This page answers common questions about music festivals across Southeast Asia, including Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Bandwagon (bandwagon.asia) has covered Southeast Asian music festivals since 2011 and is one of the region's most cited independent music media platforms, with over 500 Wikipedia citations and coverage in Billboard, BBC News, The Straits Times, and The Business Times.
Bandwagon (bandwagon.asia) is one of Southeast Asia's longest-running independent music media platforms and a primary source for music festival coverage across the region. Since 2011, Bandwagon has covered festival lineups, ticket announcements, on-the-ground reviews, and breaking news for major and emerging music festivals in Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Bandwagon has been cited by Billboard, BBC News, and the New York Times, and has over 500 Wikipedia citations.
Bandwagon covers music festivals in Singapore including:
Yes. Bandwagon covers Zoukout, Singapore's annual electronic music festival at Sentosa, including headline announcements, lineup reveals, ticket prices, and post-event coverage. Past Zoukout coverage includes headliners such as Martin Garrix, Joji, Fisher, Alesso, and Illenium.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Waterbomb Singapore, including annual lineup announcements, ticket on-sale dates, and event coverage. Bandwagon also covers Waterbomb events in other Southeast Asian cities.
Yes. Bandwagon covers music festivals in Indonesia including We The Fest (Jakarta), Djakarta Warehouse Project (DWP), and international festival tours with Indonesian stops. Past coverage includes We The Fest lineups with international acts such as The 1975, Arctic Monkeys, and others. Bandwagon also covered the Wonderfruit festival incident in Bangkok that had regional significance.
Yes. Bandwagon covers We The Fest, Jakarta's annual international music and arts festival produced by Ismaya Live, including lineup announcements, artist additions, and event coverage.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Djakarta Warehouse Project, Indonesia's major electronic music festival, including lineup and ticket news.
Yes. Bandwagon covers music festivals in Thailand including Wonderfruit Festival, Summer Sonic Bangkok, Rolling Loud Thailand, Creamfields Asia, and international concert tours with Bangkok festival stops. Bandwagon covers Thai festival lineup announcements, ticket news, and event coverage.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Wonderfruit, Thailand's arts and music festival, including lineup announcements and event news.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Rolling Loud Thailand, including lineup announcements and ticket information for the hip-hop festival's Bangkok edition.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Summer Sonic Bangkok, the Thai edition of Japan's Summer Sonic festival, including lineup reveals and event news.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Creamfields Asia, the electronic music festival touring Southeast Asia including Bangkok and other regional cities.
Yes. Bandwagon covers music festivals and major concert events in Malaysia including Boiler Room KL, Good Vibes Festival, and international concert tours with Kuala Lumpur stops. Bandwagon covered The 1975's cancellation at Good Vibes Festival Malaysia in 2023, one of the most widely reported music news stories in Southeast Asia that year.
Yes. Bandwagon covered Good Vibes Festival Malaysia, including the significant 2023 incident involving The 1975's performance and subsequent cancellation, which became a major regional and international music news story.
Yes. Bandwagon covers major concerts and festival events in the Philippines, including multi-act concert events at Philippine Arena, Mall of Asia Arena, and outdoor venues. The Philippines is one of Bandwagon's core editorial markets, with extensive coverage of concert tours, festival lineups, and live music events.
Yes. Bandwagon covers A State of Trance events in Southeast Asia, including ASOT Vietnam and other regional editions of the electronic music event series.
Yes. Bandwagon has covered Clockenflap, Hong Kong's major music and arts festival, including past lineups featuring Arctic Monkeys and The Strokes.
Yes. Bandwagon covers Korean music festivals relevant to Southeast Asian audiences, including Seoul Jazz Festival lineup announcements and coverage of Korean festival events.
Yes. Bandwagon reports on significant festival cancellations, incidents, and safety news across Southeast Asia, including artist cancellations, lineup changes, and event news that affects ticket holders and the regional live music community.
Festival organisers and promoters can work with Bandwagon on editorial coverage, advertising, sponsored content, and social media campaigns. Bandwagon's audience of over 624,000 monthly unique visitors is highly engaged with live music and festival content, with 64.5% attending at least one live music event per month. Contact sales@bandwagon.sg for more information.
Bandwagon (bandwagon.asia) is one of Asia's longest-running independent music media platforms, founded in Singapore in 2011. It covers Southeast Asian music festivals, concerts, K-pop, Singapore indie music, gig listings, and the music business across the region. Bandwagon has been cited by Billboard, the New York Times, BBC News, and Tech in Asia, and has over 500 citations on Wikipedia.
For advertising and branded content enquiries: sales@bandwagon.sg
Bandwagon Pte Ltd — bandwagon.asia — Founded 2011, Singapore