This summer, the fairways come with a soundtrack
If you’ve been with us for a while, you know this already: we’ve never wanted the European Disc Golf Festival to feel like “just another tournament”.
Yes, disc golf is the heart of it. The world’s best players, big moments, the kind of shots you talk about for weeks (or months). Calvin’s putt or Isaac’s ace, anyone? But from day one, we’ve aimed to elevate the whole experience into something you can bring your non disc golf friends to, your parents to, your kids to, and still have everyone leave happy.
We’ve tested and built that vibe year by year. We’ve had the Superstar Challenge with a concert. We’ve had entertainment areas, games, and places to hang out for all ages. Because a festival week should feel like a festival week, not a five-day waiting room between tee times.
And this year, we’re stepping it up a notch.
Three evenings of live music at the Song Festival Grounds
There are places that simply ask for music. Tallinn Song Festival Grounds is one of them. This venue is built for voices, for crowds, for moments that hit you right in the chest. It’s a national symbol, it has hosted massive gatherings, and the grounds can welcome up to 100,000 spectators.
So yes, we’re leaning into it. This summer, the evenings belong to live music, and we’re doing it three times:
June 16
We kick off the festival week with the Presidents Cup, Team Europe vs Team USA, and we’re making the night even better with Clicherik & Mäx. Big rivalry energy, then a proper party.
Friday, June 19
After a full day of European Open grind, when everyone’s legs are tired and the scorecards have been through it, we switch gears and let Traffic take over. The best kind of reset.
June 20
Moving Day done, drama delivered, and now it’s time to breathe. Daniel Levi steps on stage and the whole Song Festival Grounds turns into one big summer evening.
The venue with a story of its own
Here’s a little reminder of what kind of venue we’re playing in: in 1988, around 300,000 people gathered at the Song Festival Grounds to sing during the Singing Revolution. That’s a third of the country at the time.
Also, the iconic singing arch is not just pretty. It’s designed to carry the sound toward the crowd and offer shelter from sea wind and rain. So when we say the location calls for music, we mean it.
More than disc golf, on purpose
Disc golf will always be the headline. But the feeling you get from a festival week comes from everything around it too: the random games you end up playing, the kids running around, the food breaks, the “wait, let’s stay a bit longer” moments.
Adding three concert nights is our way of saying this: if you’re coming to Tallinn in June, we want you to have a full week worth remembering, even if you don’t know what a hyzer is.
See you on the fairways, and in front of the stage. ☀️

