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Music Fest 2022 Round One Lineup Artists Announced

Memphis in May’s Beale Street Music Festival (BSMF) headliners for 2022 will be Foo Fighters, Lil Wayne, The Smashing Pumpkins, and Three 6 Mafia.

On Monday, the region’s biggest music festival added several more musical acts in the “Round One” lineup announcement. DaBaby, Modest Mouse, former Fleetwood Mac guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, Moneybagg Yo, Toad the Wet Sprocket, Soccer Mommy, Sarkodie, Dirty Honey, The Glorious Sons, Trigger Hippy, Sue Foley, and Kenny Brown will perform at the three-day festival. More artists will be announced in February.

BSMF will return in 2022 after a two-year, pandemic-induced pause in 2020 and 2021. The 2022 edition of BSMF will take place at Liberty Park (MidSouth Fairgrounds) while construction is still underway at the redesigned Tom Lee Park. In 2023, the festival will return to Tom Lee Park, after construction is projected to be completed in April.

A limited number of three-day passes are on sale at a discounted price of $155. Prices will increase once these are sold out. VIP passes, offering a number of bonuses for music fans, are also available for $809. Tickets are available at memphisinmay.org/bsmftickets through Front Gate Tickets.

(Courtesy Memphis in May/Beale Street Music Festival)
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2022 Memphis in May Moved to Liberty Park

Beale Street Music Festival and the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest will call Liberty Park home next year.

Memphis in May’s (MIM) usual home, Tom Lee Park, is under construction for a $60-million makeover. The project is slated to wrap before the MIM events in 2023.

Music Fest is now planned for April 29th-May 1st. Barbecue Fest is planned for May 11th-14th.

Liberty Park was selected “because of its unique size, uninterrupted layout, existing infrastructure, and the public’s familiarity as a long-time entertainment location.” Barbecue Fest was moved to the site in 2011 during the flood on the Mississippi River.

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Beale Street Music Festival Canceled for 2021

MIM/Facebook

Beale Street Music Festival at Tom Lee Park

The 2021 Beale Street Music Festival is canceled “due to the continuing threat of COVID-19.”

Memphis in May (MIM) officials announced the move Friday afternoon. The World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest (WCBCC) will proceed as planned May 12th-15th with strict COVID-19 protocols in place. The Great American River Run is still set for Memorial Day weekend (May 29th), but will also have COVID-19 protocols in place. The Salute to Ghana is up in the air.

Officials said they canceled the music festival “due to the nature of the event, gathering tens of thousands of fans in front of stages and the event falling earlier in the calendar year. Large-scale music festivals and concerts remain deeply affected by the pandemic across the globe, Memphis is no exception, and it may not be safely possible until much later in the year. Ticket holders can defer their tickets to 2022 and lock-in prices from 2020 or request a full refund by visiting” the MIM website.

Barbecue “will be somewhat different and possibly smaller with capacity restrictions that may be in place at that time. Team applications are now open.”

The River Run will include a rolling start to space runners with staggered start times. Runner registration is now open.

A vote on the moves came in a special-called MIM meeting earlier this week.

“We are disappointed with the postponement of the Beale Street Music Festival to 2022, but we feel we cannot safely replicate the experience that our fans know and love with the potential COVID-19 restrictions,” said MIM president and CEO James Holt. “However, because of the nature of our other two Tom Lee Park events, we are confident that we can safely present the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest and the Great American River Run with adjustments for COVID.”

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Memphis in May Reports Record Financial Loss

Memphis In May international Festival

The cover of Memphis In May’s 2020 annual report shows an empty Tom Lee Park.

The Memphis in May International Festival (MIM) reported a record loss of revenue this year after the cancellation of the festival on COVID-19 concerns.

Festival leaders said the nonprofit organization lost around $1.8 million in 2020, making it the worst financial year in the festival’s 44 years. The loss comes after the festival recorded its best financial year last year on revenues of more than $12 million, according to the MIM’s annual report.

