These Were The Most Played Songs At EDC Las Vegas 2026 - EDM news article
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These Were The Most Played Songs At EDC Las Vegas 2026

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These Were The Most Played Songs At EDC Las Vegas 2026 with Victory Lap taking the No. 1 spot EDC Las Vegas returned to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway from May 15 to 17 for its 30th anniversary edition, bringing more than 240 artists across three nights and several major stages, including Kinetic Field, Cosmic Meadow, Circuit Grounds, Neon Garden, Basspod, Wasteland, Quantum Valley, Stereo Bloom, and Bionic Jungle.

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These Were The Most Played Songs At EDC Las Vegas 2026 with Victory Lap taking the No. 1 spot EDC Las Vegas returned to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway from May 15...

These Were The Most Played Songs At EDC Las Vegas 2026 with Victory Lap taking the No. 1 spot EDC Las Vegas returned to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway from May 15 to 17 for its 30th anniversary edition, bringing more than 240 artists across three nights and several major stages, including Kinetic Field, Cosmic Meadow, Circuit Grounds, Neon Garden, Basspod, Wasteland, Quantum Valley, Stereo Bloom, and Bionic Jungle. The scale of the lineup means the most played songs at EDC Las Vegas 2026 were not limited to one corner of the festival, with the Top 10 pulling from mainstage dance records, bass tracks, hard dance edits, rap acapellas, remixes, and older club tracks that appeared across different DJ sets. Based on 1001Tracklists data, the ranking is led by Victory Lap from Fred again.., Skepta, and PlaqueBoyMax, while the full list shows how varied the weekend’s most repeated tracks were. 10. Kendrick Lamar ft. MC Eiht – m.A.A.d city Number of plays: 6 m.A.A.d city comes from Kendrick Lamar’s 2012 album good kid, m.A.A.d city, with MC Eiht appearing on the second half of the track. The song has stayed active in DJ sets because its opening vocal, beat switch, and aggressive delivery are easy to recognize even when only a short section is used. In electronic sets, DJs often use m.A.A.d city as an acapella or transition tool, placing Kendrick Lamar’s vocal over house, trap, bass, or dubstep sections. Its appearance in the Top 10 puts another rap record alongside Pop That, showing how familiar hip-hop vocals remained part of the wider track rotation at EDC Las Vegas 2026. 09. SVDDEN DEATH – Shallow Land Burial Number of plays: 6 Shallow Land Burial comes from SVDDEN DEATH’s 2022 project VOYD Vol. II, a release tied to the darker side of his dubstep catalog. The original track runs at 140 BPM and is listed as dubstep, which keeps it close to the sound SVDDEN DEATH is known for: low-end pressure, sharp rhythm changes, and a vocal phrase that DJs can place before a drop. The track also continued through later versions, including a 2025 VIP and a Wooli remix released in January 2026, which helped bring it back into festival tracklists before EDC Las Vegas 2026. In this Top 10, Shallow Land Burial gives the list a direct bass entry from one of dubstep’s most recognizable names. 08. Yeah Yeah Yeahs – Heads Will Roll (A-Trak Remix) Number of plays: 6 Heads Will Roll (A-Trak Remix) has remained one of the most recognizable indie dance remixes from the late 2000s. The original track came from Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ 2009 album It’s Blitz!, before A-Trak turned it into a club version that became a regular reference point across dance floors, festival sets, and later electronic edits. Its vocal hook is still instantly recognizable, which gives DJs a familiar moment to place over house, electro, bass, or festival-style arrangements without needing to play the original song in full. In this Top 10, Heads Will Roll (A-Trak Remix) adds another older record to the list, sitting alongside tracks from newer electronic artists, rap acapellas, and 90s dance history. 07. Da Hool – Meet Her At The Love Parade Number of plays: 7 Meet Her At The Love Parade is one of the oldest records in the Top 10, first released by Da Hool in 1997 and tied to the German techno and trance era around Love Parade in Berlin. The track’s main synth line has stayed recognizable for decades, which is why it still works when DJs bring it into modern festival sets, either through the original version, edits, or newer remixes. Its appearance here also shows how 90s dance records are still being used at large electronic festivals, not only as throwback moments but as tracks that can still fit into techno, trance, and mainstage sets. For a list that also includes newer releases and rap acapellas, Meet Her At The Love Parade gives the Top 10 a direct link back to classic European rave history. 06. French Montana ft. Rick Ross, Drake & Lil Wayne – Pop That (Acapella) Number of plays: 7 Pop That is a 2012 rap single from French Montana featuring Rick Ross, Drake, and Lil Wayne, and its acapella has stayed active in electronic sets for years because the vocal is instantly recognizable. Instead of appearing as a full rap track, the acapella is usually layered over house, bass, trap, or dubstep drops, which lets DJs use the vocal without changing the full direction of a set. The track has also appeared in major festival tracklists before, including Ultra Music Festival 2025, where it ranked among that weekend’s most-played tracks. In this EDC Top 10, Pop That (Acapella) adds the kind of rap vocal that DJs often use as a quick crowd-recognition moment inside electronic sets. 05. Anyma, Argy & Son Of Son – Voices In My Head Number of plays: 7 Voices In My Head came out in February 2025 as a collaboration between Anyma, Argy, and Son Of Son, during the wider rollout around Anyma’s The End of Genesys era. The track connects closely to Anyma’s visual-led live world, especially after

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