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Pitchfork Music Festival: Nine bands and artists not to be missed

This weekend, Pitchfork Music Festival will open its gates to music lovers from all over and celebrate its 13th year.

The festival, taking place Friday to Sunday (July 20 to 22) at Chicago’s Union Park, provides a canvas for the folks at Pitchfork to bring their website to life, giving attendees a chance to see a well-woven tapestry of heavy hitters and up-and-coming artists performing on the large stage. It also maintains an intimate and laid back feeling when compared to some of the mega festivals out there.

This year’s headliners include acts such as Tame Impala, Courtney Barnett, Fleet Foxes, War On Drugs, and Lauryn Hill, who provides a 20th anniversary performance of The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Creativity, diversity, and passion are equally celebrated at the festival, not just on the stage, but also amongst the various activities being presented this year -- with fairs for crafts, records, posters and books taking place throughout the weekend. Pitchfork is also partnering this year with RAINN (Rape, Abuse & Incest National Network) to bring an eye and an ear to the cause of fighting sexual violence.

Tickets, both single day admission ($75) and 3-day passes ($175), are still available. For those attending, or those still on the fence, we've compiled a quick preview highlighting nine bands and artists worth circling on the schedule. With a lineup as deep at Pitchfork Music Festival's, we could have gone longer, but these are the acts that we're most excited to catch this weekend.

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The War On Drugs, performing Saturday @ 7:25 p.m.

Adam Granduciel’s music was catapulted into the mainstream this year when his band The War On Drugs won a GRAMMY for Best Rock Album. While those awards can usually be taken with a grain of salt, the Philly band has been hard at work crafting their sound for years, blending familiar retro sounds over a usually driving reverb soaked guitar landscape. In the years since Kurt Vile split off from the band to make his own music, Granduciel has been perfecting his craft and striking gold with the last two albums, A Deeper Understanding and Lost in the Dream. Aside from the accolades for their recorded music, they put on a show that takes the audience away, somewhere between then and now.

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