Ten years is a lifetime in the music business. That alone would make the GroundUP Music Festival remarkable. How it got here makes it one of a kind.

“We’re trying to shine a light on great artists who aren’t already very, very well known,” says Michael League, leader of the enterprising 20-member jazz collective Snarky Puppy and co-founder of the event. The 10th anniversary of the festival begins Friday, March 13, at the Miami Beach Bandshell and continues through Sunday, March 15.

“We’ve definitely had some artists on the (GroundUP) label at the festival with slightly bigger names. But for me, the heart of the festival is the artists people haven’t heard of when they come but then can’t stop talking about when they leave. Rather than a place to go to hear the people that you’re already a fan of, we try to make this festival a discovery point for people.”

A five-time Grammy Award-winning multi-instrumentalist, producer, composer, arranger, and songwriter, League started the GroundUP Music label in 2012 as a home for Snarky Puppy. Five years later, he and Miami Beach native and resident Paul Lehr, founded the annual music festival, and the nonprofit GroundUP Music Foundation.

Michael League, co-founder of the GroundUP Music Festival and the leader of Snarky Puppy. Michael League, co-founder of the GroundUP Music Festival and the leader of Snarky Puppy. (Photo courtesy of the artist)

Headliners this year include League’s Snarky Puppy, which performs every night, including a full “Family Dinner” set in which the band accompanies featured performers.

Also featured in GroundUP is multidisciplinary musician and filmmaker Flying Lotus (aka Steve Ellison); singer and songwriter Rickie Lee Jones; pianist, keyboardist, composer, and producer Patrice Rushen; singer, songwriter, and producer Bilal; guitarist Isaiah Sharkey; vocalist Arooj Aftab; guitarist Julian Lage; multi-instrumentalist and singer Alain Perez; and flutist and vocalist Varijashree Venugopal.

The festival takes place on the main Bandshell stage and in the surrounding park area. The program also includes workshops and encounters such as “Artist to Artist”: Patrice Rushen interviewed by Justin Stanton; “The Legacy of D’Angelo”: Isaiah Sharkey interviewed by Bilal; Rickie Lee Jones on “Creativity in Popular Song”; and “Mind Games: Mentality in Music Production” with League.

Michael League, left, and Paul Lehr, are the co-founders of GroundUP Music Festival. Lehr was born and raised in Miami Beach and says he wants to do “everything I can to support and expand cultural opportunities here. Michael League, left, and Paul Lehr, are the co-founders of GroundUP Music Festival. Lehr was born and raised in Miami Beach and says he wants to do “everything I can to support and expand cultural opportunities here. (Photo courtesy of GroundUp Music Festival)

Paul Lehr, CEO of the GroundUP Music Foundation and co-founder of the festival, recalls when he was CEO of YoungArts, the national art competition in Miami.

“We ran similar programs. That was where I formed the idea of doing small workshops and master classes, keeping things intimate,” says Lehr.

The standard format for large festivals is not one GroundUP tends to emulate. Accessibility to the artists is a plus, notes Lehr.

“Usually, at festivals, artists will come in, go to their trailer, go to the stage, play, go back to their trailer, and be gone. With us, the artist stays the entire weekend,” says Lehr. “That breaks down the barriers between the artists and the audience. You can go up and talk to Isaiah Sharkey or Bilal or Flying Lotus or whoever else because they’re sitting there watching the other shows—and that changes the experience.”

He credits League for the curation.

“He is one of the most phenomenal musicians on the planet, featuring the best artists most people have never heard of. So we have just a different approach from the artist selection standpoint.”

Two-time Grammy winner singer and songwriter Rickie Lee Jones joins Snarky Puppy for Family Dinner on Saturday at the GroundUP Music Festival. Two-time Grammy winner singer and songwriter Rickie Lee Jones joins Snarky Puppy for Family Dinner on Saturday at the GroundUP Music Festival. Astor Morgan (Photo by AstorMorgan, courtesy of GroundUp Music Festival)

The tone of the event was set early on. Memories of the late David Crosby calmly wandering about, checking the performances going on while waiting to play his set, or watching Cuban singer and guitarist Eliades Ochoa, of Buena Vista Social Club fame, enjoying a quiet moment with his family and having an ice cream, come to mind.

But the setting also encourages unplanned musical moments and spontaneous collaborations.

For Rushen, who was intrigued by the ideas and will be appearing for the first time in South Florida with her septet, such an approach “is actually more in keeping with what it was supposed to be: a community of people who share their interest in the music and have an opportunity to spend time in an environment where the focus is the music, whether you’re a player or you are a fan.”

Ten years ago, talk around the GroundUP festival of creating a community around a shared platform—notions of a generous, globally reaching diversity and creative musical ideals—sounded commendably idealistic, but also likely to crash against the bottom line.

Yet a decade later, GroundUP is thriving.

Lehr and League are exploring taking their concept to other locations. Last summer, for the first time, GroundUP Music staged the festival outside Miami Beach, in Italy. A second edition is scheduled in Alberobello, Southern Italy, next June. “Our hope is to very, very slowly consider other places where it makes sense to do this. But,” adds Lehr, “my intention is to make sure that we also always keep it here.”

Taking place each year in Spring at the Miami Beach Bandshell, GroundUp was founded in 2017. Snarky Puppy performs full sets each night. Taking place each year in Spring at the Miami Beach Bandshell, GroundUp was founded in 2017. Snarky Puppy performs full sets each night. (Photo courtesy of GroundUp Music Festival)

As musicians’ livelihoods face brutal challenges ranging from the economics of streaming services to political changes and the threat of AI, developing and nurturing an alternative business model built on higher values, networking, and community might not be so unrealistic.

That said, the attacks against diversity, equity, and inclusion are not parlor discussions but have dire, practical consequences, especially for an event that “over the 10 years, almost 70% of our audience have come from 50 states and 55 countries,” says Lehr.

“We are about community and diversity, and our audience comes from all over the world. Many literally fly in for this,” he notes. “It’s a small, intimate event. But when you turn around, this person is from Spain, this person is South African, this one is from Australia, and this one came from Ohio. It’s a diverse community united by music and camaraderie. I’ve spoken with and heard from many of our Canadian attendees, and almost to a person they told me they’re not coming to the festival because they don’t want to come into the country.”

Singer, songwriter and producer Bilal, best known for collaborations with Kendrick Lamar, Jay-Z, Erykah Badu, Clipse and Beyonce, performs Friday and Saturday at this year’s GroundUP Music Festival. Singer, songwriter and producer Bilal, best known for collaborations with Kendrick Lamar, Jay-Z, Erykah Badu, Clipse and Beyonce, performs Friday and Saturday at this year’s GroundUP Music Festival. (Photo courtesy of GroundUp Musical Festival)

The festival started like a fun proposition, reflects League. “The idea of just calling all of your musician friends and getting them together in the same place is a dream for anyone who plays music. Now, this was before COVID, before all of the political upheaval in the U.S., and before this kind of oligarchical takeover. It started as just a fun thing that we were all interested in doing.”

League says now it’s different.

“It feels a little more vital, especially as the music industry is crumbling in many respects. Live music is emerging as the one pillar, the last thing we’ll have if everything else goes. And so I think the festival sticking around is a statement.”

If you go:

WHAT: GroundUP Music Festival.

WHERE: Miami Beach Bandshell, 7275 Collins Ave., Miami Beach

WHEN: March 13-15; schedule here: groundupmusicfestival.com/dailyschedule

COST: tickets start at $39

INFORMATION: miamibeachbandshell.com/events

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