Syracuse welcomes BareRoots Festival, a new community and music tradition
Replace this text with a shorter more mobile friendly headline
The event hosted local musicians, food trucks and craft vendors for an afternoon of peace and love.

Syracuse’s Thornden Park came alive on Saturday with the city’s newest music and art celebration: the BareRoots Festival. From 3 to 8 p.m., the park’s amphitheater featured performances ranging from psychedelic rock to indie folk, attracting hundreds of students, families and residents alike to the free city event.
The lineup reflected Syracuse’s diverse music scene: bands like Pop Culture blended funk, jazz and prog, while psychedelic rock band Vaporeyes had the crowd on its feet; Honey for the Bees added a folk-rock vibe and Glass Image played alt-rock. Ruha closed the evening with a genre-bending mix of Americana and electronica.

For performers, the festival felt as meaningful as it did for the audience: “It means so much to be able to gather with music, art and community lovers,” said Ruha singer Charley Orlando. “It’s the future of life to be able to accept everyone for who they are and see the beauty in it always!”
“It felt like coming home, but better,” said Vaporeyes vocalist Jonas Reddy-Nicholson. “Old neighbors, friends, and colleagues all joined in a beautiful amphitheater to the tune of great music, great food, art and vendors. It’s tough to ask for much more, especially when it’s free entry.”


Reddy-Nicholson added that “the setup was wonderful, and the sound team absolutely was stellar.”
Between music sets, food trucks served wood-fired pizza, sandwiches and dumplings, while rows of tables displayed artwork, handmade crafts, band merchandise and antiques. Some attendees paused to talk with local artists selling jewelry or paintings, while others browsed for vintage items.