Remembering the Soul of The Farm
To understand the mistake, you first have to remember what made Bonnaroo an institution. In the early 2000s, it wasn't just another stop on the summer circuit; it was the circuit. Born from the jam band scene, its magic was in its joyful, genre-agnostic
chaos. You went to see your favorite jam legends, but you left with a new favorite indie rock band, a mind-blowing hip-hop set, and a story about seeing a comedy legend at 2 p.m. in a tent. The lineups were eclectic but cohesive, built on a foundation of musicianship and discovery. A bill featuring Neil Young, The Police, The Beastie Boys, or Radiohead didn't feel random; it felt curated. It was a four-day promise that if you trusted the bookers, your musical world would expand. That trust was Bonnaroo’s superpower. The festival's remote Tennessee location wasn't a bug; it was a feature that filtered out casuals and fostered a genuine, good-vibes-only community.
The Mistake of Chasing Ghosts
The critical mistake, which crescendoed in the years leading up to and immediately following the pandemic, was forgetting that identity. In an increasingly crowded and corporatized festival market, Bonnaroo began looking over its shoulder. It started chasing the ghosts of other festivals' success. Instead of setting the trend, it followed them. The booking philosophy seemed to shift from “Who is a perfect, weird fit for The Farm?” to “Who is popular on TikTok and can headline any of the other five mega-festivals this year?” Lineups began to feel disjointed, packed with boilerplate EDM acts and pop headliners that felt parachuted in, lacking any connection to the festival’s ethos. Take the 2022 lineup, for instance. While featuring legends like Stevie Nicks and Tool, it also included acts like Machine Gun Kelly and J. Cole, creating a bill that felt less like a curated experience and more like a Spotify algorithm’s attempt to please everyone. When you try to be Coachella, Lollapalooza, and EDC all at once, you risk becoming none of them. This dilution of the brand is the single most dangerous error a festival with a history as rich as Bonnaroo’s can make.
The High Price of Being Generic
The cost of this identity crisis is steep. First, it alienates the base. The die-hards who once planned their year around the pilgrimage to Manchester, Tennessee, began to ask a dangerous question: “Why?” Why drive hundreds of miles and camp in the sweltering heat for a lineup I could see at a more convenient city festival? Bonnaroo’s competitive advantage was never about convenience; it was about being an unparalleled destination. When the lineup feels generic, the destination loses its pull. This creates a vicious cycle: to compensate for a potentially waning legacy audience, promoters book more mainstream acts to attract a new, younger crowd. But that crowd is notoriously fickle, loyal to artists but not necessarily to festival brands. They’ll go where the hot headliner is, and if Bonnaroo doesn’t have them next year, they won’t be back. Meanwhile, the original base feels abandoned, eroding the long-term health and communal spirit of the event.
The Path Forward for 2026
The good news is that this is a correctable error. Recent editions have shown signs of a course correction. The 2024 lineup, featuring the triumphant return of Pretty Lights—an artist who embodies the intersection of jam, electronic, and soul that Bonnaroo champions—along with a legacy rock act like Red Hot Chili Peppers, felt like a deliberate nod to the festival’s roots. For 2026, organizers must double down on this strategy. The path forward isn't about booking specific bands; it's about recommitting to a booking philosophy. Embrace the weird. Prioritize unique legacy acts that rarely play the festival circuit. Build an undercard so deep and interesting that it encourages exploration, not just camping at the main stage. Book the next Goose or Khruangbin, not just the current pop star. Re-establish Bonnaroo as the tastemaker, the one festival where the lineup itself is the headliner. It needs to be the place where you’re guaranteed to discover something new and wonderful, a promise that has become increasingly rare in the modern music landscape.












