List of Austin City Limits lineups by year explained

This is a list of Austin City Limits Music Festival lineups by year.

2002

2002 was the inaugural year of the festival. Unlike subsequent years, it was a 2-day event only. The festival, arranged by Charlie Jones and Charles Attal founders of C3 Presents, was thrown together in a matter of three or four months. The 2-day festival hosted 5 stages and 67 bands. One-day passes were $25. 42,000 people attended the event when only 25,000 were expected. The festival has grown every year since.

2003

September 19–21 marked the second year for the ACL Music festival. With 100 bands performing, tickets increase to $65 for a three-day admission pass. Children under 10 were admitted for free when accompanied by an adult with a ticket.

2004

The 2004 festival took place on September 17, 18 and 19.

The 2004 festival had eight stages, and, on the second day of the festival, a top attendance of 75,000 people. This spike in attendance forced the festival promoters to lower capacity per the request of surrounding neighborhood associations.

2005

The 2005 festival took place on September 23, 24 and 25.

The 2005 Austin City Limits Festival won Pollstar's Festival of the Year Award. This was also the infamous "Dust Bowl" year where dust kicked up by the festival crowd made it difficult for audiences to breathe. The following year, sprinklers were installed in Zilker Park to remedy this problem. Organizers reduced the daily capacity of the event by 10,000 fans because of neighborhood disputes in the previous years. Three-day passes were sold for $105.

Last minute replacement acts included:

Several acts were scheduled to appear, but cancelled due to transportation issues arising from Hurricane Rita. They included:

2006

The 2006 festival took place on September 15, 16 and 17.

After sweltering heat in 2005, festival organizers attempted to relieve festival goers from the Texas sun by adding more misting and water stations and more tents for shade. Organizers also added a mobile phone texting feature to the festival. AT&T's Blue Room offered options for fans to watch live streaming bands playing from the comfort of their own homes.

Ben Kweller suffered a nosebleed during his set. He attempted to stem the flow by inserting a tampon, thrown to him by an audience member, into his nostril. The tampon expanded painfully and then he removed it. Kweller performed two more songs until he had to leave the stage.[1] The next day when The Flaming Lips performed, lead singer Wayne Coyne asked the audience to throw tampons at him to help mop up his signature fake blood. It continued to rain tampons on the band for well over two songs.

2007

The 2007 Austin City Limits Music Festival occurred September 14, 15 and 16 in Zilker Park. Several acts, including Amy Winehouse, The White Stripes and Rodrigo y Gabriela, cancelled their appearances at the festival for health reasons, the latter two on very short notice. The scheduled performance by Saturday headliner The White Stripes was replaced by moving already scheduled Muse into the headlining slot.

Other notable moments include Friday when a propane tank was ignited and a fire broke out in the service area, burning down two trailers and several port-o-potties. Four people who were working at the festival were injured, two of them seriously. A second fire broke out on the speaker stack at the AT&T stage during Björk's set, but it was quickly extinguished and no injuries were reported.[2]

2008

The 2008 edition took place September 26–28, 2008.

2009

The 2009 festival took place on October 2–4, 2009. This year's festival is most commonly remembered as the one when torrential rains which started falling on Saturday afternoon turned the new grass turf into slick fields of Dillo Dirt mud.

2010

The 2010 festival took place on October 8–10, 2010.The performers included The Eagles, Phish, Muse, The Strokes, and M.I.A.

2011

ACL Festival celebrated its 10th anniversary on September 16–18, 2011.[3] The official lineup was announced on May 17, 2011.[4]

2012

Austin City Limits took place from October 12–14, 2012. The official lineup was announced on May 22, 2012.[5]

2013

For the first time, the Austin City Limits Music Festival was split across two weekends with matching lineups: October 4–6 and October 11–13, 2013.

Weekend 2

Due to heavy rains and flash floods, the festival was cancelled on day 3 of weekend 2.

2014

Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 3–5 and October 10–12, 2014. Forbes called it one of five American music festivals to look forward to.[6]

Weekend 2

2015

Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 2–4 and October 9–11, 2015. The headliners were Foo Fighters, Drake, the Strokes, Florence and the Machine, and the Weeknd.

Weekend 2

2016

Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: September 30 – October 2 and October 7–9, 2016. The headliners were Radiohead, Kygo, Kendrick Lamar, Mumford & Sons, and LCD Soundsystem.

