Travis Scott has been announced as the first headliner for next year’s Rolling Loud Portugal festival.
- READ MORE: Rolling Loud New York 2022: Five buzz-worthy moments from the hip-hop festival
The three-day event, which debuted earlier this year, has been canceled for both 2020 and 2020 after its initial launch. 2021 year will return to Praia De Rocha beach in Portimão, Algarve, on July 5-7, 2023 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Pre-sale tickets go on sale this Friday (9th December) from 10am GMT, you can buy Here.
More titles will be announced in the coming weeks. This year’s headliners included J. Cole, A$AP Rocky and Future, AJ Tracy, Lil Uzi Vert, Skepta, Roddy Rick, Jack Harlow, DaBaby, Ms. Banks, Rico Nasty and Central Si – to name a few.
Billed as “the world’s largest hip-hop festival,” with events in Miami, Los Angeles, the Bay Area and New York, Scott is also headlining the March 3-5 Los Angeles event confirmed to do. Hollywood Park Grounds with Playboi Carti and Future.
Playboi Carti will close out the festivities on Friday, March 3, with a line-up of 35 acts including Kodak Black, Tyga, Trippie Redd, DaBaby, Saweetie, Fivio Foreign and Soulja Boy. Then, joining Travis Scott for a 41-act bill on Saturday, March 4 will be Lil Baby, Don Toliver, 2 Chainz, Kevin Gates, Lil Yachty, City Girls, Amine and Chief Keef.
While not officially listed as a headliner, Lil Wayne will appear as a “special guest” on the Sunday (March 5) route, with the same billing as Future’s headliner. The final day of the festival is the biggest of them all, with 44 acts including Lil Uzi Vert, Tory Lanez, Polo G, Moneybagg Yo, Ski Mask The Slump God, Central Cee, Lil Tecca, OhGeesy and Sheck Wes.
Scott has been slowly making his way back into the public eye since the tragedy at Houston’s Astroworld concert last November. In May of this year, the rapper returned from a six-month hiatus with a performance at a nightclub in Miami, and this month he made a more public appearance on stage at the 2022 Billboard Music Awards. He recently performed at the first edition of the Primavera Sound festival in Chile.