Coachella
Migos perform onstage during the Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California, April 22, 2018. Getty Images for Coachella/Christopher Polk

Coachella, arguably America's biggest music festival, announced its entire lineup late Wednesday, and the headliners include Ariana Grande, Childish Gambino and Tame Impala. This year Coachella will be held over back-to-back weekends, April 12-14 and April 19-21, at the Empire Polo Club in Indio, California.

Solange, Kid Cudi, Aphex Twin, Janelle Monáe, the 1975, Pusha-T, Blood Orange, Diplo, Weezer, Kacey Musgraves, Rosalía, SOPHIE, Mac DeMarco, Idris Elba, Jon Hopkins, Kaytranada, Anderson .Paak, Juice WRLD, Playboi Carti, Let’s Eat Grandma, Bad Bunny, Sheck Wes, Gesaffelstein, J Balvin, 070 Shake, and more are also on this year’s lineup.

Festival passes will go on sale Friday at 2 p.m. EST [Tickets can be purchased here.]

The Coachella website indicates that general admission passes for the first weekend already are sold out, but weekend two general admission passes are available for $429. The passes allow “single wristband grants access to venue and camping. Valid all weekend. Includes day parking." General admission plus shuttle passes are available for both the weekends for $509. VIP passes are available for $999.

The twin weekends are followed by sister event the Stagecoach Country Music Festival on April 26-28.

On Wednesday, Grande took to her Twitter account to express her excitement about Coachella.

Before the lineup was announced, there were rumors for months that Justin Timberlake, Childish Gambino and Kanye West will be part of the headliners. According to reports, West decided against performing at this year’s festival due to the festival’s 40×60 foot stage setup.

“These 40×60 stages are so archaic. It’s the same type of stage on which Shakespeare’s works were performed hundreds of years ago,” a source told TMZ.

Last year, Beyonce, The Weeknd, Eminem, Jamiroquai, ODESZA and more headlined the festival. This is the 20th anniversary for Coachella after the festival was founded in 1999. In 2017, Coachella grossed more than $114 million, according to Billboard.