Weekend 2

2017

Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 6–8 and October 13–15, 2017. The lineup featured headliners Jay Z, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Chance The Rapper, The Killers, and Gorillaz. This was the year that Silent Disco produced by Quiet Events began.[7]

Weekend 1

2018

Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 5–7 and October 12–14, 2018. The lineup featured headliners Paul McCartney, Metallica, Arctic Monkeys, Travis Scott, Odesza, and The National. Childish Gambino was forced to cancel his performance after a foot injury, and Justice was promoted from an earlier time slot to replace him as a headliner. Phoenix and Lil Wayne were also added to fill the empty time slots, with the former playing on the first weekend of the festival and the latter on the second weekend.

Weekend 2

2019

2019 Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 4–6 and 11–13. The festival was headlined by Guns N' Roses, Mumford & Sons, Childish Gambino, The Cure, Cardi B (first weekend only), Billie Eilish, Tame Impala, and Robyn (second weekend only).[8]

2020

2020 Austin City Limits Music Festival was held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Austin, Texas. The festival was held on October 9–11 and streamed previous festivals as well as live performances.[9]

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

2021

2021 Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 1–3 and 8–10. The headliners were George Strait, Billie Eilish, Tyler, the Creator, Miley Cyrus, Rüfüs Du Sol, and Duran Duran.[10]

2022

2022 Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 7–9 and 14–16. The festival was headlined by Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pink, The Chicks, SZA, Kacey Musgraves, Flume, Paramore and Lil Nas X.[11]

2023

2023 Austin City Limits Music Festival was held over two weekends: October 6–8 and 13–15. The festival was headlined by Kendrick Lamar, Foo Fighters, Mumford & Sons, The Lumineers, Shania Twain (first weekend), The 1975 (second weekend), Odesza, Maggie Rogers, Alanis Morissette, Hozier, Major Lazer, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Labrinth.[12]

Weekend 1

Honda Stage
FridaySaturdaySunday
American Express Stage
T-Mobile Stage
Miller Lite Stage
BMI Stage
  • Tanner Usrey
  • Sunrose
  • Grace Sorensen
  • Major.
Barton Springs Stage
Tito's Handmade Vodka Stage
  • Chromeo
  • Christone "Kingfish" Ingram
  • Calder Allen
  • Angel White
  • Shooks
  • Die Spitz

Weekend 2

Honda Stage
FridaySaturdaySunday
American Express Stage
T-Mobile Stage
Miller Lite Stage
BMI Stage
  • The Moss
  • Oliver Hazard
  • Emlyn
Barton Springs Stage
Tito's Handmade Vodka Stage
  • Tegan and Sara
  • Sudan Archives
  • Calder Allen
  • Angel White
  • Valley James
  • Blackhyl

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rolling Stone, The 10 Best Shows at Austin City Limits . https://web.archive.org/web/20061022110119/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/11717282/the_10_best_shows_at_austin_city_limits_2006/2 . dead . October 22, 2006 . Rollingstone.com . 2013-04-15.
  2. Web site: Austin Music Source . Austin360.com . 2014-06-25.
  3. Web site: Austin City Limits Festival Celebrates 10th Anniversary . Dailytexanonline.com . September 14, 2014 . 2014-08-14.
  4. Web site: 2011 Austin City Limits Lineup Announced: Stevie Wonder, Arcade Fire, Kanye West Headlining. Mitchell. Peters. Billboard.com. May 17, 2011. October 13, 2023.
  5. Web site: Austin City Limits Festival Announces Schedule | News . Pitchfork . July 26, 2012 . 2014-06-25.
  6. Web site: 5 American Music Festivals To Look Forward To. Forbes . October 5, 2014 . 2014-10-07.
  7. Web site: Events . Quiet . Quiet Events® To Debut Silent Disco At Austin City Limits Music Festival . 2023-10-09 . . en.
  8. Web site: Guns N’ Roses, Mumford & Sons, Childish Gambino to Headline 2019 Austin City Limits Music Festival. Billboard. Gil. Kaufman. April 30, 2019. February 18, 2022.
  9. Web site: Lineup for ACL Fest 2020 three-night broadcast announced. KTBC. October 6, 2020. February 18, 2022.
  10. Web site: Billie Eilish, Miley Cyrus, Duran Duran Lead 2021 Austin City Limits Festival. Rolling Stone. August 11, 2021. February 18, 2022. Daniel. Kreps.
  11. Web site: Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pink, SZA, Kacey Musgraves, Lil Nas X to Headline 2022 Austin City Limits Festival. Variety.com. May 10, 2022. March 26, 2023. Jem. Aswad.
  12. Web site: Kendrick Lamar, Foo Fighters, Shania Twain & More to Headline 2023 Austin City Limits Festival. Billboard. Gil. Kaufman. September 5, 2023. March 29, 2024.