Olivia Rodrigo Reveals All-Women Festival Daisy Chain Fields

Olivia Rodrigo has announced Daisy Chain Fields, her debut music festival, starting at August 29 in Irvine, California. The singer broke the news on Instagram alongside a poster featuring the event’s lineup, writing that she’d “had a dream of doing this festival for years.” The festival centers on an all-women lineup and will donate 100% of its net proceeds to organizations supporting women and young girls which are; Baby2Baby, Jhpiego, National Institute for Reproductive Health, Black Mamas Matter Alliance, Johns Hopkins Center for Indigenous Health, National Women’s Law Center Center For Reproductive Rights, National Domestic Workers Alliance, Planned Parenthood and Freefrom

Rodrigo herself will take the stage alongside an impressive roster that includes Mitski, Garbage, Bikini Kill, the Breeders, Santigold, Rachel Chinouriri, Die Spitz, Eli, Not for Radio, and Quiet Life. Three special guests — Stevie Nicks, Karen O, and Sarah McLachlan.

Presale tickets go live at 10 a.m. PT on Wednesday, June 24. Fans can register at the Daisy Chain Fields website beforehand to receive a presale passcode. The festival echoes the spirit of Lilith Fair, the landmark all-women music event McLachlan launched in 1997 — a fitting connection, given that Rodrigo appeared in a 2025 documentary about it.

The announcement follows Rodrigo’s broader advocacy work: her Fund 4 Good initiative raised over $2 million during her Guts World Tour, and Planned Parenthood honored her with its Catalyst of Change award in 2025. Daisy Chain Fields arrives just ten days after the release of her chart-topping third album, You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love.

What Rodrigo has built here is a blueprint. Joy, community, and music as drivers of change — that idea shouldn’t stay in California. It should travel to your, theirs and ours countries, hug the women in your life today.

Author: TAKSIRAT
Taksirat Festival began as a small event (300–400 attendees) to address dissatisfaction with Macedonia’s cultural scene. Named after the Turkish word “taksirat” (meaning “misfortune”), it now hosts global stars and over 10,000 visitors, proving challenges can inspire growth, learning, and meaningful connections.

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