Chattanooga Times Free Press

Music festival lineups to be announced

Bonnaroo, Riverbend return after delays from COVID, weather

- BY BARRY COURTER STAFF WRITER

Some details for two of the largest festivals in the Chattanoog­a area will be announced in the next two weeks as the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival will reveal its 2022 lineup Tuesday and the Riverbend Festival will announce its full lineup Jan. 20.

Both festivals, like many around the nation, canceled their events in 2020 and 2021 because of either COVIDrelat­ed fears, scheduling conflicts or weather. Bonnaroo, for example, canceled its September 2021 event a day before fans were to arrive because of the remnants of Hurricane Ida, which moved from Louisiana to the East Coast.

Riverbend is scheduled to take place on Riverfront Parkway on June 3-5, and Bonnaroo is scheduled to unfold on The Bonnaroo Farm in Manchester, Tennessee, on June 16-19. Tickets are on sale for Riverbend at riverbendf­estial.com for $95 or at wgow.com for $85 through the end of January.

VIP tickets will be $295 and will include preferred seating and bars near the two main stages, access to VIP areas on the pier and a new VIP section on the green across Riverfront Parkway from the Tennessee Aquarium, as well as access to permanent bathroom facilities.

Riverbend will be capped at 15,000 attendees for the first time in its more than 40-year history. It will take place in the late afternoon and evening, with music ending around 11 p.m. Bonnaroo is a camping festival that draws ticket-buyers to a nearly 700-acre farm about 70 miles from Chattanoog­a.

Bonnaroo tickets go on sale Thursday at bonnaroo.com starting at $299 for general admission. The festival offers several ticket tiers, such as VIP for $1,250 and Platinum for $3,500. These come with a variety of amenities, such as private baths and showers, pre-made meals and exclusive entry points into Centeroo, the festival’s main area and accommodat­ions.

In past years, Riverbend has spread its lineup announceme­nts over several days and weeks. The change is just one of many, according to Robin Derryberry of Derryberry Public Relations.

“This is a new Riverbend,” she said in a telephone interview.

According to Friends of the Festival Executive Director Mickey McCamish, Riverbend has made several significan­t changes since its last event in 2019. Most significan­t is reducing the number days from eight to three, the number of acts from about 100 to 30, and the jettisonin­g of the iconic barge, which was the event’s main stage.

Riverbend 2022 will feature two main stages with alternatin­g nationally touring acts and a third smaller stage featuring local and regional acts.

Friends of the Festival also is operating with a reduced staff, opting to outsource roles such as marketing, staging and lighting.

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