Miami's Homegrown Music Festival, Swamp Stomp, Expands to New Jimbo's Digs This Saturday
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| via www.swampstompfestival.com |
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 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.
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 $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
































