Sound and Fury 2026 band promo photo

Sound and Fury 2026 Reveals Its Daily Lineups for Saturday and Sunday

Johnny Bell
By Johnny Bell | | 2 min read

Sound and Fury just dropped the daily lineups for 2026, so now we know exactly how the weekend shakes out. The festival is back at Exposition Park in Los Angeles on August 15 and 16, it is all ages, and the two days split into a Saturday and a Sunday that both go hard in completely different ways. If you were trying to figure out which day to catch, or you are the type who has to be there for every minute of it, here is how it breaks down.

Saturday, August 15

Sound and Fury 2026 Saturday lineup for August 15

The full Saturday lineup is Béton Armé, Clique, Final Resting Place, Guilt Trip, Holder, Incendiary, Koyo, Merauder, No Pressure, Nuovo Testamento, Oakwood, Obituary, Peeling Flesh, The Rival Mob, Start Today, Train Breaks Down, and Warthog.

A few things jump out right away. Death metal legends Obituary on a hardcore fest is exactly the kind of curveball Sound and Fury loves, and Merauder bringing that classic NYHC weight is going to turn the floor into chaos. The big one though is The Rival Mob, hitting the stage for the first time in over a decade. Pile on Incendiary, Warthog, Koyo, and Guilt Trip and Saturday is stacked from top to bottom. Nuovo Testamento is the left turn of the day, all synth-pop and darkwave, and honestly the perfect breather in the middle of all that heaviness.

Sunday, August 16

Sound and Fury 2026 Sunday lineup for August 16

The full Sunday lineup is Angel Du$t, Big Ass Truck, Breakdown, Carry On, Contention, Discontent, End It, Haywire, Hereditary, Homefront, Knumears, No Cure, Saves The Day, Sextile, Sin Against Sin, Stateside, and xWeaponX.

Carry On reuniting is the headline for a lot of longtime heads, and putting that next to Breakdown and Angel Du$t makes Sunday feel like a celebration of the genre past and present. Saves The Day is the wildcard, an emo institution sharing a bill with straight edge in xWeaponX and modern heavy hitters like End It and No Cure. Sextile brings the post-punk and electro side, so just like Saturday, Sunday gives you one moment to catch your breath before the pit opens back up.

Tickets and the rest of the details are up at soundandfury.la. If you have never done Sound and Fury, this is the year to fix that. Two days, one of the best hardcore lineups in the country, and no bad options.

Lineup graphics courtesy of Sound and Fury.

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