Rappin’ The Rivers Is Building Montana’s Hip-Hop Outpost

When most people think about major hip-hop festivals, Montana rarely enters the conversation. For decades, many national tours bypassed the state entirely, leaving local fans to travel hundreds of miles to catch major artists.

That reality helped inspire Rappin’ The Rivers, an independent festival founded in 2023 by Montana rap duo Filth and Foul, made up of Nickel Barney (NICKBUSY) and Shane Boylan (Contact). What started as an effort to bring large-scale hip-hop programming to their home state has grown into one of Montana’s most recognizable music gatherings.

Now entering its fourth year, the festival returns to Cardwell, Montana, on August 7–8, 2026.

A Montana Festival With Its Own Identity

Held at the same venue that has hosted events including Rockin’ The Rivers and Country Jam, Rappin’ The Rivers has built its reputation around a blend of live music, camping, nightlife, and Montana scenery.

Unlike many urban music festivals, the event takes place against a backdrop of mountains, open skies, and sprawling campgrounds. Every weekend pass includes camping access, helping create an experience that extends beyond the performances themselves.

Festival organizers say that combination has helped attract a growing audience from both inside and outside Montana. The event has also earned recognition in the Bozeman’s Choice Awards, where it has been named Best Festival for three consecutive years.

Hip-Hop, EDM, and More

This year’s lineup includes artists from across hip-hop, EDM, rock, and adjacent genres. Scheduled performers include DaBaby, That Mexican OT, Paul Wall, Dave East, Kid Ink, Rittz, X-Raided, Whitney Peyton, Unconventional Kingz, Champagne Drip, DirtySnatcha, Hairitage, LadyDice, and Doggface.

One of the festival’s signature attractions is Ravin’ The Rivers, an EDM-focused stage that operates alongside the event’s hip-hop programming. Organizers are also introducing a new Rockin’ The Rivers stage in 2026, expanding the festival’s musical footprint with additional rock and mixed-genre performances.

Another notable addition is Young Dirty Bastard, son of Wu-Tang Clan member Ol’ Dirty Bastard. He joins the festival as both a performer and special guest host through a new partnership involving the Dirty Jones brand.

Cannabis Culture Meets Independent Music

As the festival continues to grow, organizers have also added partnerships that reflect its connection to broader counterculture communities.

Among them is Evan Kajander, owner of Montana-based cannabis company Apogee Gardens, who has joined the event as a partner for 2026. While Rappin’ The Rivers remains primarily a music festival, the addition reflects the long-standing overlap between independent hip-hop, festival culture, and cannabis communities.

The festival grounds also feature vendors, merchandise, VIP experiences, food options, art installations, and after-hours activities that help create a weekend-long destination rather than a traditional concert experience.

Building Something Different

What makes Rappin’ The Rivers notable is not simply the lineup. It is the fact that an event built by independent Montana artists has managed to carve out its own place in a crowded festival landscape.

In a state often overlooked by major touring circuits, the festival has become a gathering point for fans of hip-hop, bass music, camping culture, and independent creative communities. As it enters its fourth year, Rappin’ The Rivers continues to grow while maintaining the Montana identity that helped set it apart in the first place.

Rappin’ The Rivers returns to Cardwell, Montana, on August 7–8, 2026. Get tickets here.

All images courtesy of Rappin The Rivers team.

<p>The post Rappin’ The Rivers Is Building Montana’s Hip-Hop Outpost first appeared on High Times.</p>

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