve as the hub for daily editions of MUTEK Match, a customized 1:1 matchmaking initiative offering exclusive access to some of the most influential international minds in digital creativity. This is MUTEK's most ambitious professional offering to date, and a concrete expression of its long-standing commitment to the growth and development of the interactive digital media sector.

Dozens of international industry representatives from digital creativity are set to participate in MUTEK Market. Past attendees include The Barbican, Victoria & Albert Museum, Cryptic / Sonica, New Museum, LAS Arts Foundation, The Music Centre, Light Art Museum, Brussels Major Events, KIKK, The Tate, HELLERAU - European Centre for the Arts, and many more. 

The MUTEK Market is coming soon. Submit your interest through our form and be among the first to receive updates as we announce more details about this year's expanded programme.
 

Today's Forum announcement joins the previously announced starting lineup for the MUTEK Music programme. The starting lineup brings together pioneers of electronic music, leading figures from the contemporary scene and bold emerging voices,  pushing the boundaries of art, technology and music. This first announcement focuses primarily on international artists, with a significant group of Québec and Canadian artists to be revealed in the next wave.

MUTEK Montréal 2026 - Phase 1 (A-Z)

A Guy Called Gerald (UK)  

aria (CA)  

Barker (UK)  

Ben UFO (UK) — DJ Set  

chiquitamagic (CO/CA)  

Cleo Leigh (CA)  

Dana Ruh (DE)  

Dave Huismans (ex_libris) (NL)  

ELECTRONICOS FANTASTICOS! (JP)  

Evicshen (US)  

Fennesz & Lillevan (AT/IE)  

Florence-Delphine Roux (CA/QC)  

gyrofield (HK/NL)  

Honeydrip (CA/QC)  

JakoJako (DE)  

Jeff Mills (US)  

Matthew Herbert (UK)  

Mia Koden (UK)  

Nazar (AO)  

Noémi Büchi (CH)  

NVST (CH)  

Polygonia (DE)  

Purelink (US)  

Rival Consoles (UK)  

Sara Persico & Mika Oki (IT/BE)  

Tristan Perich & James McVinnie (US/UK)  

Violent Magic Orchestra (JP)  

Voices From The Lake (IT)  

MUTEK would like to thank its partners, who play a key role in the maintenance and development of its activities and have provided particular support towards the production of the Festival. The Government of Québec, the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Québec, the ministère du Tourisme du Québec, the Secrétariat à la région métropolitaine du gouvernement du Québec, the ministère de la Culture et des Communications du Québec, the Canada Council for the Arts, FACTOR and Canada's private radio broadcasters, the Department of Canadian Heritage, Musicaction, the City of Montréal, the Conseil des arts de Montréal, Tourisme Montréal, Hôtel Monville and the Society for Arts and Technology.

TICKET INFORMATION

MUTEK Forum offers several ticketing options, including the Forum Passport and the Festival + Forum Passport, along with the Student Forum Passport at a fixed price of $90 (+ service fees and taxes). Day passes will be available for purchase in June.

Learn More: https://forum.mutek.org/en/tickets

TERMINAL V LEAVES LASTING LEGACY AFTER FINAL EDITION IN EDINBURGH

Scotland's defining electronic music festival closes its Edinburgh chapter in style, as over a quarter of a million fans have passed through its doors across nine landmark years

Terminal V has brought its legendary Edinburgh chapter to a close, with a final edition at the Royal Highland Centre marking the end of a defining nine-year run in the city where it all began.

 

Taking place across 18th & 19th April 2026, the festival delivered one final large-scale celebration in the Scottish capital, welcoming tens of thousands of fans across six fully reimagined stages and more than 100 artists from across the globe. Representing a £1 million investment into the festival site, the closing edition maintained the famously high production standards Terminal V has become known for, including a full site transformation and a bespoke sound redesign developed in collaboration with global audio leaders d&b audiotechnik.

 

Since launching in 2017, Terminal V has grown into one of Europe's largest and most influential electronic music festivals, drawing over a quarter of a million attendees to Edinburgh across its nine-year run. Along the way it earned recognition as Scotland's number one festival, the fifth-ranked festival in the UK, and 34th in the world in the DJ Mag Top 100 Festivals poll, as well as being named Best UK Festival at the DJ Mag, Best of British Awards in 2023.

The final programme featured a wide-ranging lineup spanning techno, house and the harder edges of the underground, with standout performances across the weekend from Sara Landry - who brought the UK festival exclusive of her ETERNALISM show - alongside Klangkuenstler, Mall Grab, Robert Hood, Restricted, Ben Hemsley, Vieze Asbak and many more.

 

Derek Martin, co-founder of Terminal V says “Nine years ago we had a vision for what Terminal V could be, and Edinburgh gave us the platform to realise it. Closing this chapter is bittersweet, but watching so many people share this weekend with us made it feel like the celebration it deserved to be. This might be the end of one era but we are excited about what is coming next. 2027 will also mark our 10th anniversary as well as a new exciting chapter for Terminal V."

 

Simon McGrath, co-founder of Terminal V says “The standard of this weekend is the benchmark we’ll take with us. We never compromise, and we never will. What comes next for Terminal V will be bigger and more ambitious than anything we’ve done before.”

 

Over the past nine years, Terminal V has played a central role in shaping Scotland's electronic music landscape, bringing international talent to Edinburgh while building a fiercely loyal, ever-growing community. In recent years its influence has extended well beyond the city, with the launch of a Croatian festival edition each summer and a successful London debut at the 15,000-capacity Drumsheds.

 

While this edition marks the end of Terminal V’s time in Edinburgh, the festival’s evolution continues at pace. Plans are already in place for a new Scottish location in 2027, alongside a global programme of events, including the imminent launch of Terminal V Australia, marking a significant new chapter in the brand’s international expansion.

 

Terminal V leaves behind a significant legacy in the city - one defined by scale, ambition, and an unwavering commitment to pushing the boundaries of production and programming.

 

 This is not the end, but the beginning of another exciting chapter!


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