Turnstile live uploads
- Official Turnstile performances from Coachella were posted to YouTube with full-song videos shortly after the festival. - The uploads included 'NEVER ENOUGH' and 'LOOK OUT FOR ME' on the band's official channels. - The rapid posting shows festival sets are being packaged as immediate digital content for replay and discovery ( ).
Turnstile’s Coachella set was on YouTube as standalone song videos within days of the festival, not just as a livestream replay. (youtube.com) The official Coachella channel posted full-performance videos for “NEVER ENOUGH” and “LOOK OUT FOR ME” on April 22, 2026, after the band’s April 17 Weekend 2 set at the Outdoor Theatre in Indio. (youtube.com) Both clips use the same “Live at Coachella 2026” branding that appears across the festival’s post-event uploads, and both descriptions tell viewers to “re-live” the performance and subscribe for more sets. (youtube.com) Coachella had already built the pipeline for that turnaround. The festival’s official site said YouTube was carrying seven stages live across April 10-12 and April 17-19, giving organizers broadcast footage ready to be cut into individual songs. (coachella.com) That changes what a festival set becomes after the crowd leaves Indio. Instead of disappearing into fan-shot clips, songs can keep circulating as official videos tied to the artist name, the festival brand, and YouTube search. (youtube.com) Turnstile is a useful case because the Coachella uploads centered on songs from *NEVER ENOUGH*, the band’s current album cycle. The band’s official site is still anchored around that release, and the album campaign already includes official videos for the same songs. (turnstilehardcore.com) Setlist records show “NEVER ENOUGH” opened Turnstile’s April 10 Coachella set, while “LOOK OUT FOR ME” also appeared in the show’s main run. The official uploads turned those live moments into separate, searchable assets instead of leaving them buried inside a 55-minute set. (setlist.fm) The Coachella channel is doing the same with other artists, from Sabrina Carpenter to Justin Bieber to BINI, often in co-branded uploads with the performers. That gives festivals a release schedule after the festival itself, with clips arriving like singles in the days that follow. (youtube.com) For viewers, the result is simple: a festival song now has a second life almost immediately, and Turnstile’s Coachella performance was online before the weekend’s dust had really settled. (youtube.com)