Big Pop Show | Friday, March 20โ€“Monday, March 23, $15โ€“$40 | Various venues in Carrboro, Chapel Hill, and Durham

A music festival can be a beautiful thing. But it can also be a machine that launders vast quantities of money through young talent into old pockets.

The Big Pop Showโ€”coming to the Catโ€™s Cradle Back Room, the ArtsCenter, Duke Coffeehouse, and the Pinhook for four days, starting March 20โ€”dispenses with the power differential. Instead of commercial sponsors, support comes from Duke Coffeehouse and Dukeโ€™s and UNCโ€™s student radio stations, WXDU and WXYC, where the five organizers have all been involved in various ways.

Three of themโ€”Lilian Fan, Charlotte Kane, and Annie Vedderโ€”live in the Triangle. The other two, Nathan McMurray and Eli Schmitt, are in Chicago. Theyโ€™re all in their early 20s, the same age as the dozens of bands theyโ€™re convening from around the South, the Midwest, and beyond.

The festival is volunteer-run; all the proceeds go to the bands. Rather than navigating booking agencies, they reached out directly to artists they know or admire. Thereโ€™s no hierarchy, no fight for type size on a flyer, just โ€œa small, beautiful subsection of DIY music culture today,โ€ according to Schmitt, whose psych-rock band TV Buddha will also perform.

Though guitars will be plentiful, Big Pop offers an array of genres. The common thread is a drive for independence in community, to create something โ€œlocal, tangible and real,โ€ said Nathan McMurray, a Durham native, whose new band Sects sounds like early Modest Mouse.

A performance at 2025's Big Pop Show. Photo by Braeden Long.
A performance at 2025’s Big Pop Show. Photo by Braeden Long.

Big Pop debuted last year with a one-day event at Duke Coffeehouse, emerging organically from the friendships of its organizers.

โ€œAnnie and I were running a local music zine together,โ€ said Lilian Fan. โ€œCharlotte and I play in a band [Little Chair], and we met Eli when they invited us to play a show in Chicago.โ€

Expanding from one day to four, this year, will give visitors an authentic taste of what itโ€™s like to live here and love music, even if that means always driving up and down 15-501.

With the bigger footprint, accessibility remains a priority. Though last yearโ€™s small-scale fest was free, this much more ambitious outing costs $15 a night or $40 for all four daysโ€”still a relative bargain.

Schmitt is excited about Paper Jam, a sugar-sweet Texas indie-pop band. โ€œIโ€™ve known them for a while on the internet,โ€ Schmitt says, โ€œand Iโ€™m finally going to get to see it.โ€
Vedder, a musician who works at All Day Records, is stoked for Orlando band Warm Frames, โ€œa bunch of hardcore musicians who really love pop music.โ€ Kane and McMurray both highlighted April Magazine, a gorgeous dreampop band from San Francisco, because itโ€™s exciting to have someone coming from so far away.

And Fan picked Pipe, the old-school Chapel Hill punk-rock ringers: โ€œEveryone in the band is a local legend I look up to, and they rock.โ€

For a festival run by and for Gen Z, the Gen X lineage in Big Pop is strong. Many things about it seem more 1996 than 2026: the college-radio roots, the zine-trading day, the screening of Chapel Hill filmmakers Michael Galinsky and Suki Hawleyโ€™s Half-Cocked, a โ€™90s indie slice of life with Polvo on the soundtrack. The festivalโ€™s website is a Web 1.0 throwback, all static links stuck in dancing tiles.

Even the name Big Pop Show echoes a little-remembered but pivotal Chapel Hill indie festival from 1992, the Big Record Stardom Convention. The organizers were unaware of it, but drew significant inspiration from the International Pop Underground Convention, a similar event in Olympia, Washington. Then as now, indie kids love those mock-grandiose names.

Thereโ€™s something really human and real about college radio. Because itโ€™s a space that was built up by a past generation who were doing what weโ€™re doing, thereโ€™s a large amount of intergenerational care.โ€

Nathan McMurray, co-organizer, big pop show

Above all, they were inspired by the living roots of DIY music in college radio and at Duke Coffeehouse.ย 

โ€œThey have been the most endlessly supportive group of an older generation,โ€ said Vedder. โ€œAt least in the Triangle, college radio is the crux of the local community, and I think it can be a resistant tool within universities, or at least thatโ€™s how a lot of my friends have approached it.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s something really human and real about college radio,โ€ McMurray added. โ€œBecause itโ€™s a space that was built up by a past generation who were doing what weโ€™re doing, thereโ€™s a large amount of intergenerational care.โ€

Big Pop is a chance to see some great up-and-coming bands, but itโ€™s also great to see history repeating itself in a good wayโ€”with young people grounded in a tradition, reinterrogating it for their times, finding the same core principles: DIY, RIYL, and IRL.

โ€œMy biggest dream for it is that the people who come see that this kind of thing is possible,โ€ Schmitt says. โ€œYou donโ€™t need to wait for adults to do it for you, which I think is a really inspirational thing.โ€ย 

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