A jam-packed week of Afrocentric events is headed to Detroit, with the lead-up to AfroFuture Detroit, a massive cultural festival taking place on Saturday and Sunday, August 16–17, at Bedrock’s Douglass Site (corner of Beaubien Boulevard and Winder Street, Detroit).
The giant party thrown by Ghana-based AfroFuture and Detroit’s Bedrock will feature an entire week of immersive experiences in the city, counting down to the weekend’s main event featuring headliners Asake, Ludmilla, Davido, Kaytranada and Gims, plus dozens of other performers and DJs.
“AfroFuture, we are a cultural entertainment platform with the goal of really bridging the gap of the diaspora from the continent with the rest of the world,” said AfroFuture Chief Operating Officer Akosua Ayim. “We started in 2017 in Accra, Ghana, and I’ve since been able to do activations around the continent over the past eight years. This time, for the first time ever, we’re bringing the festival to the States.”
Massive cultural festival AfroFuture will make its U.S. debut in Detroit Aug. 16 – 17, 2025, after a weeklong celebration of countdown events.
And why Detroit?
“We saw a lot of synergy between the history of Detroit, the richness of Black culture in Detroit – everything from food to music, the impact the city has had on Black culture globally,” he said. “There are so many synergies between Detroit and Accra in that way, in terms of being innovative and cultural leaders. It made sense for us to (come to) Detroit for our first iteration of the festival stateside, and then with our partner, Bedrock, and the way that they’ve shown up for the city and the way they’ve supported the festival, it just aligned really well.”
While tickets for the weekend’s festival must be purchased, a wide variety of free events will be offered the entire week leading up to the main event.
“There’s a restaurant week, there’s a bar crawl,” said Ayim. “We’re doing a pitch competition, we have movie nights, a spoken word show, and all these things are happening in partnership with local Detroit communities and movers and shakers and promoters. We’re coming in, really trying to integrate into the community. We don’t want to just show up and do a festival and leave; we really want to make sure that we’re touching on a lot of important facets for people from Detroit.
“Everything for the week before is free. We have music panels happening as well, media panels, a dinner. All of that can be found at detroit.afrofuture.com under the programming tab. We also have VIP tables for sale, for those who want a little bit of a more elevated experience. But, however you show up, whether you come to some of the programming one day, every day, we would really just love your people to come in and get to know us and see what we’re all about.”
Massive cultural festival AfroFuture will make its U.S. debut in Detroit Aug. 16 – 17, 2025, after a weeklong celebration of countdown events.
Addofio Addo, director of business development for Bedrock, expanded upon Ayim’s sentiments.
“This is a festival that truly is more than just a concert, more than just a festival,” said Addo. “It’s a lifestyle experience of culture that contributes to Afrobeats. It has fashion. It has music as elements of film. It has a marketplace that highlights all the cultural makeup of the diaspora in one, so you’re going to get a showstopping experience onstage, but you’re also going to get that same feeling onsite. And I think that’s the most crucial thing about AfroFuture, which we love and are excited to experience.”
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Ayim says festival organizers are expecting thousands of people to attend, coming in from around the world.
“In the past, this festival has brought over 30,000 people over two days, so we’re excited to see where we start in the U.S. iteration and continue to build from there. There’s enough space for everybody, so everyone should pull up!”
Addo said visitors should prepare to come away from the experience changed for the better.
“You’re coming here to be uplifted in so many special ways – through music, through scent, through food, through fashion, through conversation,” he said. “This event attracts globally: There are people from the Netherlands, there’s people from Ghana, Nigeria, Jamaica, South Africa. We have hip hop, we have electronic music, we have Afrobeats, we have Amapiano, all these things that tie in so many unique ways – especially for Amapiano, knowing that there are a lot of techno elements in there. With this being a techno-heavy city, it’s the perfect genre to match. Afrobeats has so many romantic elements to it that can be attributed to the Motown sound.
“Being elevated into that is going to be a worldly experience. And, for those who are new to the city, they get to walk away with a piece of Detroit, which I think is really, really special.”
For more information, tickets, and info on hotel blocks and flight discounts through Delta Airlines, go to Detroit.AfroFuture.com.
This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Massive cultural festival AfroFuture to take Detroit by storm for week
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