“The challenges presented by the pandemic represent the most difficult period our organization has ever faced, and the challenges are ongoing,” said James Holt, MIM’s president and CEO. “For the first time in 44 years, Memphis in May did not happen. Without a festival there is very little to no revenue for 2020 and consequentially Memphis in May has suffered a devastating $1.795 million financial loss. A loss of this scale has no precedent in the festival’s history. Historically, the organization’s largest loss to date was $595,000 in 1998.”
[pullquote-1-center] To adjust to the economic challenges, MIM took federal Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, cut costs, and furloughed most of the staff, according to MIM. Organization leaders are “working to see the new challenges and plan to present festival events again safely in May 2021” (schedule dates are below).

Festival events are the backbone of MIM’s revenue stream. Last year, those events brought in more than $8.4 million. This year, they brought in $137,748. Sponsorships are the next-biggest money makers for the festival. They made $461,645 this year, compared to more than $3 million last year.
  Memphis In May international Festival

Payroll was the still the largest expense item for MIM this year, even though it furloughed most of the staff, as leaders said. The management budget was cut only by $327,457 from 2019 to 2020. Management expenses were more than $1.9 million this year compared to $2.3 million last year.

It wasn’t immediately clear if MIM leaders took pay cuts in a year of record losses. According to its 2018 tax data, Holt made $203,500. Compensation for the organization’s top three executives totaled $470,074 that year.

The final tally of MIM’s 2020 finances show income of $731,351 and expenses of more than $2.5 million, putting the organization in the hole by roughly $1.8 million. It had assets of more than $3.8 million at the beginning of its fiscal year and ended the year with more than $2 million.

The financial blow comes as MIM had recorded four years of increasing revenues. The organization made $8.5 million in 2016, $9.7 million in 2017, $10.7 million in 2018, and more than $12 million in 2019.

Memphis In May international Festival

The effect of the festival’s cancellation went far beyond the MIM office, however.

“Memphis in May [is] a month-long economic engine that not only drives visitation and hotel stays, but the trickle-down economic effect is endless with local vendors who help execute the operations of the festival,” said Kevin Kane, president & CEO of Memphis Tourism.

2021 Memphis in May International Festival Dates

• Beale Street Music Festival: April 30th-May 2nd, 2021

• Salute to Ghana May 1st-31st, 2021

• World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest: May 12th-15th, 2021

• Great American River Run: May 29th, 2021

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Memphis in May Canceled for 2020

MIM/Facebook

Beale Street Music Festival at Tom Lee Park

Memphis in May (MIM) has been canceled this year. Officials announced the move Thursday morning.

Here’s the full statement from MIM:

Due to the continuing threat of COVID-19, in the interest of public safety and under advice from local health authorities, the planned 2020 Memphis in May events scheduled for September 30th through October 23rd are canceled.

The difficult decision was made based on information in consultation with local health officials who advised that it would not be reasonable to host festival events as planned in 2020.

Our board of directors met this morning and voted to cancel the 2020 events. The health and safety of our patrons and participants is always our top priority.

We are disappointed that we are unable to reset for the fall as planned and that Memphis in May now joins the growing list of outdoor festivals and events that have been forced to cancel.

“The annual Memphis in May is an important part of the cultural fabric of our city, but this pandemic has impacted large-scale public events worldwide and Memphis is no exception,” said James Holt, MIM president and CEO.

Ticket holders, teams, and registrants will be offered a full refund or can opt to use their tickets or entries for the 2021 festival events. Participants will receive an email early next week with specific information for their ticket or registration and can also visit memphisinmay.org for details.

We are pressing pause this year, for the first time in over four decades, but we plan to be back next May bigger and better than ever. Mark your calendars now for the 45th anniversary of Memphis in May.

2021 Memphis in May International Festival

Beale Street Music Festival: April 30-May 2, 2021

Salute to Ghana: May 1-31, 2021

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest: May 12-15, 2021

Great American River Run: May 29, 2021

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Final Plans Unveiled for New Tom Lee Park

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

Shade, small hills, paths through forests, a cafe with a porch, a covered space for recreation, a new entry plaza, a canopy walk, and more are in store for the now-flat, wide-open Tom Lee Park after a $60 million renovation planned to begin this fall.

