Fans are furious over the latest changes announced for The Voice Season 29.

‘The Voice’ Season 29 shakeup: No live shows, an all-star twist, and 3 ‘absolute maniacs’ in the red chairs

Kelly Clarkson in "The Blind Auditions Premiere" on Season 29 of 'The Voice'

Kelly Clarkson in “The Blind Auditions Premiere” on Season 29 of ‘The Voice’
Trae Patton/NBC

Season 29 of The Voice is shaking things up in a major way — and it’s a whole new game.

The singing competition returns Feb. 23 with a two-hour premiere on NBC. After that, new two-hour episodes air Mondays at 9/8c and stream on Peacock the next day — and yes, that means no more Tuesday episodes.

This spring’s cycle is officially branded The Voice: Battle of Champions, and that theme isn’t just marketing — it’s built into the format.

Gold Derby got the inside scoop from showrunner Audrey Morrissey, who walked us through the biggest changes: a three-coach panel, new competitive incentives in the Blinds, an in-season all-star showdown and — most notably — no traditional live shows.

Here’s what to expect.

3 coaches – and here’s why

'The Voice' Season 29: (l-r) Adam Levine, Kelly Clarkson, John Legend ‘The Voice’ Season 29: (l-r) Adam Levine, Kelly Clarkson, John Legend Art Streiber/NBC
For the first time in franchise history, the red chairs will hold just three coaches.

Adam LevineKelly Clarkson, and John Legend are back — and the “Battle of Champions” title nods to the fact that all three have won the show before.

But the move from four coaches to three wasn’t about theme. It was about time.

NBC is bringing the NBA back to its primetime lineup, which cuts into The Voice’s hours. With fewer episodes to work with, keeping four coaches would have meant much smaller teams.

“The hours this season are considerably less,” Morrissey explains. If they’d kept four coaches, the teams would have been too small. “It felt a little ridiculous.”

 

Instead, they opted for three teams of 10 — and according to Morrissey, it doesn’t feel like anything’s missing. “You don’t miss four coaches at all,” she says.

The Blinds are more competitive than ever

"The Blind Auditions Premiere" Pictured: (l-r) John Legend, Kelly Clarkson, Adam Levine“The Blind Auditions Premiere”: (l-r) John Legend, Kelly Clarkson, Adam Levine Trae Patton/NBC
The “Battle of Champions” theme really kicks in during the Blind Auditions with an all-new twist called the Triple Turn Competition.

Here’s how it works: when all three coaches turn their chairs for the same artist, the power shifts to the singer to decide which team they want to join. By the end of the Blind Auditions, the coach who has won the most of those coveted three-chair turns earns a special advantage heading into the Battles — the Super Steal.

Each coach gets one steal in the Battle round, but the Triple Turn winner has the Super Steal — a one-time power that overrides any other coach’s attempt to steal. If two coaches try to grab the same eliminated singer, the Super Steal automatically wins.

In other words, win the most three-chair Blind auditions and you guarantee yourself any steal you want in the Battles. And yes, that changed the energy in the room fast.

“These people are maniacs. They’re absolute maniacs,” Morrissey says of Adam, Kelly, and John once that prize was on the line. “It is so funny. These are grown people — they all have kids — but they’re so competitive.”

Knockouts get tighter

After the Battles, things narrow quickly. There are no steals in the Knockout round this season — once a coach lets you go, that’s it.

“We can’t keep having all these second chances this season, Morrissey says. “We’ve got to narrow the field.”

By the time the Playoffs arrive, the competition is down to a Top 9 — three artists per coach — before narrowing to a Top 4 for the finale.

The All-Star twist

Midseason, the “Battle of Champions” theme expands with an In-Season All-Star Competition.

Each coach brings back two former contestants for head-to-head sing-offs on behalf of their original team. The coach with the most all-star wins is guaranteed a second finalist in the finale — another shot at victory.

Morrissey wouldn’t confirm the official lineup just yet, but she did reveal a key detail: nearly all of the returning all-stars are former winners. Adam and Kelly each brought back two champions, while John — who has had just one winner — paired that winner with a non-winning standout from his team.

That narrows the possibilities considerably. For Team Adam, that could mean Javier ColonTessanne Chin, or Jordan Smith. For Team Kelly, potential returning champs include Brynn CartelliChevel ShepherdJake Hoot, or Girl Named Tom. And for Team Legend, it’s Maelyn Jarmon alongside a yet-to-be-revealed former contestant.

The returning artists aren’t competing for the Season 29 title themselves. They’re competing for their coach. But yes, the idea of going even bigger has come up.

“We have thought about it and we continue to think about it,” Morrissey says of a full-blown all-stars season. “I think this was one step towards that.”

CeeLo returns

Adam Levine and CeeLo Green on Season 1 of 'The Voice' in 2011Adam Levine and CeeLo Green on Season 1 of ‘The Voice’ in 2011Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images
To judge the all-star sing-offs, the show brought back original coach CeeLo Green. “It’s all on him,” Morrissey says. And in true CeeLo fashion, he planned his own grand entrance.

“Within a minute after we asked him to come back he had texted me a clip from a movie that he had envisioned for his return… and we replicated it for the show. It’s epic,” she says.

No live shows — and a new way to vote

The biggest change? There are no traditional live shows this season.

Instead of coast-to-coast voting from home, the winner will be decided by an in-studio voting block made up of super fans and former contestants. Votes are cast in real time after performances, and eliminations are revealed on the spot. Audience members were even issued iPads to lock in their picks.

“We love live shows,” Morrissey says. “But if there was to be a season that didn’t have it, this is a super fun season to try something different.”

As for what’s next, Morrissey says The Voice is always evolving. Season 29 may be branded “Battle of Champions,” but it’s also a reminder that the format itself is never standing still.
'The Voice': John Legend, Carson Daly, Kelly Clarkson, Adam Levine‘The Voice’: John Legend, Carson Daly, Kelly Clarkson, Adam LevineTrae Patton/NBC

Voice coaches crash Baby Grand karaoke night

To help kick off the “Battle of Champions” season, Kelly and John surprised fans at Baby Grand in New York for an impromptu karaoke night — along with comedian and influencer Druski, who’s taking on a correspondent-style role this season.

Carson Daly and showrunner Audrey Morrissey were also on hand, watching the chaos unfold from upstairs VIP.