Concerts

Miami’s Homegrown Music Festival, Swamp Stomp, Expands to New Jimbo’s Digs This Saturday

Swamp Stomp is truly a homegrown party, a super-independent mini-festival that keeps steadily growing in size since its inaugural year in 2007. The first edition was pretty much a house party in the backyard of some UM kids, and students from the U are still behind this event. But with...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Swamp Stomp is truly a homegrown party, a super-independent mini-festival that keeps steadily growing in size since its inaugural year in 2007. The first edition was pretty much a house party in the backyard of some UM kids, and students from the U are still behind this event. But with some 500 attendees last year, it’s outgrown its original digs and moved to the only-in-Florida environs of Jimbo’s, on Virginia Key.

The festival bills itself as a “bad-ass, rockenest [sic], craziest, funkadelic hell-of-a-good time,” and if that sounds a little jammy, you’re right. This is a feel-good, outdoorsy kind of vibe, with the musical sounds taking a wold trip over a rock foundation.

To open, there’s Brazil-obsessed, global pop of Cleaveland Jones,

followed by the groovy, bluesy up-and-comers Juke. Next on the bill is

When news happens, Miami New Times is there —
Your support strengthens our coverage.

We’re aiming to raise $30,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to you. If Miami New Times matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.

$30,000

the lo-fi, quirk-pop perfection of local star Rachel Goodrich, and then

the electro-inflected good times of Afrobeta. Rounding off the night’s

later sets are roots reggae riders Jahfe, and then

southern-funk-rockers (and UM students) Tavern.

Related

Extracurriculars abound as well. There’s sunset yoga, stand-up comedy,

and tug of war billed as a battle between hipsters and “wookies” — we

think, by the tussle’s promo pictures, that might be code for “bearded

hippie.” That alone is worth the low-low-low admission price of $5 or

Related

$10 (the latter, advance price comes with a souvenir T-shirt).

Saturday, April 25 at Jimbo’s, Duck Lake Road, Virginia Key, Miami. (Look up the directions at jimbosplace.com). Show goes from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. Admission is $5, or free with a $10 souvenir T-shirt purchased in advance. 305-361-7026; swampstompfestival.com

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...