Coming up on April 18, 2026, the Fort Worth Stockyards will fill with the smell of smoked brisket, the twang of Red Dirt guitars, and the roar of a crowd ready for Texas’ ultimate BBQ and music showdown. The Syndicate Smokedown & Music Festival returns for its fifth anniversary, bringing together award-winning pitmasters, chart-topping musicians, and a mission that matters: every ticket, every bite, and every cheer supports scholarships for Texas youth in agriculture.
Andy Eldridge, Fort Worth resident and longtime festival director, has guided the Smokedown from its early days at Panther Island to a sprawling, two-stage spectacle that draws thousands each spring.
“The main purpose of our organization is to raise money for the junior sale champions at the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo,” Eldridge says during a phone interview. “Last year at the sale, we raised $10 million — and 100 percent of that money goes straight to the kids. Since 1980, we’ve raised about $95 million. This year, we should cross the $100 million threshold.”
The Syndicate’s efforts extend beyond livestock auctions. “For many years now, we’ve gifted 24 $10,000 scholarships,” Eldridge explains. “Half go to 4-H kids, half go to FFA kids.”
While the Syndicate has spent the past five years bringing the Smokedown to a wider audience, its roots run deep, supporting Texas youth in agriculture since 1980. And as much as the organization honors tradition, the fifth annual festival next April promises to create a new one.
Music has always been central to the event, and 2026’s lineup is its biggest yet. Whiskey Myers headlines, performing one of only two announced concerts for the year, while the Randy Rogers Band celebrates two decades of Texas country storytelling. Grammy-winning fiddler Amanda Shires adds Nashville polish, and rising stars like Jason Scott and The High Heat, Ellis Bullard, The Broken Spokes, and Weldon Henson round out a full day of performances. “For our fifth anniversary, we wanted a lineup that felt both elevated and unmistakably Texas,” Eldridge says.
But there’s more to this event than just music. The festival’s beating heart is its barbecue. Twenty-five pitmasters from across Texas serve all-you-can-eat samples from noon to 4 p.m., while professional and amateur teams compete for a $20,000+ purse organized by the International Barbeque Cookers Association (IBCA).” “Those guys are truly culinary experts,” Eldridge says. “People absolutely love that portion of the event — it’s almost another headliner.”
After last year’s sellout crowd of roughly 7,500, the festival footprint has expanded to accommodate over 10,000 guests, allowing organizers to host bigger headline acts and create a more immersive experience. “We wanted to make the event larger,” Eldridge says. “That’s what allowed us to bring Whiskey Myers and Randy Rogers, and to put together a lineup that’s both exciting and authentic to Texas.”
Tickets range from the $45 Music Time pass — granting access to stages and festival grounds — to the $425+ Platinum pass with premium viewing, concierge service, and hospitality perks. Beyond raising funds for scholarships and youth programs, a portion of the event’s proceeds will support the Jim Bob Norman Scholarship Fund.
“Syndicate Smokedown is built for fans,” Eldridge says, “but no matter which pass you buy, every single ticket purchase directly helps a Texas kid and supports this great state’s agriculture industry.”
Eldridge’s connection to the work is deeply personal. “I grew up in 4-H and FFA, and those programs really teach kids leadership,” he says. “I’ve met students through the Stock Show and scholarship programs and seen how they’re pointed toward successful careers in agriculture and beyond. These programs form the foundation of the next generation of Texas leaders.”
General ticket sales are already available.