The final concept for the new design of the park was unveiled Wednesday afternoon by the Mississippi River Parks Partnership (MRPP). The design is close to original concept plans drawn up in 2017 by Chicago-based design firm Studio Gang. That firm and New York-based landscape architecture firm SCAPE teamed up for the design’s final concept.

The total budget for the 30-acre park is $60 million. Half of the money — $30 million — will come from state, county, and city coffers. The remainder of the money will be raised privately. The Hyde Family Foundation has already given $10 million to the effort.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

MRPP said the plan positions Tom Lee Park as ”Memphis’ next civic jewel by reconnecting the city with the Mississippi River and creating a beautiful place for community life to flourish on the water’s edge.”

“For 100 years we’ve dreamed of a riverfront whose majesty was a match for the river it frames,” MRPP president and CEO Carol Coletta said in a statement. “Today, we finally have the opportunity to make the most of our position at the widest and wildest point on the Mississippi River.

“Memphians are going to be thrilled with what’s coming to their riverfront. This work is already winning national awards and it will produce a riverfront we’ll all be proud of for generations to come.”

The riverfront’s transformation began in 2016 as Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland organized the Riverfront Task Force. Since then, the Riverfront Development Corp. (RDC), long time caretakers of the riverfront, was replaced by the MRPP. That group moved quickly and has already completed some projects by the Mississippi River: River Garden, River Line, and Fourth Bluff Park. MRPP is now working to rehabilitate Cobblestone Landing.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

Tom Lee Park’s new design is not final. It will continue to develop before the firms produce construction documents. Groundbreaking on the new park is expected later this year.

The timeline on the project has been pushed back as officials with Memphis In May (MIM) have worked to ensure the new design will allow them to maintain crowd sizes at their signature events — Memphis In May International Barbecue Cooking Contest and Beale Street Music Festival.

MIM announced Tuesday it would hold the festival in the park as it is now next year. The announcement came the day before MRPP unveiled the new park designs.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

“When this spring’s events were delayed, Memphis in May asked (MRPP) for use of the park in the fall and we were happy to work with them to accommodate the revised dates for Memphis in May 2020,” Coletta said. ”A week ago, (MRPP) informed Memphis in May that we would alter our construction schedule to accommodate Memphis in May in Tom Lee Park proper in May 2021 — even as we will start construction on the project this fall.”

MRPP said the new design “meets or exceeds all design constraints generated through a mediation process with Memphis in May and will continue to develop in anticipation of groundbreaking within the year.”

The new design is also grounded in community engagement. The MRPP got input from more than 4,000 people during the concept phase with local high school students weighing in, site visits, speaking at public events, and a design display at Beale Street Landing.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

“Just like this region has been shaped by the Mississippi, our design for Tom Lee Park has been shaped by the input of the many Memphians who have graciously shared their knowledge, ideas, and dreams with us,” said Studio Gang founding principal Jeanne Gang. “This new park is meant to be a place where everyone can come to enjoy their favorite activities and to take in the natural wonders of the Mississippi. Embracing the local knowhow that characterized the working waterfront structures that operated here for so long, the architecture is designed to celebrate the material history of Memphis by making new use of salvaged wood and metals.”

Here’s a more complete list from the MRPP of some of the new design features to be included in the new Tom Lee Park:

The new park design is grounded and inspired by the dynamic ecological features of the Mississippi River. Architecture and landscape will work closely together to make the park an accessible, exciting, and welcoming place for all.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

Five new, highly efficient buildings, an open-air canopy, more than 250,000 square feet of open lawn space, and a series of immersive landscape environments spanning the park’s 30 acres will accommodate a diversity of activities and programming, from family gatherings to corporate events and major public festivals.

The design improves park access from Downtown with five new and improved park entry plazas — called “landings” — at key connecting streets including Beale, Vance, Huling, and Butler as well as an entry from Ashburn-Coppock Park at the south end.

ADA-accessible pathways at the north and south ends of the park democratize access while improved staircases and safer crossings of Riverside Drive lead to generous landing points in the park itself.

The nature and ecology of the Mississippi river bank will be showcased throughout the park with a restored soil system, enhanced topography to frame unobstructed river views, and native plantings to promote the longevity of the renewed landscape.

