Ruhr Reggae Summer 2026

Lineup

Zion Mar­ley, Tiken Jah Fakoly, Romain Vir­go, DJ Mac, Skar­ra Muc­ci x Manudig­i­tal, Mil­lion Stylez, The Har­bin­gerz, Kumbia Boru­ka u.v.


Date

August 28–30, 2026

Venue

Ruhrsta­dion, Mülheim/Ruhr, Ger­many

Tickets

Here


Doing things dif­fer­ent­ly and think­ing out­side the box. That has always been the approach the Ruhr Reg­gae Sum­mer has tak­en. This year is no excep­tion. Any­one famil­iar with fes­ti­val logis­tics knows that advance tick­et sales are cru­cial for orga­niz­ers. After all, it makes plan­ning much eas­i­er.

To avoid get­ting right to the point—or, rather, reveal­ing the full line­up right away—the RRS has come up with a clever solu­tion. If the line-up released on July 6 doesn’t appeal to you, you can return any tick­ets you’ve already pur­chased with­in 30 days—it’s that sim­ple. So go ahead and grab your tick­ets before the fly­er with the com­plete list of acts is released.

Adver­tise­ment:

The tac­tic of reveal­ing the line­up bit by bit is also meant to slow­ly build antic­i­pa­tion and keep the mys­tery sur­round­ing the upcom­ing per­for­mances alive for a lit­tle while longer. We’ll know more soon.

Before we turn our atten­tion to the acts, here are a few bonus points that make the RRS spe­cial. Many praise the festival’s fam­i­ly-friend­ly atmos­phere, as well as the sound, which is made pos­si­ble by a well-coor­di­nat­ed tech­ni­cal crew. Then there’s a very spe­cial stage: a walk­way that allows a larg­er crowd to get clos­er to the artists.

Let’s take a look at them now. Lau­ryn Hill and Rohan Mar­ley have giv­en the reg­gae world some strong young artists in YG and Zion Mar­ley. Zion, who bears a strik­ing resem­blance to his father, recent­ly shone in Bec­ca D’s Dead­ly Ses­sion as part of SXSW London—and not just with cov­er ver­sions of his grandfather’s songs. With Tiken Jah Fakoly, the fes­ti­val is mak­ing a polit­i­cal state­ment. Death threats forced the reg­gae singer to flee from the Ivory Coast into exile in Mali in the ear­ly 2000s. Through his music, he car­ries on the tra­di­tion of social com­men­tary from the roots reg­gae era of the 1970s. He rais­es his voice against cor­rup­tion, neo­colo­nial­ism, injus­tice, and abuse of pow­er of any kind. Romain Vir­go, whom many have missed in this season’s line-ups, is one of the strongest Jamaican singers of today. It’s no coin­ci­dence that he’s said to be fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of Beres Ham­mond. Romain, too, com­bines tal­ent, hit songs, and per­for­mance skills all in one per­son.

Any­one inter­est­ed in hot dance­hall pro­duc­ers can’t ignore DJ Mac—the “Leader of the New School,” as his Insta­gram bio states. Dance­hall his­to­ry was recent­ly made with the “WYFL” rid­dim, con­jured up in col­lab­o­ra­tion with Crash Dum­my. The album of the same name fea­tures a whop­ping 45 tracks. It remains excit­ing to see how he per­forms live.

The RRS is also known for delib­er­ate­ly includ­ing Euro­pean acts. This time, those acts are Skar­ra Muc­ci & Manudig­i­tal as well as Mil­lion Stylez—both sure­fire hits live. The French band The Har­bin­gerz is par­tic­u­lar­ly intrigu­ing. They’ve man­aged to give roots reg­gae a twist and spin all their own. Their per­for­mances are emo­tion­al­ly charged, and their mes­sages always hit the mark. Also hail­ing from France is the mul­ti­cul­tur­al group Kumbia Boru­ka, which cham­pi­ons cumbia—paired with reg­gae, dub, and oth­er Caribbean influ­ences. They have Mex­i­can, Chilean, Argen­tine, and French roots.

And who absolute­ly can’t be missed at the RRS? Be hon­est, you already know: Miwa­ta!

You prob­a­bly also haven’t missed the fact that the RRS 2026 line­up is once again quite diverse. And if the tem­per­a­tures turn out to be like they were on June 25—the day this text was writ­ten in Cologne—then I’m already day­dream­ing about the nat­ur­al out­door pool, which is also a spe­cial part of the fes­ti­val.

Text: Ellen Köh­lings


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