Last month, the BGS team once again embarked on Cayamo: A Journey Through Song, the 18th edition of the beloved week-long floating roots music festival that crisscrossed the Caribbean aboard the Norwegian Pearl. With performances by Jason Isbell & the 400 Unit, Dawes, Watchhouse, Patty Griffin, and many, many more, plus port visits in San Juan, Puerto Rico and Cayo Levantado, Dominican Republic, our team was more than ready to yet again partner with Cayamo and Sixthman to bring you special Basic Folk podcast live tapings on board and our fan favorite BGS Nightcap jam set, our fourth edition of the event.
There’s no festival or live music event quite like Cayamo, where ardent roots music fans and the best and most buzzed-about artists and bands come together on a floating sanctuary to enjoy music, art, community, and togetherness – and a break from the wintry weather, too. Below, enjoy a couple of clips captured on board and a series of photos from Cayamo 2026 that clearly demonstrate the joy and fun of this one-of-a-kind event.
Great news, too! The 2027 lineup for Cayamo: A Journey Through Song has already been announced (see above). Tickets go on sale on April 16th at 2pm EDT, but you still have time to join the final presale. More info here.
Days 1 & 2
It's time for Cayamo: A Journey Through Song!
Welcome aboard...
Tommy Emmanuel arrives.
Fans brave the less-than-perfect weather before setting sail from Miami, FL.
Dawes perform for the sail away set on the pool deck.
Rissi Palmer.
Sister Sadie.
Patty Griffin performs to a packed theater.
Patty Griffin.
Erin Rae.
Did you bring your instrument? You can take part in the music, too!
One of our live Basic Folk podcast tapings, hosted by Cindy Howes and Lizzie No and presented by the BGS Podcast Network.
Martina San Diego.
Rose Cousins.
Enjoying tunes while soaking in the hot tub.
Ron Pope.
Crys Matthews.
Palmyra.
The adoring fans of Cayamo, filling out the pool deck.
Ken Pomeroy.
Bronwyn Keith-Hynes and band with special guest Sierra Hull.
Pynk Beard
Tommy Emmanuel.
Jason Isbell strapping up.
Sierra Hull and the Milk Carton Kids perform “Everybody’s Talking” at the Stardust Theater during Cayamo 2026, captured by BGS on board.
Days 3 & 4
A gorgeous day to port in San Juan, Puerto Rico and leave the 'Norwegian Pearl' for some exploring.
Fortifications in Old San Juan.
Jason Isbell and Tommy Emmanuel talk backstage.
Jason Isbell.
Jon Muq.
Rodney Crowell.
Sierra Hull performs on the pool deck.
Jobi Riccio and Lizzie No.
Leon Timbo and band.
Victoria Canal.
Kathleen Edwards.
Brandy Clark and Rodney Crowell share songs and stories.
Bronwyn Keith-Hynes and her guitarist Grant Dresnok join Tommy Emmanuel on stage.
The Milk Carton Kids.
During our favorite event of the voyage – ahem, the BGS Nightcap of course – Kathleen Edwards joined Della Mae to perform “Six O’Clock News.” Thanks to Della Mae for recording and sharing this clip.
Days 5 & 6
It really is a floating festival!
Rodney Crowell performs.
Palmyra with Della Mae.
Judy Blank.
Kaia Kater.
The entire ship becomes a setting for so many different sorts of events, panels, and sessions.
Banjoist Gena Britt of Sister Sadie.
Pynk Beard performs on the pool deck.
Brandy Clark and Patty Griffin, another crowd favorite event.
Della Mae.
Alicia Blue.
Sierra Hull and band joined by Milk Carton Kids.
Lizzie No.
Chuck Cannon.
BGS Nightcap
Jobi Riccio joins our evening's hosts, Della Mae.
Rose Cousins.
Tommy Emmanuel and Celia Woodsmith of Della Mae.
Palmyra and Della Mae together, a match made in heaven.
Pynk Beard clearly got along great with our hosts!
Bronwyn Keith-Hynes made an appearance.
Kathleen Edwards. Watch a clip of her performance with Della Mae above.
Sister Sadie and Della Mae together equals real musical power.
Kaia Kater, Crys Matthews, and Della Mae on the BGS Nightcap.
Tommy Emmanuel on the BGS Nightcap with Della Mae.
Sierra Hull.