The new Tom Lee Park is comprised of four primary zones from North to South:

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

1. The Civic Gateway at the northern end of the park welcomes visitors from Beale Street and Vance Park with:

• Cutbank Bluff, a radically redefined bluff entrance and access point from Vance Park;

• A new entry plaza with shade trees and water feature;

• Landscape improvements at Beale Street Landing.

2. The Active Core features areas and structures for active and flexible use, including:

• An open, 20,000 square foot Civic Canopy that offers a covered space for recreation and events;

• Three highly efficient Point Bar Pavilions house a small café with porches overlooking the river, equipment storage, and public facilities;

• Open, expansive lawns featuring a signature Play Area with varying topography and unique playscapes;

• Centrally located River Groves provide shaded areas for people to sit and enjoy views of the river or activities below the Civic Canopy.

Mississippi River Parks Partnership

3. The Community Batture is a forested area situated on higher ground, providing a different perspective of the river within the park and places for families to gather and barbecue. New spaces include:

• Meditative Paths that weave through the forest to create intimate gathering spaces for people to connect with the landscape;

• A Peace Walk that creates a new landscape that integrates the Tom Lee Memorial into its surroundings

• A Civic Glade that offers a sunny area in the restored riparian forest for smaller-scale gatherings, activities, or events;

• Two Point Bar Pavilions to house visitor amenities and park utilities.

4. Habitat Terraces at the southern end of the park offers a more intimate experience of the natural landscape, and will include:

• A Canopy Walk that connects the park to the city by means of an elevated path through the biodiverse forest of Tom Lee Park’s southern zone;

• Immersive Platforms which offer park-goers a quiet acoustic environment to experience the sights and sounds of the Mississippi River.

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Memphis In May Returns to Tom Lee Park in 2021

MIM/Facebook

Beale Street Music Festival at Tom Lee Park

Ahead of Wednesday’s expected unveiling of the final redesign of Tom Lee Park, Memphis In May (MIM) officials announced Tuesday afternoon that all three of its major events will be held in the riverfront park next year (2021).

MIM officials said they “received the good news that any development work planned by the [Mississippi River Parks Partnership – MRPP] for Tom Lee Park next year will take place outside the park grounds until after the 2021 festival.”

“Thousands of our patrons from across the country and around the world make plans months in advance to travel to Memphis for our events, and now we can let them know we will be in our Tom Lee Park home again next year,” MIM president and CEO James Holt said in a statement. “We are excited to be able confirm that our events in 2021 will take place along the Mississippi riverfront in Downtown Memphis as they have for over four decades.”

MIM also published dates for the 2021 events:

Beale Street Music Festival — April 30th-May 2nd 2021

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest — May 12th-15th 2021

Great American River Run — May 29th 2021

Here are the 2020 dates for this year’s festival, also slated for Tom Lee Park. The events this year were postponed in March as COVID-19 arrived in Shelby County:

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest — September 30th-October 3rd 2020

Beale Street Music Festival — October 16th-18th 2020

Great American River Run — October 24th 2020

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Beale Street Music Festival Adjusting Lineup for October Event

MIM- Facebook

Beale Street Music Festival at Tom Lee Park

Hopefully, by now you’ve heard: October is the new May. As the city began this shelter-in-place era, Memphis in May and the Beale Street Music Festival (BSMF) announced the postponement of the perennial gathering until this fall. For those who might feel torn between BSMF and the Mempho Music Festival, traditionally held in October also, never fear: the latter event has been postponed until sometime next year.

While many prognosticate that even October is too soon to anticipate a return to normalcy, BSMF planners are hoping for the best and getting their ducks in a row. Given the current volatility of the touring circuit, it’s surprising that most of the acts scheduled for this spring have confirmed for the later date. The final lineup will be announced in June.

In a statement released last Friday, BSMF spokespeople wrote,

Eighty-five percent of the 60+ artists announced in early February will return except the following six artists due to scheduling conflicts in October: The Lumineers, The 1975, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Liam Gallagher, Louis the Child and Toad the Wet Sprocket. Festival fans who purchased tickets specifically to see these artists perform may obtain a full refund of their festival ticket purchase via Eventbrite through April 30, or they may hold their tickets for use on the fall dates.

