Usa news

Who to catch at Lollapalooza 2025: Expert picks for hip-hop, pop, rock and EDM

On Thursday, Lollapalooza plugs back into Grant Park, bringing 170-plus bands on eight stages across four days. To help make sense of the massive lineup, we asked local experts in the worlds of hip-hop, pop, rock and EDM to share their perfect schedules — for each day by genre.


Photo: Provided | Illustration: Bryan Barker/ Sun-Times

HIP-HOP

The Expert: Taylor Bennett, local musician, brother and manager of Chance The Rapper; has been going to Lolla since 2010.

“Lollapalooza is one of my favorite festivals in the world, and I’ve been to a lot,” says Taylor Bennett, who released a new single, “Champagne Tears,” last week. Lollapalooza was the first big festival performance for the brothers: Chance on the BMI Stage in 2013 and Taylor on Perry’s Stage in 2018.

“I think the artist selection and the listener balance [at Lolla] is really good,” he says. “[Organizers] have a very specific way of being able to look at the surface of hip-hop and not just bring in who’s hot or the legends, but have a mix where you can still find new music. … It fills a void in hip-hop that you don’t get at too many festivals.”

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


Photo: Provided | Illustration: Bryan Barker/ Sun-Times

POP

The Expert: Val Haller, founder of Valslist Music and co-producer of Winnetka Music Festival; has been going to Lolla since 2007.

Lollapalooza somehow managed to nab two of the biggest pop stars of the moment — Sabrina Carpenter and Olivia Rodrigo. And although both are must-sees, Val Haller’s advice is “don’t spend the whole day just waiting for them.” Haller, a festival organizer herself, recommends “getting a taste of everything the festival offers. Go from stage to stage, even if it’s only to stay for three songs.” She is particularly interested in the range of global pop bands this year. “A lot of them are big in their country but trying to break into the American market,” Haller says. “So it’s a chance to get on board early.”

Thursday

Gracie Abrams

Getty Images

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


Photo: Provided | Illustration: Bryan Barker/ Sun-Times

ROCK

The Expert: Lauren O’Neil, midday DJ at Q101; has been going to Lolla since 2012.

While Lollapalooza may not be the rock-dominant festival of its youth, Q101 DJ Lauren O’Neil says rock and alternative still have a stronghold in 2025. “I feel the lineup is pretty eclectic this year,” she says, even if “outwardly a lot of the headliners lean more in the pop or even country categories.” O’Neil adds: “Lolla knows their place as far as booking too many of the rock and metal bands — because Riot Fest would like to have a word. But they do a good job of picking a few that are appointment-setters if you’re into those genres. … You just have to do the digging.”

Thursday

Korn

Getty Images

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


EDM

The Expert: Ellie Barker, founder of EDM Ladies of Chicago; has been going to Lolla since 2016.

When Barker moved to Chicago from Detroit eight years ago, she founded EDM Ladies of Chicago — an online community of electronica lovers — with Devin Dalakouras, Diia Gward and Shelby Miller. It was a way for “women, femmes and non-binary to get together safely,” Barker says. The group has since grown to 10,000 members, and an international edition, Female Ravers United, boasts 60,000 members, all of whom discuss shows, outfits and meetups. Getting together at Perry’s Stage is an annual tradition (find meetup times on the group’s Instagram page, #edmchiladies). “It’s nice that Perry’s Stage is total EDM culture with people wearing standard rave wear and trading candy … all the things that make EDM special, all in one place,” Barker says. Here are her curated picks, all at Perry’s — except for Rüfüs Du Sol, the alternative dance group from Sydney, headlining the T-Mobile Stage at 8:45 p.m. on Saturday.

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday


LOCAL ACTS

The Expert: Nudia Hernandez, afternoon music host of Vocalo Radio.

Hernandez recommends the TIP Fest (Teens in the Park) Pop-up Stage, located near Buckingham Fountain, a DIY platform at Lolla to catch homegrown acts. “The TIP Stage has some huge names for the young kids in Chicago. … And it’s where local acts can share their music with the younger generation of festival goers.” Starting at 2 p.m. Friday, the stage will host DJ Ca$h Era, Jean Deaux and Pivot Gang. On the Chicago Made Stage (Thursday, Tito’s, 2:15 p.m.), Hernandez called out BJ The Chicago Kid and Clairice. Hernandez says surprises are likely: “From the artists I’ve talked to recently, a lot of them are planning to share new or unreleased music at Lollapalooza.”

More Lollapalooza coverage:

Exit mobile version