Noah Cyrus Brings Family on Stage as Brother Braison Joins Her for Emotional Song Finale
- Noah Cyrus brought her family to the Stagecoach Festival stage on Friday, April 24, 2026, inviting both her father Billy Ray Cyrus and her brother Braison Cyrus to...
- She called her dad up to the stage and asked her brother, Braison Cyrus, to join them.
- Noah’s Stagecoach appearance followed a set that included performances of her lead single “I Saw The Mountains” from her second studio album, I Want My Loved Ones to...
Noah Cyrus brought her family to the Stagecoach Festival stage on Friday, April 24, 2026, inviting both her father Billy Ray Cyrus and her brother Braison Cyrus to perform with her during her set in Indio, California. The performance marked a rare onstage collaboration between the three members of the Cyrus family, highlighting a deeply personal moment in Noah’s evolving artistic journey.
The song came at the very end of Noah’s set. She called her dad up to the stage and asked her brother, Braison Cyrus, to join them. Braison, 31, had already appeared earlier in the set to perform a duet with Noah on “Don’t Put It All on Me,” a song he co-wrote that features Fleet Foxes. After that brother-sister performance, Noah surprised the audience by bringing out Billy Ray for a reflective rendition of “On Our Way Along,” a track co-written and co-produced by Braison.
Noah’s Stagecoach appearance followed a set that included performances of her lead single “I Saw The Mountains” from her second studio album, I Want My Loved Ones to Go with Me, released the previous year. She also performed the album’s third single “New Country” and her collaboration with Ella Langley, “Way of the World,” before shifting into the country-tinged “I Got So High That I Saw Jesus,” which she introduced with a playful temperature check to the crowd.
The family collaboration underscored the thematic and creative connections within the Cyrus household. Billy Ray Cyrus described “On Our Way Along” in earlier discussions as being inspired by a hill on his Tennessee property, saying the lyrics came from “realizing that my whole life unfolded on this hill, and the magic of this place here.” He added that the song represented a sense of coming full circle in his life, and career.
Braison Cyrus, who has been developing his own artistic output for years, played a central role in the performance not only as a performer but as a songwriter and producer. His involvement in co-writing and co-producing “On Our Way Along” marked a continued creative partnership with both his sister and father, reinforcing the family’s shared musical language.
Noah’s album I Want My Loved Ones to Go with Me was co-produced with longtime collaborators Mike Crossey and PJ Harding and features guest appearances from artists including Ella Langley, Blake Shelton, Fleet Foxes, and Bill Callahan. The record explores personal experiences and formative influences that have shaped her songwriting, blending introspective lyrics with genre-spanning arrangements.
The Stagecoach performance came nearly a year after the album’s release and served as a live extension of its themes—family, memory, and personal reckoning. By bringing her father and brother onstage to perform songs they helped create, Noah framed the moment not just as a familial gesture but as an artistic statement rooted in shared history and creative trust.
As of the performance date, no official announcements have been made regarding future collaborative projects between Noah, Billy Ray, and Braison Cyrus. However, the Stagecoach appearance stands as a documented instance of their creative alignment, captured in real time before a festival audience and later shared through official recordings and media coverage.
