Brandi Carlile, MUNA and Lola Young Join All Things Go 2026

Brandi Carlile, MUNA and Lola Young Join All Things Go 2026

Brandi Carlile, MUNA and Lola Young joined all things go 2026, expanding the D.C. festival’s three-day bill at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, Md. The update lands as the 12th edition heads to Sept. 25 to 27, with the D.C. event already sold out for five consecutive years.

Carlile’s First All Things Go Set

Brandi Carlile will make her All Things Go debut in 2026, giving the festival another marquee name for a lineup that already includes Hayley Williams and Mitski as headliners. For a three-day event that has consistently sold out, one first-time booking at this level can shape how quickly the remaining inventory moves once the general onsale opens.

MUNA will mark its fourth appearance at the festival, while Lola Young returns after being billed in 2024 and 2025. That kind of repeat booking tells the same story from a different angle: All Things Go is not just chasing one-off arrivals, it is keeping artists in rotation across editions.

Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia

Zara Larsson, Ethel Cain and Slayyyter were also added to the Merriweather Post Pavilion lineup, along with Sienna Spiro, The Beaches, Rainbow Kitten Surprise, Rico Nasty, Del Water Gap, She & Him, Tinashe and Wolf Alice. Robby Hoffman joined the music-focused lineup as well, widening the bill beyond straight concert programming.

The festival’s 2026 D.C. edition still carries the same commercial pressure as before: five straight sellouts in the market leave little room for weak draw or generic booking. That is why the additions matter beyond name recognition; they reinforce a lineup strategy built around women, non-binary artists and LGBTQIA+ appeal, the mix that has given All Things Go its enduring demand.

June 6 to 7 in Toronto

All Things Go now runs festivals in the D.C. area, New York at Forest Hills Stadium and Toronto at RBC Amphitheatre, and the Toronto edition will feature Lorde, Kesha, Wet Leg and The Beaches from June 6 to 7. The New York lineup was expected soon, leaving the D.C. announcement as the clearest look yet at how the brand is scaling its 2026 calendar.

For readers tracking the D.C. event specifically, the practical takeaway is simple: the lineup is larger, the headliners are locked, and the ticket window is already set in motion with the pre-sale and general onsale dates around the corner. In a market where the festival has sold out five years running, the new additions should be treated as a prompt to buy early rather than wait for more names.

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