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Rolling Loud Miami just announced its lineup for this year. Here are the headliners

People are seen at Rolling Loud at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida on Sunday, July 24, 2022.
People are seen at Rolling Loud at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida on Sunday, July 24, 2022. swalsh@miamiherald.com

After festivals in California and Thailand, Rolling Loud will be back in Miami in July.

Rolling Loud Miami announced its 2023 lineup Wednesday morning, and it includes Playboi Carti, Travis Scott and A$AP Rocky as headliners.

The three-day festival will be July 21-23 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens.

Other big names on the bill include 21 Savage, Glorilla and Lil Durk, who famously brought out Kanye West at Miami’s 2022 show.

As always, South Florida is heavily represented. Broward County’s own Kodak Black, Ski Mask the Slump God and Trapland Pat will grace the stage, as will Palm Beach County rapper $NOT and Miami-Dade MCs like City Girls, Robb Bank$ and Pouya.

Since its debut in 2015, Rolling Loud has grown into the world’s largest hip-hop festival. Co-founders Tariq Cherif and Matt Zingler have taken what was once a showcase in a warehouse in Wynwood and made it into a must-see international event with iterations in Toronto, New York, Rotterdam, Portugal and Germany.

“We see ourselves as hip-hop Disney,” Cherif told the Miami Herald in 2021. “We’re a world you can come experience and we’ve also branched out into content, lifestyle, merch and everything.”

If you go

Tickets go on sale Friday, April 14 at 10 a.m.

For more information, go to RollingLoud.com/MiaTix.

This story was originally published April 12, 2023 at 11:25 AM.

C. Isaiah Smalls II
Miami Herald
C. Isaiah Smalls II is a sports and culture writer who covers the Miami Dolphins. In his previous capacity at the Miami Herald, he was the race and culture reporter who created The 44 Percent, a newsletter dedicated to the Black men who voted to incorporate the city of Miami. A graduate of both Morehouse College and Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, Smalls previously worked for ESPN’s Andscape.
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