The Roots Picnic Goes Global, But Philly Remains The Core
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – MAY 31: Black Thought performs during the 2026 Roots Picnic on May 31, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images)
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The Roots Picnic started off as an initiative to curate a festival space for Black audiences. Now, as it prepares for its first international edition in London this August, Black Thought reflects on its evolution into a global cultural brand.
“This year felt like the Roots Picnic had arrived,” said Black Thought, led MC of The Roots, an MC that is slated as one of the greatest rappers in hip-hop history, a performance that contributes to the signature sound of the Philly collective.
The Origins Of The Roots Picnic
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – MAY 31: Erykah Badu performs during the 2026 Roots Picnic on May 31, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images)
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According to Black Thought, The Roots Picnic began as The Roots’ own cultural counterpart to Philadelphia’s annual Welcome America Festival, giving the native Philly band a platform to celebrate their community and build momentum before performing for hundreds of thousands of people during the city’s Fourth of July festivities.
Before co-headlining Denmark’s Roskilde Festival with Bruce Springsteen, The Roots were performing in tents beyond the festival’s main perimeter. Climbing from those early slots to the main stage helped shape the patience, persistence, and long-term vision that would later fuel the growth of the Roots Picnic.
“We wanted something like that of our own in Philadelphia,” said Black Thought. “We understood that there was no overnight way, no instant way, to build that.”
Their access to the biggest stages in music as not only a Black music act, but a hip-hop act, afforded them insight into the state of inclusivity in those spaces. They made a swift observation: there were no Black-centered festivals.
“Other festivals weren’t Black,” Black Thought said during our interview, which took place days after the 2026 Roots Picnic headlined by Jay-Z and Erykah Badu. “I didn’t feel represented in those spaces. Over our long career, The Roots have been in every space. So we wanted to create something of our own. The Roots Picnic was about creating a space of our own.”
The Roots hold a diverse musical family tree, with a core hip-hop foundation and a defining presence in neo-soul. The band made substantial contributions to the work of many of the genre’s pioneering artists, served as a backing band for several soul and R&B acts, and drew heavily from jazz and funk influences.
The Architects Behind The Roots Picnic
Questlove (L) and Black Thought of The Roots perform during Smokin’ Grooves at Shoreline Amphitheatre on July 26, 1997 in Mountain View, California. (Photo by Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images)
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The festival’s lineup has historically functioned as what the “100% Dundee” MC described as a “melting pot,” featuring a mashup of contemporary Black genres—hip-hop, neo-soul, R&B, soul, rock, and even Afrobeats. The approach, Black Thought admits, is indeed intentional and aimed at cultivating an organic expansion of the festival’s appeal.
“The Roots Picnic was never intended to be a hip-hop festival,” said Black Thought. “Though we’ve always incorporated lots of elements that cater to and appeal to a hip-hop aesthetic, the Picnic has always been about something more broad.”
“We were always mindful about diversity in the representation of genre, influence, and aesthetic. We’ve always wanted the Picnic to serve as a sort of melting pot.”
The initial idea for this Black mosaic of a festival came from four figures: the late Rich Nichols, longtime manager of The Roots and, as Black Thought puts it, the “brains of this operation”; Shawn Gee, current president of Live Nation Urban; Questlove; and Black Thought.
Philly Is The Roots Picnic Superpower
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA — MAY 30: Jay-Z performs alongside Beanie Sigel and Freeway during a State Property reunion at the 2026 Roots Picnic at Belmont Plateau in Philadelphia.
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One thing they also kept in mind, or rather prioritized, while curating the festival was ensuring it remained Philly-centric. Jill Scott, Musiq Soulchild, Bilal, Meek Mill, Jazmine Sullivan, and Lil Uzi Vert are all Philadelphia natives who have headlined the Picnic, underscoring The Roots’ intention to curate a multigenre, multigenerational contemporary Black music experience.
DJ Jazzy Jeff, a history-making pioneer of Philly hip-hop, is a repeat performer at the Picnic, having once again brought his DJ Jazzy Jeff’s Magnificent Block Party to the festival this year. The set featured a medley of city classics and appearances from fellow pioneers Schoolly D, Tuff Crew, and Robbie B, alongside 1980s act Malika Love, tracing the roots of hip-hop’s infancy in Philadelphia.
Philadelphia’s DJ culture remains a signature feature of the festival, with this year’s lineup including DJ Cash Money, DJ Diamond Kuts, DJ Aktive, and Rich Medina, whose house music set featured fellow Philadelphian Crystal Waters.
Bilal delivered his own neo-soul-infused set before returning to the stage during Jay-Z’s performance to perform Frank Ocean’s chorus on “No Church in the Wild.”
Adam Blackstone, the Philly musical mastermind, curated a set dedicated to the Waiting to Exhale soundtrack featuring Yolanda Adams, Ledisi, Tamar Braxton, and Andra Day.
Beano French and Amir Ali stood as representatives of the next generation of Philly MCs, their local acclaim earning them a place on the festival’s stage.
State Property, Jazmine Sullivan, and Meek Mill all appeared during Jay-Z’s set, serving as a powerful reminder of Philadelphia’s enduring influence on both hip-hop and R&B.
The performance included a State Property reunion commissioned by Hov, bringing Beanie Sigel, Freeway, Peedi Crakk, and Young Gunz back to the stage, alongside welcoming Philadelphia songstress Jazmine Sullivan and rapper Meek Mill.
There’s something that’s very Philadelphia—it’s Philly-centric—about the Picnic, and that’s sort of our superpower. In order to continue to build the brand out in the way that we intended to, we had to keep getting that charge.
– Black Thought
The Roots Picnic Goes Global
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – JUNE 01: Nas and Tariq “Black Thought” Trotter perform during the 2024 Roots Picnic at The Mann on June 01, 2024 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Taylor Hill/Getty Images for Live Nation Urban)
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As The Roots Picnic brand expands internationally, it is doing so with some of hip-hop’s most influential figures.
Jay-Z headlined the flagship Philadelphia event, while Nas has been tapped to lead the festival’s inaugural London edition, placing two of rap’s most celebrated MCs at the forefront of the growing brand.
The distinction is further underscored by the involvement of The Roots, whose co-founder and lead MC, Black Thought, is widely regarded as one of hip-hop’s greatest lyricists.
“As we continue to build the brand out, it has sprouted—no pun intended—legs and wings,” said Black Thought. “We’re taking it across the pond to the UK. And I think this is all with the intention of building it out to become what it is and what it has been for Philadelphia, but without abandoning Philadelphia or the Philadelphia Picnic.”
He described the collaboration with Nas as part of a broader touring partnership rather than a one-off festival appearance, with The Roots, Nas, De La Soul, T.I., and special guests scheduled to perform a series of shows throughout the summer across both the United States and the United Kingdom.
Scheduled for August 8 and 9 at the Crystal Palace Bowl, Roots Picnic London represents the festival’s first international expansion, presented in collaboration with Palace Bowl Presents and Live Nation Urban.
The two-day event will feature Nas and The Roots, Sasha Keable, and Nia Smith on opening day, followed by Anthony Hamilton, Musiq Soulchild, Floetry, Robert Glasper, Common, Bilal, Gotts Street Park, and Olivia Dean on Day 2.
The festival will also bring back the J. Period Live Mixtape, featuring Black Thought, Yasiin Bey, and Benny the Butcher.
“It required courage, sacrifice, and patience. We’ve dug it out for almost twenty years, and here we are.”
