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Mostly Jazz, Funk & Soul Festival comes to Birmingham in July

Mostly Jazz, Funk & Soul Festival is scheduled to return to Moseley Park in Birmingham from Friday, July 10 to Sunday, July 12, 2026, placing a three-day music festival in one of the city’s distinctive green settings.

The event is listed by Visit Birmingham as taking place at Moseley Park, Moseley, Birmingham. Start and finish times have not been stated in the source listing, and no ticket price or booking detail is provided in the available event information.

For readers deciding whether to plan around it, the confirmed draw is straightforward: a festival built around jazz, funk and soul in Moseley Park, with the setting itself forming part of the appeal.

Confirmed date, venue and entry information

Detail What is confirmed
Event Mostly Jazz, Funk & Soul Festival
Dates July 10 to July 12, 2026
Venue Moseley Park
Area Moseley, Birmingham
Times Not stated in the source listing
Price Not stated in the source listing
Booking details Not stated in the source listing

The listing places the festival in the United Kingdom and gives Birmingham as the host city. The event brief identifies the timezone as Europe/London, but does not include daily gate times, stage times or end times.

That means anyone considering attending should treat the published date and venue as the firm planning points for now, while leaving room to check later for practical details such as times, entry arrangements and any price information when they are released by the event source.

Moseley Park is part of the festival’s identity

Mostly Jazz, Funk & Soul Festival is described in the source text as being set in the “truly beautiful and unique setting” of Moseley Park. The park is not just a backdrop in the listing; it is presented as one of the defining features of the event.

The brief does not list individual performers, stages, food stalls, accessibility arrangements or transport notes. It also does not name an organiser. For that reason, the useful confirmed picture is a narrower one: a Birmingham festival taking place across a July weekend in Moseley Park, with the music identity set by jazz, funk and soul.

That matters for planning because a park-based festival can shape the kind of day readers prepare for, even when the full programme has not yet been published in the available source material. The confirmed setting points to an outdoor festival environment rather than a single indoor concert listing.

Who this preview is most useful for

This event will be most relevant to people looking for a summer music festival in Birmingham, particularly those interested in jazz, funk and soul. It may also be useful for readers planning a July weekend around Moseley, provided they are comfortable waiting for fuller details on timings, prices and booking.

The available listing does not support claims about family suitability, age restrictions, accessibility provision, food options or travel advice. Those details should not be assumed from the event title alone.

For now, the safest way to plan is to note the three confirmed essentials: Mostly Jazz, Funk & Soul Festival, Moseley Park, Birmingham, July 10 to July 12, 2026.

Practical details still to check before attending

Before making firm plans, readers should look for updated information on opening times, ticket prices, booking method and any site-specific entry conditions. Those details are missing from the source text supplied for this preview.

The current event listing confirms the name, dates and venue, and identifies Visit Birmingham Events as the source context for the information. It does not provide a daily schedule, performer list, organiser contact, accessibility notes or transport guidance.

Source: Visit Birmingham Events

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Priya Marshall

Priya Marshall

Author

Priya Marshall covers Birmingham's events calendar through a public-interest lens, checking listings against venue notices, organiser updates and transport information before publication. She has reported on neighbourhood festivals, council-backed cultural programmes, road closures and accessibility issues across the West Midlands, with a focus on helping readers understand what is happening, what has changed and how local decisions affect community life

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