Just days after Tomorrowland revealed its official 2026 livestream plans, Apple Music has announced it will broadcast live audio from Tomorrowland Belgium Weekend 1 through Apple Music Club, giving fans around the world another way to experience one of dance music’s biggest festivals—no Apple Music subscription required.
Beginning July 17-19, listeners will be able to tune into live sets from six stages across Tomorrowland’s iconic festival grounds in Boom, Belgium, as Apple Music continues expanding its new Club Live broadcast series.
Six Stages, Three Days Of Live Music
Streaming daily beginning at 3:00 PM CET, Apple Music Club will broadcast performances from six Tomorrowland stages, featuring some of electronic music’s biggest names. For fans unable to watch Tomorrowland’s official video livestream, Apple Music’s audio broadcast offers another way to follow the festival in real time.
Each day will also be rebroadcast beginning at 3:00 AM CET, allowing listeners in different time zones another opportunity to catch the performances.


Spatial Audio Replays Available After The Festival
While the live broadcasts will be free to everyone through Apple Music Club, Apple Music subscribers will receive an additional benefit once the festival concludes. Select DJ sets will become available on demand in Spatial Audio, allowing listeners to revisit performances with immersive Dolby Atmos sound.
Apple Music already hosts previous Tomorrowland performances on its dedicated Tomorrowland curator page, giving fans access to a growing library of festival sets beyond the live weekend.
Apple Music Continues Investing In Dance Music
Tomorrowland becomes the latest addition to Club Live, Apple’s new live electronic music broadcast initiative. The series debuted earlier this year with EDC Las Vegas and is already scheduled to feature The Warehouse Project later this year, demonstrating Apple’s growing commitment to bringing major electronic music events directly to listeners around the world.
Behind the scenes, Club Live combines the technology powering Apple Music DJ Mixes with Shazam’s music identification system, allowing Apple to properly identify tracks played during live sets while ensuring rights holders are compensated. The technology creates a scalable model for licensed DJ broadcasts—something that has historically been difficult due to the complexity of clearing hundreds of tracks played during live performances.
Another Way To Experience Tomorrowland
Earlier this week, Tomorrowland confirmed fans will once again be able to watch the festival through its official livestream platforms, including Tomorrowland.com, the Tomorrowland App, and One World Radio. Apple Music’s new partnership expands those viewing and listening options even further, giving fans another free way to experience Weekend 1 from virtually anywhere in the world.
As Tomorrowland continues to push the boundaries of both live production and digital experiences, partnerships like this are making one of electronic music’s biggest festivals more accessible than ever before.
