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Tag: warped tour

  • Vans Warped Tour Returns In 2026 With Global Expansion & Five Two-Day Festivals – Metal Injection

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    The Vans Warped Tour officially returns in 2026, ushering in a bold new era with expanded dates, international growth, and a refreshed vision for the next generation of fans.

    Following last year’s three sold-out U.S. events, Vans Warped Tour will present five two-day festivals across Washington, D.C., Long Beach, CA, and Orlando, FL, while launching two brand-new international editions in Montreal, Canada, and Mexico City, Mexico.

    Partnering with Insomniac, the powerhouse event creators behind some of the world’s largest festivals, Warped Tour is being reimagined while staying true to its roots. The updated format honors the festival’s legacy of discovery, inclusivity, and community while evolving its scale, production, and cultural reach.

    Each two-day event will feature over 100 artists, spanning rock, pop punk, alternative, emo, hip-hop, ska, and more, alongside appearances from elite skateboarders and action-sports athletes.

    In the lead-up to the festivals, Vans Warped Tour has launched its signature artist-reveal campaign, with multiple artists announced daily over the next 30-ish days, exclusively on Warped Tour social platforms. The staggered rollout reinforces the festival’s fan-first ideology and commitment to artist discovery.

    Last year’s campaign generated over 3.8 billion impressions, more than one million monthly engagements, and measurable career growth for participating artists. Once fully unveiled in mid-March, the lineup will again be listed alphabetically, keeping the spotlight on the collective experience rather than headliners — a long-standing Warped tradition.

    Warped Tour will also host intimate pop-up events in each market throughout the artist-announcement period. These city-specific activations may include surprise performances, community engagement moments, and potential artist reveals, strengthening the festival’s local connections.

    True to its legacy, Warped Tour continues its commitment to social impact. As part of its Charity Circle, last year’s events collected over 134,000 pounds of canned food, raised more than $100,000 in fan donations, and delivered $200,000 to nonprofit organizations.

    Founder Kevin Lyman shared: “Warped has always been about a sense of discovery — learning about brands, nonprofits, and bands. By releasing the lineup the way we do, each band gets their moment to introduce or reacquaint themselves to you. For those who get Warped, they get this. Thank you for your support, and we look forward to seeing you in the pit.”

    Founded in 1995, Vans Warped Tour became the largest traveling music festival in U.S. history and the longest-running touring festival in North America. More than just a concert series, it served as a proving ground and cultural crossroads where emerging artists shared stages with future icons.

    Past performers include Blink-182, Green Day, No Doubt, Sublime, Eminem, Bad Religion, NOFX, Limp Bizkit, Katy Perry, Beck, Black Eyed Peas, and countless others. Get your tickets here.

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    Greg Kennelty

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  • Rising pop-punkers Winona Fighter do Warped Tour double duty in Orlando  

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    “We are running off of pure love of doing what we do, and I want it to be an escape for people. I want them to have 30 minutes to an hour out of their day where they can just be a little freak and run around and punch and whatever.”

    Coco Kinnon, frontwoman of rising Nashville-based pop-punk band Winona Fighter, started early in music: drumming on stage at the age of 12, playing underground shows in the New England punk scene.

    Kinnon, whose father raised her on rock and grunge, always found herself drawn to punk. But after joining her first band (a punk band, of course), she started to fall in love with more than just the music, but also the punk scene.

    “The music is very scary and harsh, and the mosh pits can be a little much for people,” Kinnon tells Orlando Weekly, “but it’s also a community where everyone has each other’s back and everyone’s welcome, and it’s open to all new faces and to those who are young and old.”

    Years later, Kinnon met bassist and producer Austin Luther, who was into late-’90s and early-aughts alternative, and lead guitarist Dan Fuson, who loved ’80s metal. The three shared a mutual drive to play in a rock band.

    “So for me, it was like that feeling of taking what I grew up in and bringing it into something new and fresh, because Nashville doesn’t really have a punk scene,” says Kinnon. “And for the boys, it was like this cool introduction to a totally new community.”

    Before the release of their first EP, Father Figure, in 2022, the band was just going by Kinnon’s nickname, “Coco.” Then one night, after mulling over potential band names, Luther — a pop-culture obsessive — came up with “Winona Fighter.”

    Kinnon felt the name was “the perfect balance of masculine and feminine, like pretty, but harsh.” Thus Winona Fighter was born, and they are now part of the lineup of the 2025 Vans Warped Tour on the heels of their latest album, My Apologies to the Chef.

    Kinnon describes the whole thing as surreal, with the band gearing up to head to Orlando not just to play the main fest, but also Will’s Pub for an official afterparty — all on Saturday.

    “I grew up going to Warped Tour, and I looked up to these bands, and I looked up to bands that were as big/little as we are. I thought they were like the shit,” says Kinnon. “It’s so funny now to be in that position of, you know, we’re still grinding so much, and we’re still doing van tours. We’re still little fish in such a big pond. But to know that we are having that weird impact on people that I had with the bands I saw at Warped Tour and Warped afterparties, it’s such a really cool, exciting thing for us.”

