The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lineup announced for Music Midtown 2017

This year’s edition is set for Sept. 16-17 in Piedmont Park.

- By Melissa Ruggieri mruggieri@ajc.com

Bruno Mars, Future, Mumford & Sons and Blink-182 top the list of nearly three dozen acts, which will inhabit Piedmont Park Sept. 16-17.

A global pop superstar, an Atlanta rap luminary, a decorated British folk-rock collective and a ‘90s-era pop-punk favorite will headline Music Midtown 2017.

The quartet of Bruno Mars, Future, Mumford & Sons and Blink-182 top the lineup of nearly three dozen acts, which will inhabit Piedmont Park Sept. 16-17.

Joining the roster for Atlanta’s biggest music festival: Wiz Khalifa; Weezer; Big Sean; HAIM; Young the Giant; Bastille; Two Door Cinema Club; Tove Lo; Russ; Milky Chance; Collective Soul; Rag’n’Bone Man; Oh Wonder; the Strumbella­s; Judah & the Lion; the Naked and Famous; Zara Larsson; Dua Lipa; BROODS; PVRIS; Vintage Trouble; Lizzo; Joywave; Bibi Bourelly; COIN; AJR; Hiss Golden Messenger; Circa Waves; Daye Jack; and Midnight Larks.

In keeping with last year’s more youthful bent — which featured headliners Twenty One Pilots and Deadmau5 — the all-ages Music Midtown is again being directed primarily at an 18-34 demographi­c and will retain its four-stage setup.

Peter Conlon, president of Live Nation Atlanta, which produces Music Midtown, said in an interview at his Buckhead office last week that the tweak in 2016 proved successful. According to Billboard, nearly 130,000 people attended last year’s two-day event, with gross ticket sales of more than $8.6 million.

“It’s not that the adults won’t come — they just don’t necessaril­y want to be around a lot of young people,” Conlon said. “You can’t mix genres. We tried to do that, but we know our market.”

Conlon estimates that the 2017 installmen­t of the festival, which returned in 2011 after a five-year hiatus, will cost between $9 million and $10 million.

“This is the most we’ve ever spent on talent,” he said of the robust lineup.

Tickets for Music Midtown will go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday in the forms of two-day general admission ($135), two-day VIP ($600) and two-day Super VIP ($1,750). Visit www.musicmidto­wn.com to purchase and for a breakdown of what each ticket level includes. As in past years, prices will increase

closer to the event.

A pre-sale will take place for those who sign up for the Music Midtown E-List (at www.musicmidto­wn.com/ connect/) through 10 p.m. Thursday.

While big names attract major crowds — a study from the Research Center in Nashville estimated that the 2014 installmen­t of Music Midtown generated about $50 million for the Atlanta-area economy — there is always an effort to include Atlanta artists.

Future, who recently broke numerous chart records and in May packed Lakewood Amphitheat­re, is a source of hometown pride, while hip-hop artist Daye Jack and eclectic rockers Midnight Larks will be exposed to major crowds.

Atlanta natives Collective Soul played the secondever Music Midtown in 1995 and again in 2000, but this year’s appearance will mark their debut since the festival landed at Piedmont Park.

Band frontman Ed Roland said being asked to play is a homecoming, and also presents a sense of accomplish­ment.

“It’s an honor, man,” he said last week from the West Coast, where Collective Soul was touring. “If you think about it, growing up in Atlanta and still being asked to play (Music Midtown) almost 23 years later? We don’t take that for granted. It’s always nice to come back and, for lack of a better term, kind of show off our body of work. After 23 years, we’re releasing our 10th record (‘Blood,’ in late summer or early fall). We feel like we won the lottery.”

Conlon, meanwhile, invoked the memory of his longtime business partner and friend, the deceased Alex Cooley, when asked what he’s looking forward to at Music Midtown 2017.

“I think Bruno will be fun,” he said. “But I like to watch the audience. Alex loved watching the audience and I learned that from him. I like to see the makeup of it — it shows you who is coming and having a good time.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO / INVISION /AP, FILE KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES FOR HANGOUT MUSIC FESTIVAL RICHARD GRAULICH / THE PALM BEACH POST ?? ABOVE: Bruno Mars is shown performing at the 2016 Jingle Ball at Staples Center in Los Angeles. TOP RIGHT: Musician Marcus Mumford of the band Mumford & Sons performs during the 2017 Hangout Music Festival on May 21 in Gulf Shores, Ala.. RIGHT:...
CHRIS PIZZELLO / INVISION /AP, FILE KEVIN WINTER/GETTY IMAGES FOR HANGOUT MUSIC FESTIVAL RICHARD GRAULICH / THE PALM BEACH POST ABOVE: Bruno Mars is shown performing at the 2016 Jingle Ball at Staples Center in Los Angeles. TOP RIGHT: Musician Marcus Mumford of the band Mumford & Sons performs during the 2017 Hangout Music Festival on May 21 in Gulf Shores, Ala.. RIGHT:...
 ??  ??
 ?? DAVID BARNES / DAVID. BARNES@AJC. COM ?? Atlanta natives Collective Soul, who performed at the Peach Drop in Atlanta on Dec. 31, will be back home for this year’s Music Midtown.
DAVID BARNES / DAVID. BARNES@AJC. COM Atlanta natives Collective Soul, who performed at the Peach Drop in Atlanta on Dec. 31, will be back home for this year’s Music Midtown.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS / EYE OF RAMSESS MEDIA ?? Atlanta rapper Future is one of the big names topping the lineup of nearly three dozen acts at Music Midtown, which will be held Sept. 1617 at Piedmont Park.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY AKILI-CASUNDRIA RAMSESS / EYE OF RAMSESS MEDIA Atlanta rapper Future is one of the big names topping the lineup of nearly three dozen acts at Music Midtown, which will be held Sept. 1617 at Piedmont Park.

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