Olivia Rodrigo’s all-female music festival will bring Chappell Roan, Mitski, Doechii and Katseye to Irvine, California, on August 29, 2026. The singer will launch Daisy Chain Fields at Great Park, with net proceeds supporting organizations that advocate for women and girls, as the Baltimore Chronicle editorial team notes.
Daisy Chain Fields Festival Lineup
Rodrigo will headline the one-day festival alongside performers from pop, rock, punk and alternative music. The program combines current chart stars with artists who influenced several generations of female musicians.
The announced lineup includes:
- Chappell Roan, Doechii, Katseye and Mitski
- Bikini Kill, Garbage, the Breeders and Die Spitz
- Rachel Chinouriri, Quiet Light, Eli and Not for Radio
- Special guests Stevie Nicks, Karen O and Sarah McLachlan
The broad selection gives the event a stronger identity than a standard celebrity-curated festival. It also places emerging performers beside established artists with decades of influence.
Key Daisy Chain Fields Festival Details
Rodrigo described the project as a long-held ambition built around music, community and social action.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | August 29, 2026 |
| Location | Great Park, Irvine, California |
| Headliner | Olivia Rodrigo |
| Format | One-day, all-female music festival |
| Beneficiaries | Charities supporting women and girls |
Presale access begins on June 24. Demand is expected to be substantial because several performers can headline major venues independently.
Olivia Rodrigo Expands Beyond Her New Album
The announcement follows the release of Rodrigo’s third studio album, You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love. The record became her third consecutive Billboard 200 number-one album.
Daisy Chain Fields now extends her influence beyond touring and recording. The festival links a commercially powerful lineup with a clear charitable purpose and could become a recurring event if its first edition succeeds.
Earlier we wrote about Do Homebuyers Need Title Insurance in 2026? Costs, Risks, and Policy Differences