    Luther recorded their entire album in his home studio, which also doubles as a garage. Kinnon, who helped produce the record, says the band loves to do as much as possible by themselves, staying true to their DIY roots.

    As a pop-punk band, they created this new album to make punk accessible to all music lovers. Kinnon says the goal was to make a record of really catchy punk music that would appeal to people unfamiliar with the genre, even to those who weren’t into “super thrashable, yelly, loud punk music.”

    The record’s lyrics center on the human experience and universal struggles of daily life, with tracks like “You Look Like a Drunk Phoebe Bridgers” and “I’m in the Market to Please No One.”

    “Everyone can listen to the record and find one song where they relate to it, because it’s like we all go through these things,” says Kinnon. “Everyone feels like it’s a lonely, unique experience, but in reality, there’s always someone who can relate to what you are going through.” For Kinnon, every day with the band feels like an impactful moment.

    “Every moment, even if it’s like, we show up and the green room has our little snacks that we like, or we show up and there’s even 50 people in a room, it’s so cool to us, like, ‘Oh, we are reaching people, and we are having an impact,’” says Kinnon. “Or we write a song that we think no one’s gonna understand. But then people are on Reddit and they’re just like, ‘Wow, this song hit me hard.’ Every day we have something that happens that is just very surreal for us.”

    It’s that same passion for what they’re doing that helps the band whip up high energy onstage and in the crowd. Kinnon says it’s a mix between a true love of performing and a desire to give fans an outlet.

    For aspiring Warpers out there, Kinnon says that chasing viral moments won’t help you grow as artists. Instead, it’s the tough shows or embarrassing moments that help artists find themselves and their community much quicker.

    “Pick up a guitar, get out, play shows. Be kind, be willing to learn and it’ll come. What you’re looking for will come if you just put your head down and keep grinding, keep learning, keep being kind. That’s all you can really do. And make music you’re excited to make.”  

    (WINONA FIGHTER, EMO SOCIAL: 9 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 15, Will’s Pub, 1042 N. Mills Ave., willspub.org, $28.43)


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    BJ Barham opened the night

    Marking 30 years of this touring juggernaut



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    Azlyn Cato
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  • Vans Warped Tour pre-parties, events head to Orlando before fest

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    Credit: Vans Warped Tour/Facebook

    Vans Warped Tour is alive again and heading to Orlando’s Camping World Stadium this month to celebrate more than three decades of music. 

    Orlando is one of only three cities hosting the pop-punk extravaganza and 30-year anniversary comeback, and is set to welcome a series of corresponding events leading up to the two-day fest that takes place Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 15 and 16. 

    The Warped Wall-Street Takeover transforms Wall and Court streets into “Warped World” for a four-day bar crawl-style get-together from Nov. 13 to 16.  It’s free to attend and features food trucks dishing out Warped Tour-themed eats, a Warped Pour pop-up bar, trivia nights and a barbecue after the festival’s final shows of the night on Nov. 15 and 16. 

    On the eve of the fest, Warped will partner with Emo Nite to put on a night of nostalgic emo and pop-punk anthems courtesy of a live DJ. The party takes place at the Beacham on Friday, Nov. 14. 

    If you can’t make the Orlando events, the Skate Park of Tampa is also set to host the annual Harvest Jam All Ages Contest — which will serve as a one-stop shop for Warped Tour 2025 merch. 

    Warped Tour kicked off in June in Washington D.C. and touched down in Long Beach, California in July. The Orlando fest wraps up the comeback.

    The musical lineup includes both seasoned Warped Tour performers and new faces, some of which include 3OH3!, A Day to Remember, The Wonder Years, Winona Fighter, Movements, Simple Plan, Bowling for Soup, Pennywise, Miss May I, Dance Hall Crashers, Less Than Jake, Thursday, MGK, Falling in Reverse, Boys Like Girls, Microwave and many, many more.


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    Warped Tour-themed eats, merch, pop-up bars and even more music

    Opener Hellogoodbye set the tone for the night

    *Actually from Chicago, and deffo not cops


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    Azlyn Cato
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  • WATCH: MxPx on Their Latest Album and Three Decades of Punk Rock

    WATCH: MxPx on Their Latest Album and Three Decades of Punk Rock

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    After 30 years together, MxPx remains one of the best and hardest working bands out there. They recently released their 11th studio album Find A Way Home. Anchored by “Not Today,” and “Stay Up All Night,” it’s full of the catchy rock songs that fans love.

    From a sound that defined pop-punk to their iconic album art and merch, MxPx has influenced countless acts including Simple Plan, Fallout Boy, Sum 41, and Good Charlotte. They’ve laid out the blueprint for many of this century’s biggest bands.

    Watch lead vocalist/bassist Mike Herrera and lead guitarist Tom Wisniewski talk about how they make music now, their favorite Warped Tour memories, and the story behind the “Pokinatcha Punk.”

    MxPx | It’s Real with Jordan and Demi

    For more from MxPx follow them Instagram and TikTok.

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    Staff

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