Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2024-04-14T23:47:21Z | Updated: 2024-04-14T23:47:21Z Son Of Late Sublime Singer Bradley Nowell Joins The Band At Coachella | HuffPost

Son Of Late Sublime Singer Bradley Nowell Joins The Band At Coachella

Jakob Nowell took the mic during a set that included classics like "Bad Fish, Santeria and What I Got."

Twenty-eight years after the death of singer Bradley Nowell, Sublime is getting a second life.

The beloved Southern California ska-punk band reunited at Coachella Valley Art and Music Festival in Indio, California, on Saturday, with their late singers son, Jakob Nowell, on the mic.

Joining original bassist Eric Wilson and drummer Bud Gaugh on the festivals main stage, Jakob perfectly echoed his dads sound as he played guitar and sang during a set that included classics like Bad Fish, Santeria and What I Got.

It was a soulful tribute to Bradley Nowell, who died of a drug overdose at age 28 in 1996, just two months before Sublimes self-titled album was released.

Nowells death put the band in stasis until 2009, when Wilson and Gaugh revived the act with singer and guitarist Rome Ramirez at the helm, calling themselves Sublime with Rome.

Ramirez announced he was leaving the group late last year, just one week after Wilson and Gaugh performed at a Los Angeles benefit concert with the younger Nowell.

Saturdays festival performance was the first time Sublime played to a public audience with Jakob.

The latest iteration of the reggae-influenced punk band plans to appear at music festivals and one-off gigs together, while Sublime with Rome will wrap a farewell tour this August.

Jakob, now 28 himself, was only 11 months old when his father died and called stepping into his dads shoes emotionally complicated in an interview ahead of their big Coachella debut.

I think stepping into this role has given me a lot of closure, he told People magazine . The story feels complete.

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Support HuffPost