Take That Opens Capital's Summertime Ball 2026 on Itv1
itv1 carried Capital's Summertime Ball with Barclaycard 2026 live on 6 June 2026, and Take That opened the show before RAYE, Niall Horan, Sienna Spiro and Calvin Harris took their turns. The setlist page was updated at 20:36, three minutes after publication, while the event itself ran from 7pm to 10:30pm.
Global Player at 20:36
20:36 was the last update on the live setlist page, which sent at-home viewers to the Global Player livestream while the show was underway. That makes the page more than a running order: it was the live guide for anyone following the Ball as it happened, not after the fact.
7pm to 10:30pm gave the production a tight window, and the page reflected that by listing the artists already in the programme and the acts still to come. The bill included Take That, RAYE, Niall Horan, Sienna Spiro and Calvin Harris, with the page also laying out setlist sections for Bebe Rexha, MEEK, Jason Derulo, Sekou, Robyn, Lola Young, December 10, Stephen Sanchez, Fatboy Slim, XG and Niall Horan.
Take That start the bill
Take That kicked off Capital's Summertime Ball with Barclaycard 2026, giving the event an opening act that set the pace before the rest of the lineup rolled out. For a live show built around a rotating set of names, the first slot is the clearest signal of how the night is being paced.
6 June 2026 was the date that mattered to viewers following the livestream, because the page was live while the concert was still in progress. The article also promised loads of surprises and exciting moments, which is exactly the kind of language live-event editors use when the setlist is still moving and the audience is deciding whether to stay with the stream.
Loaded bill, narrow window
20:33 was the publication time, and 20:36 was the update. That three-minute gap shows how quickly the running order was being maintained for a same-day audience that wanted the latest lineup without waiting for a recap.
RAYE, Niall Horan, Sienna Spiro and Calvin Harris were the names that turned the Ball from a general summer concert into a specific viewing target for a live audience. If you were watching at home, the practical move was simple: use the Global Player livestream and follow the setlist page as it changed rather than treating the event like a post-show highlight reel.