November 24, 2024

What to Know About Lolla Chicago 2021: Lineup, Tickets, Vaccines and More

Lolla #Lolla

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: CHICAGO, IL – AUGUST 03: General atmosphere as Cage The Elephant performs at Samsung Galaxy stage during 2014 Lollapalooza Day Three at Grant Park on August 3, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images) © Getty Images

CHICAGO, IL – AUGUST 03: General atmosphere as Cage The Elephant performs at Samsung Galaxy stage during 2014 Lollapalooza Day Three at Grant Park on August 3, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images)

Lollapalooza is officially on, marking a return of one of Chicago’s biggest summer events – but there are some changes in store this year.

Chicago’s largest music festival will be held at full capacity from July 29 to August 1, organizers announced Tuesday.

Here’s what we know so far:

Lineup

Lollapalooza released its lineup Wednesday for the 2021 festival in Chicago’s Grant Park this summer, with the Foo Fighters, Post Malone, Tyler the Creator and Miley Cyrus slated to headline.

Other artists scheduled to perform include DaBaby, Marshmello, Illenium, Journey, Megan Thee Stallion and Roddy Ricch.

Here’s a look at the full lineup:

Tickets

Tickets for the four-day festival will go on sale at 12 p.m. CT Wednesday, at which point only the four-day tickets for general admission, GA+, VIP, Platinum and hotel packages will be available. Organizers said single-day tickets will be available at a later date.

COVID Precautions

Organizers said in announcing the festival’s return that a full COVID-19 vaccination or negative test results within 24 hours before attending the festival will be required for admission, in accordance with current public health guidance.

Details on the festival entry process will be available in early July, officials said.

The requirement is similar to one being used for the popular Pitchfork Music Festival in September as well.

“Certainly an outdoor setting is lower risk than an indoor setting and when we pair that with the agreement that the people attending will be vaccinated or tested every day that really is about as low risk a setting as we can have,” Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said Tuesday. “And so we felt confident that we would be able to move ahead without capacity restrictions. Certainly from a planning perspective, you know, the organizers of all events know that it’s possible things could change with COVID, but we expect at this point that we would be able to have that event at full capacity.”

As for how attendees will be asked to prove vaccination status, details weren’t immediately clear.

“We’ll have some updated information by early July, but we need people to get vaccinated now if they want to attend,” Arwady said. “And their record would be in that state system. My hope is they would be able to access that electronically if they wanted to. If not, we would use, you know, we would use the [vaccine] card.”

The festival was postponed indefinitely last year due to the coronavirus pandemic, a decision Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot called “difficult.”

“Here in Chicago, the word ‘Lollapalooza’ has always been synonymous with summer, great music and four days of unforgettable fun – which made last year’s decision to postpone it all the more difficult,” Lightfoot said in a statement Tuesday.

“Now, less than a year later and armed with a vaccine that is safe, effective and widely available, we are able to bring back one of our city’s most iconic summer music festivals,” Lightfoot continued. “I want to thank the Lollapalooza team for working closely with the City to create a reopening strategy that prioritizes safety and can’t wait to see festivalgoers return to Grant Park this summer.”

Chicago is currently in the Bridge Phase of its reopening plan, with increased capacity limits and other changes ahead of a full reopening in Phase 5.

Lightfoot has previously said the city’s goal is a full reopening with no capacity limits by the Fourth of July and has long hinted that this summer would look more like the summer of 2019 than of 2020 in terms of large-scale events like Lollapalooza and other festivals.

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