This September, Shaky Knees 2026 returns to Piedmont Park with one of its most stylistically expansive lineups in recent memory. Long known for anchoring Atlanta’s alternative calendar, the festival continues to evolve while staying rooted in guitar driven music, pairing legacy acts with modern boundary pushers across punk, indie rock, hip hop, electronic, emo, and progressive rock.
Topping the bill are three arena scale acts with distinct identities:
The Strokes – garage rock revival standard bearers whose early 2000s cool still resonates across generations.
Twenty One Pilots – alternative pop maximalists blending rock, hip hop, and electronic production into festival sized spectacle.
Gorillaz – Damon Albarn’s genre dissolving project, merging alternative rock, hip hop, electronic, and global pop textures.
It is a trio that reflects Shaky Knees’ widening lens: alternative at its core, but not confined to one sonic lane.
The undercard is where the 2026 lineup reveals its true dimensionality.
Hardcore momentum comes from Turnstile, whose sound began in hardcore punk but now stretches into melodic hardcore and alternative rock atmospherics. Ireland’s Fontaines D.C. carry the modern post punk revival forward with stark lyricism and driving minimalism, while New York’s Geese inject wiry art rock unpredictability into the mix.
For indie traditionalists, Pavement represent foundational 90s slacker indie rock, their influence echoing throughout much of the weekend’s guitar forward acts. Jimmy Eat World, often categorized as emo and alternative rock with pop punk crossover appeal, bring melodic catharsis that bridges Warped Tour nostalgia and radio ready hooks.
The rhythmic and electronic spectrum is equally robust. Wu-Tang Clan embody classic East Coast hip hop, while Blood Orange blends alternative R&B, indie pop, and electronic production into sleek, artful grooves. LCD Soundsystem remain synonymous with dance punk and electronic rock, their sets balancing live band energy with club pulse dynamics.
On the melodic indie pop side, Peach Pit deliver jangly indie pop with surf rock undertones, while Japanese Breakfast layers indie pop and indie rock with dream pop ambience. Wolf Alice traverse alternative rock, grunge textures, and occasional dream pop shimmer.
Emo and pop punk energy finds representation in Hot Mulligan, whose sound more precisely lands between emo, pop punk, and post hardcore. Meanwhile, Santigold continues to defy easy categorization, fusing electronic, new wave, alternative pop, and dancehall influenced rhythms into a distinctly genre blending live show.
For progressive minded attendees, Coheed and Cambria bring intricate progressive rock structures layered with alternative and post hardcore roots, offering one of the weekend’s most technically ambitious performances.
We knew Piedmont Park would offer the opportunity for bigger and better, and here it is, a reason for music loves across the region to get excited!
For all things Shaky Knees, check out the festival site! Tickets on sale now!