Everything You Need to Know About Jazz Fest in New Orleans

If you’re visiting New Orleans to take part in the festivities, here’s what you’ll need to know about how to plan your days, which performances to see, and what to eat.

Everything You Need to Know About Jazz Fest in New Orleans

The New Orleans Jazz Fest celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2019.

Courtesy of NewOrleans.com

The 2021 edition of Jazz Fest has been delayed due to COVID. The party will now take place between October 8 and 17.

The first thing you need to know about the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival—universally called Jazz Fest—is that it covers far, far more than jazz. In fact, a better name might be Rock-Pop-R&B-Jazz-Blues-Funk-Hip-Hop-Gospel-Zydeco-Folk-Bluegrass-Country-Caribbean-Latin-and-Food Fest. Much like the city it calls home, Jazz Fest defies definition and marches to its own drumbeat. (It’s also distinct from the French Quarter Festival, which takes place earlier in the year.)

Here’s what you need to know about New Orleans Jazz Fest 2021.

What is Jazz Fest?

The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival (or Jazz Fest as it’s affectionately known) began in 1970 in Congo Square, the open-area space where enslaved Africans gathered on Sundays in the early 1800s and created the sounds that would ultimately influence all American music.

The inaugural event, which featured Mahalia Jackson, Fats Domino, and Duke Ellington, drew a humble audience of 350. Today it’s one of the planet’s greatest musical extravaganzas, with an annual attendance of roughly half a million (in pre-COVID times). Yet it somehow also retains its unpretentious, funky, local soul.

When is Jazz Fest in 2021?

The festival takes place between October 8 and 17, with hundreds of bands on multiple stages. For tickets and more info, visit the official Jazz Fest website. Read our review of Jazz Fest 2019 here for more on why it’s such an unmissable experience.

Who is performing at New Orleans Jazz Fest in 2021?

The lineup includes many big names, including The Black Crowes, Foo Fighters, The Beach Boys, and Stevie Nicks. However, it’s the wealth of local talent and legendary New Orleans-related artists that really make the festival stand out from the usual summer schedule. We’re talking Trombone Shorty and the singular Preservation Hall Jazz Band, among dozens of others.

Mardi Gras Indians at Jazz Fest

Mardi Gras Indians at Jazz Fest

Courtesy of NewOrleans.com

Is Jazz Fest good for families?

Absolutely. A family-friendly schedule (hours from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.) means you won’t need to hunt for a babysitter. Children ages 2 to 10 get in for $5 (or at least they did when it was last held in 2019), and a kids’ tent provides puppet shows, theater, youth choir performances, brass bands doing Disney numbers, a hands-on play area, and toddler-approved food.

Meanwhile, older generations will enjoy the intimate performances, chairs, and water misters in the smaller tents. Strollers and wheelchairs are permitted, and you’ll skip parking hassles by taking the round-trip Jazz Fest Express Shuttle, which stops at the Sheraton Hotel, Steamboat Natchez Dock, Hyatt House, and Wisner Lot/City Park (prices in 2019 were $16 to $22).

What kind of food is served at Jazz Fest?

It’s music you’ll listen to at New Orleans Jazz Fest—but it’s food you’ll talk about. With 75 vendors offering more than 150 creations, you’re basically required to pig out. And we’re not talking pizza and corn dogs: Menus showcase regional tastes and influences, with more only-in-New-Orleans eats than you can shake a plastic fork at. Arrive hungry, and start with the obligatory crawfish bread, then progress to the life-changing cochon de lait po’boy and the pheasant, quail, and andouille gumbo. Try yakamein (hangover soup) and jama-jama (sautéed spinach), and save room for white chocolate bread pudding and a mango freeze. Then sample a completely different menu the next day.

What else is there to do at Jazz Fest?

Shopping opportunities abound, with three big bazaars selling traditional and contemporary wares—from African instruments and Acadian furniture to hand-painted clothing and purses made of recycled cowboy boots. And you can explore NOLA’s rich culture in several dedicated areas that highlight local heritage.

In the Louisiana Folklife Village, you’ll see artisans creating traditional treasures; the Native American Village honors indigenous culture with dances, crafts, and food; the air-conditioned Grandstand has beautiful exhibits and four stages of music, interviews, and cooking demos; and the Cultural Exchange Pavilion celebrates New Orleans’s ancestry, featuring a different guest country each year.

Then there are the parades. Every day during the festival, Social Aid and Pleasure Clubs dance through the crowd wearing colorful suits festooned with flowers and feathers, buck jumping, twirling parasols, and waving handkerchiefs as a brass band plays. Also parading are Mardi Gras Indians—African American tribes who celebrate their unique cultural tradition dating back to the 1800s. Dressed in magnificent beaded and feathered costumes they’ve spent all year creating, they chant, sing, and drum. A quintessential Jazz Fest experience is jumping in and dancing along. When you join a second-line parade, you become part of New Orleans’s story—a centuries-old tale of boundless, indomitable spirit.

At Jazz Fest, you’ll see all kinds of revelers and music fans.

At Jazz Fest, you’ll see all kinds of revelers and music fans.

Courtesy of NewOrleans.com

What should you wear to Jazz Fest?

Since you’ll be walking a dirt track, plan for a little dust. All manner of fashion flies at the festival, from spangled dresses and sequined fedoras to cargo shorts and tanks. But you’ll be happiest wearing light, airy clothes, a wide-brimmed hat, sunglasses or rain gear depending on the forecast, and your comfiest walking/dancing sandals.

What should you do at night?

Good news, night owls: The party doesn’t end when the gates close at 7 p.m.—it spreads through the city. An undeniable feature of Jazz Fest is the bevy of well-past-midnight shows in the French Quarter and on Frenchmen Street and at legendary venues like Tipitina’s and Preservation Hall. Local artists gig all over town, and visiting headliners sometimes sit in. Over the years, late-night festgoers have been treated to pop-up performances by the likes of Stevie Wonder, Sharon Jones, Alabama Shakes, and U2’s The Edge. You never know who might appear, and that’s part of the magic. Here’s hoping New Orleans’s famous nightlife will be thriving once again in the fall of 2021.

>> Next: Plan Your Trip With AFAR’s Guide to New Orleans

From Our Partners
Sign up for our newsletter
Join more than a million of the world’s best travelers. Subscribe to the Daily Wander newsletter.
More From AFAR