What a night! Sister Sadie and Della Mae bid the audience goodnight.
The BGS highlight of the week! A Nightcap jam session is our favorite pastime, especially aboard Cayamo. What a lineup of artists and bands and special collaborations. And this year it happened to fall on St. Patrick’s Day itself – perfect for a roots music party.
Day 7
Everywhere you look, Cayamo, Sixthman, and Norwegian make the voyage a musicful experience.
Shawn Mullins.
Kashus Culpepper brings country cinema to Cayamo.
Kathleen Edwards.
Brandy Clark's full band set.
Tylar Bryant.
A star-studded round and a full house aboard Cayamo.
Photos courtesy of Sixthman, credits as listed in each watermark. Lead image: Will Byington.
(Editor’s Note: Find all of WXPN’s Artist to Watch Black Opry Residency podcast episodes on their website.)
Founded just two years ago, the Black Opry has a simple, but deceptively-difficult mission.
Simple in that it seems straightforward enough: To challenge the idea Black voices are only under represented in roots music because there’s little interest or talent in the black community.
But deceptive, in how hard that myth is to refute.
The truth is that Black and Brown voices have always (and continue to) contributed mightily to the pantheon of Americana music, but they are often overlooked by the very media channels needed to bring about a change.
Using the Philadelphia-based public radio station’s new Artist to Watch podcast to highlight a Black Opry Residency in the City of Brotherly Love, both organizations have teamed up to celebrate and elevate current Black artists, and to educate roots music fans on what they’ve been missing.
Over five weeks, host John Morrison seeks to introduce a new generation of talent to the broader listening public, telling some truly remarkable stories in the process. And, according to Black Opry founder and co-director, Holly G, it was just the type of partnership that could create a lasting trajectory change.
“Working with WXPN was great because they really let us take the lead on what the needs were for our community,” she says.
As a journalist/artist manager and self-identified “country music disruptor,” Holly G knows those needs better than just about anyone. She’s been shining a light on this community for years, which the podcast does a good job of explaining.
Holly G founded Black Opry as a blog and artist directory back in 2021, recognizing a blind spot in the genre and working to profile Black artists in the roots space. But it quickly became something more, and has now grown into a web of inter-connected talent and supporters which even includes a nationwide touring production – the Black Opry Revue. The WXPN show helps tell that story in a broad sense, but also zooms in to introduce a handful of artists individually.
In a five part series, each weekly episode features a different Black artist or act, taking listeners on a “deep and personal dive into the real-life struggles of emerging performers.” Along the way, each gets the chance to tell their story and let listeners see the unique contours of their world – namely, trying build careers from the ground up, in a genre that has all but said they don’t exist.
It’s part of a new drive WXPN has to help develop (and actually support) talent in the pandemic’s wake, since it exposed how precarious an emerging artist’s life can be. According to Bruce Warren – Assistant GM for programming at WXPN and World Cafe’s Executive Producer – featuring Black Opry artists is a natural place to begin.
“WXPN has for a long time had a reputation as a tastemaker, and part of that has been its ability to identify and curate new and emerging artists from across the country and connect them to wider audiences,” he says in podcast’s first episode. “We wanted to give [artists] an amazing, immersive experience that will help change their careers, and at the same time showcase a deeper piece of who they are above and beyond the actual music they play to our audience.”
The Artist to Watch season profiling The Black Opry kicked off on June 8, highlighting Nashville’s Tylar Bryant. Other episodes introduce Denitia and The Kentucky Gentleman (both also out of Nashville), plus Boston’s Grace Givertz and hometown Philly talent, Samantha Rise.
As part of the show, each artist sat for an extensive interview, and also took took part in a week-long creative residency in Philadelphia, writing songs, meeting with mentors and ultimately performing their work at a live showcase.
It’s a remarkably detailed and enlightening podcast, giving some talented and deserving artists a carer boost while also expelling an outdated premise about country music and the black community. New episodes continue to air weekly on Thursday nights, and although it’s just one more step in tackling a big and complex problem, Holly G says every little bit counts.
“It was great feeling empowered to provide the artists involved with resources specifically catered to them,” she says. “Our knowledge and understanding of our community paired with the extensive industry knowledge that WXPN provided enabled us all to have a great experience that was meaningful and substantial to everyone involved.”
Photo Credit: Rah Foard
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