

Free. Live. Music. On the river.
The riverfront gets a soundtrack. Seven Saturdays at Riverfront Park.
A new tradition on the water
National funding. Homegrown River City soul.
The Walter Anderson Museum of Art secured national funding to bring the Levitt AMP program to Riverfront Park, a free three-year concert series in the heart of downtown Moss Point. It is presented by the Maddox Foundation, in partnership with the City of Moss Point and Moss Point Main Street.
Anderson painted this coast in pelicans, waves, and palmetto fans. That same block-print spirit runs through this series: open lawn, no front row or back row, everyone welcome, the river doing the rest.

Amplify pride
Turn up the volume on the River City’s character and the people who make it.
Free live music
High caliber artists and a wide range of genres, every show free to every neighbor.
A place to gather
An open, inclusive riverfront where the whole community comes together.
Fall 2026 · Saturdays
The lineup.
Seven Saturdays, seven headliners, one riverfront. Shows run 5 to 9 PM, with the September 19 Homecoming as an afternoon lawn party from 1 to 5 PM.








A landmark for the riverfront
The River City Guitar.
A new monumental steel sculpture rises at Riverfront Park, fusing Moss Point’s blues history, its timber and industry legacy, and its lifelong relationship to the water. It anchors one of the Coast’s most stunning downtown vistas, and it will stand long after the last encore.
Plan your evening
Bring a chair. Bring the family.
- Always free, always all agesNo tickets, no cover. Just show up.
- Riverfront Park5200 Main St, downtown Moss Point, on the Escatawpa.
- Saturdays, 5 to 9 PMExcept the Sep 19 Homecoming lawn party, 1 to 5 PM.
- Open lawnPack a blanket or a lawn chair and settle in by the water.
The Levitt AMP Moss Point Music Series is presented by the Maddox Foundation and is part of the national Levitt AMP program of the Levitt Family Foundation, which is supporting more than 900 free concerts in 90+ towns and cities across America in 2026. It is spearheaded by the Walter Anderson Museum of Art in partnership with the City of Moss Point and Moss Point Main Street, and is supported in part by the Mississippi Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts.