SummerStage, a city outdoor performing arts festival, will be back for its 37th year this summer, bringing 80 shows to Central Park and 12 other neighborhood parks across the five boroughs, the City Parks Foundation announced Tuesday.

Concerts will take place this summer at Central Park, Jackie Robinson Park, Marcus Garvey Park and Tompkins Square Park in Manhattan, Brooklyn Bridge Park, the Coney Island Amphitheater and Herbert Von King Park in Brooklyn, Flushing Meadows-Corona Park and Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens, Crotona Park and the Williamsbridge Oval in the Bronx, and Clove Lakes Park and Stapleton Waterfront Park on Staten Island.

The shows will be free and open to the public, except for a handful of ticketed benefit concerts in Central Park.

“It’s an honor to bring to parks artists that are reflective of each neighborhood’s rich cultural fabric, whether these performers are familiar or completely new discoveries. Feeling the joy and wonder of live music with other New Yorkers is an experience that is unmatched and should not be underestimated. At a time when we are increasingly isolated, SummerStage uses our city’s parks — vital resources in every neighborhood — to connect audiences with each other in a very emotional and magical way and, ultimately, to create community,” Heather Lubov, the executive director of the City Parks Foundation, said in a statement.

SummerStage will get underway on June 10, when Alabama eight-piece soul band St. Paul and the Broken Bones takes the stage with Say She She and Mwenso & the Shakes at Central Park’s Rumsey Playfield.

The lineup of free concerts includes Horsegirl, Jason Moran, Kool & The Gang, Marisa Monte, Skip Marley, Tanya Tucker and The Comet is Coming.

Performers at the benefit concerts include Buddy Guy, Hippo Campus and Gus Dapperton, Manchester Orchestra and Jimmy Eat World, Mt. Joy and Regina Spektor.

SummerStage will commemorate the 50th anniversary of hip-hop this summer, with events “highlighting not only its history and significance to New York City but also the massive impact it has had on culture worldwide,” the City Parks Foundation wrote in a statement.