A new festival presented by the First Amendment group Freedom Forum is coming to Nashville in April, featuring a lineup of heavy-hitting artists and celebrating the “power of music and the freedoms protected by the First Amendment.”
The Freely Fest will hold its inaugural event on April 8, 2026, featuring The Killers, T-Pain, Dominic Fike, Janelle Monáe and Avery Anna at Bridgestone Arena and streaming live worldwide.
“The Freedom Forum’s approach to our work for 30 years has been to help people understand how the First Amendment freedoms impact them in their daily lives,” said Jan Neuharth, chair and chief executive officer at the Freedom Forum. “Fashion, music, food, picking up The Tennessean and reading it in the morning — do people think, ‘Wow, thank you First Amendment for protecting this right?’ We don’t. We often take it for granted.
“So we try to find ways to reach people in ways that make these freedoms feel personal and relevant,” she said. “And music is such a universal language and such a great way to reach people and bring people together … and what’s a better place than Music City? We are celebrating the power of music and doing that in Nashville.”
The Freely Fest will “blend musical performances, artists’ stories about the power of free expression, and interactive experiences that highlight the importance of our First Amendment freedoms — onstage and off,” according to the Freedom Forum announcement of the event.
The nonpartisan organization, which has worked to educate Americans on their First Amendment rights for over 30 years, has deep ties to Nashville through the late John Seigenthaler — the legendary Nashville journalist, Tennessean editor, publisher and chairman, First Amendment and civil rights advocate, founding editorial director of USA TODAY and founder of the Freedom Forum’s First Amendment Center at Vanderbilt University.
“I have his quote on my wall in my office here: ‘Free expression is never safe, never secure, but always in the process of being made safe and secure,'” Neuharth said. “We’re going to help people if they leave Bridgestone with that message in mind that it is never safe, it’s never secure, but all of us can help make it safe and secure. We can all celebrate the power of music. We can all stand up for the First Amendment, and it just feels on a personal level to the Freedom Forum like we would be helping fulfill John’s dream as well.”
According to Freedom Forum’s most recent annual survey, nearly two thirds of Americans say they hold back from speaking freely.
“We hope through these artists to do storytelling around the power of music and how that has inspired generations, how it fueled the civil rights movement, how it’s been anthems for generations and movements, and about music in all aspects and why it’s protected, and how we all can continue to support that,” said Neuharth. “When you build your Spotify playlist, pause for a minute and think, ‘I can do this, right?’ This music in this country is free, and I can do this because of the First Amendment.”
Tickets will go on sale Thursday, Dec. 18 at FreelyFest.org. Event updates can be found on TikTok and Instagram at @FreelyFest.
The USA TODAY Network – The South region’s coverage of First Amendment issues is funded through a collaboration between the Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.
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‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.tennessean.com ’














