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Hootie and the Blowfish Make Their Stagecoach Debut With Deep-Fried Jams and Public Enemy

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Hootie and the Blowfish Make Their Stagecoach Debut With Deep-Fried Jams and Public Enemy

By Charisma Madarang

Charisma Madarang

Contact Charisma Madarang on X Contact Charisma Madarang by Email View all posts by Charisma Madarang April 27, 2026 Hootie and the Blowfish's Stagecoach Set Was a Viiiiibe Darius Rucker of Hootie and the Blowfish and Chuck D and Flavor Flav of Public Enemy perform at Stagecoach on April 26, 2026 in Indio, CA. Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Stagecoach

On Sunday evening, Hootie and the Blowfish made their Stagecoach debut under the bright desert lights. The crowd was already swaying with nostalgia before frontman Darius Rucker took the mic and kicked off the band’s set with their bittersweet 1994 number, “Hannah Jane.”

The offering from their colossal debut albumCracked Rear View, was one of several deep-fried jams the band played, along with “Let Her Cry,” “Hold My Hand,” and “Time.” The set reached a glorious peak when Hootie and the Blowfish got to “Only Wanna Be With You,” which they tagged with a bit of Kool and the Gang’s “Get Down on It,” setting off dancers throughout the massive crowd. The band also performed Old Crow Medicine Show’s “Wagon Wheel” — which was a smash solo hit for Rucker — and Led Zeppelin’s “Hey, Hey, What Can I Do.”

Then in a moment that echoed Rucker’s love for music that spans Seventies soul to Nineties hip-hop, the frontman brought out Chuck D and Flavor Flav of Public Enemy. The duo delivered “He Got Game,” which revisits Buffalo Springfield’s 1966 protest classic “For What It’s Worth,” and the revolutionary anthem “Fight The Power.” Rucker looked right at home with Chuck D and Flav, and sent the thousands gathered for their set jumping and jamming.

After a massively successful run with Hootie and the Blowfish, Rucker became one of the top stars in country music as a solo artist. And while it was the band’s first time at Stagecoach this weekend, Rucker has previously performed at the desert fest three times. “I think country music today and a lot of the ’90s alt-rock definitely have a kinship,” Rucker recently told The New York Times.

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