Memphis in May is bigger than BSMF, of course, and other related events have been rescheduled as well:

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest: September 30 – October 3, 2020
Beale Street Music Festival: October 16-18, 2020
Great American River Run: rescheduled for the fall, date TBA
International Salute to Ghana: May 1-31, 2021

The Memphis in May board acknowledges that the future is uncertain, and continues to monitor new developments. “While millions are currently impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, we are hopeful that by this fall the situation will have improved enough to allow us to present the 2020 Beale Street Music Festival in a safe environment and provide music fans cause for celebration,” said James L. Holt, President and CEO of Memphis in May. “Our fall 2020 lineup features many of music’s biggest names representing a broad spectrum of musical genres and we look forward to announcing additional artists and a killer lineup with our June announcement of the ‘Memphis in October’ Beale Street Music Festival.”

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Memphis in May Announces New Fall Dates

Chris McCoy

Sunset over Tom Lee Park

Here’s a news release from Memphis in May announcing new fall dates for the festival:

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic sweeping the globe, and following the guidelines and recommendations of national and local health officials, Memphis in May International Festival announced last week that all festival events would be rescheduled.

Realizing the importance of these events to not only our patrons, but also the area economy in these unprecedented times, the Memphis in May board of directors made the decision after a two and a half hour online meeting yesterday to move forward with the festival events despite a projected $2 million loss for fiscal year 2020.

“For forty-four years, Memphis in May has been a revenue generator for the City of Memphis, particularly through the business it brings to our tourism industry’s key segments of lodging and hospitality,” said Memphis in May President and CEO James L. Holt. “With the difficult times those businesses are facing now, we felt it was more important than ever that we do our part to help revitalize the local economy. The Memphis in May events are a source of civic pride and unity for Memphis and the Mid-South, and this fall will certainly be the time for our community to come together.”

With that in mind, for one year only, Memphis in May will become Memphis in October!

The Rescheduled Festival Event Dates:

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest: September 30 – October 3, 2020

Beale Street Music Festival: October 16-18, 2020

Great American River Run: TBA (The Great American River Run will also be rescheduled for the fall with the date to be announced in the coming weeks.)

Should these new dates conflict with our patrons’ schedules, Memphis in May is among the few festivals nationally who will offer patrons the option to defer passes to the 2021 events, donate the cost of their passes to the non-profit Festival for a charitable tax deduction, or request a refund. Information for each of these options has been emailed to patrons and is posted to the event pages of www.memphisinmay.org.

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Memphis in May Halted by City ‘Authorities’

Chris McCoy

Sunset over Tom Lee Park

Memphis in May (MIM) officials announced Thursday afternoon that its 2020 festival events have been halted.

Officials hope to reschedule the events and plan to release more details on the matter on Friday.

Plans to stop the festival did not come from MIM leaders, apparently. Festival officials said they were halted as “we have been instructed by authorities with the City of Memphis that our 2020 festival events cannot be held as originally scheduled in May.”

Here’s MIM’s statement in full:

“After closely monitoring guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and local health officials, in response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we have been instructed by authorities with the City of Memphis that our 2020 festival events cannot be held as originally scheduled in May.

“With the health and safety of our patrons, performers, volunteers, teams, judges, runners, and staff as our top priorities, we are working on a fall postponement of the Beale Street Music Festival, International Salute to Ghana, the World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, and the Great American River Run.

“As we are in the process of rescheduling each of these events, we plan to announce details next Friday, March 27, with more specifics, including new event dates. Should ticket buyers, teams or runners find themselves unable to attend on the rescheduled dates, we will also provide the information for receiving a refund of their purchases or fees.

“As these are unprecedented times for all of us, Memphis in May encourages all of our fans, supporters and volunteers to stay safe and continue to follow the recommendations of health officials; from frequent hand washing and sanitizing, to working from home if possible and social distancing as much as your situation allows.

“Let’s pull together to help our neighbors, get through this stronger, and make the time we can enjoy on the other side of this crisis that much sweeter. Stay well!”