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Home Canadian news feed

Fewer superstars, more local talent: Inside this year’s Calgary Stampede concert lineup

WeMaple AI by WeMaple AI
July 1, 2026
in Canadian news feed
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Fewer superstars, more local talent: Inside this year’s Calgary Stampede concert lineup
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To many, the Calgary Stampede is known more for the music than the rodeo.

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With over 100 artists performing at the 2026 Calgary Stampede, coupled with many more playing adjacent festivals like Cowboys and Badlands, “The Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth” offers something for everyone musically.

“I think with the Stampede, it’s increasingly becoming less of just a country music festival,” CBC music columnist Jess Arcand said. “I think it has country roots of course, but the lineup increasingly reflects the listening habits of modern Calgarians.”

But this year’s lineup marks a significant detour from years prior — with fewer international superstars and more local artists headlining shows. Coupled with the aftermath of significant safety concerns raised at concerts last year, the 2026 lineup is noticeably different.

Previous lineups brought some of the most popular hip-hop artists in the world to the Calgary Stampede for free shows — names like Bryson Tiller, Logic, Lil Yachty and NBA legend Shaquille O’Neill’s musical alter-ego DJ Diesel — with those concerts cramming the Coca-Cola Stage and Big Four Roadhouse with out-of-control crowds of rowdy young fans.

This year, Arcand says she sees more of a focus on local talent.

Bijaan, SHY FRiEND, Sea of Lettuce, Kue Varo & The Only Hopes, and K. Raz & The Family are only a few of the Calgary-area acts performing at this year’s Calgary Stampede, encompassing a wide variety of genres.

To Arcand, the abundance of local musicians is the highlight of this year’s lineup.

“I think this year has some of the most local artists ever booked at the Calgary Stampede,” she said.

“The fact that a lot of these local artists I think are making such incredible music get to perform with nationally recognized artists … I’m excited to see how these, like, local artists really, like, step up their performance and translate what they’re doing on a small scale on such a big level.”

Harry Casey “couldn’t really believe it” when his group got the call from Stampede.

He’s part of Hip Hip Thursday, a Calgary collective blending everything from jazz and hip-hop to funk, indie and rock.

The group will play the Coca-Cola Stage on July 10, ahead of performances by Juno-winning Toronto artist Dylan Sinclair and four-time Grammy nominee Fridayy. 

“I never thought I would be up on that stage,” Casey said.

“It felt like a huge win for the community as a whole, for all the bands to get selected and put up there,” Casey said.

Bandmate Naomi Derksen echoed that sentiment.

“To see not only our name on that list but then so many local names of friends and peers and colleagues, it’s such incredible representation of Calgary this year,” Derksen said.

Beyond Calgary’s music scene, Canadian musicians are well-represented at the 2026 Calgary Stampede, with Ontario artists deadmau5 and Dax among the highest-profile headliners of the Coca-Cola Stage this year.

Dax, who has amassed over 40 million followers across social media platforms, is headlining two separate shows at this year’s Calgary Stampede.

In an interview with CBC News, the St. John’s-born, Ottawa-based artist highlighted how impressed he is with this year’s lineup.

“It’s a great thing that a Canadian festival has a lot of Canadian artists, I think as it should be,” Dax said.

“I think Canada has a lot of talent, especially per capita,” he said, pointing to the relatively high number of prominent musicians among Canada’s population of only about 41 million.

“I think we produce some amazing musical artists, and it’s been great to watch it grow, and I’m excited for it to continue to grow and I’m excited to be a part of that growth.“

Dax is playing the Stampede’s country-centric Nashville North on July 3 and the all-encompassing Coca-Cola Stage the following day — a reflection of his blending of country and hip-hop.

“With me it’s never really been about genres,” Dax said. “I think that’s why I’m able to sort of probably do both of these stages. It’s always just been about the words and the message.”

Neil Christopher, the Calgary Stampede’s manager of entertainment and festival experience, says the team starts looking at artists and planning for the next year’s festival 12 to 14 months in advance.

“We’re starting to look at next year already,” he said.

Christopher said the Stampede utilizes a “growth program” through which the organization fosters local Calgarian and Canadian talent.

“We do enjoy seeing local Canadian acts or local Calgarian acts kind of start as day bands on the Coke Stage, progress to support acts on the Coke Stage or on [the Big Four Roadhouse] and then end up becoming headliners in another stage like Nashville North or even Saddledome,” he said.

“We actually are really proud to foster and support the Canadian and the Alberta music industry, and the music scene here.”

But when it comes to booking the biggest stars, different strategies are employed.

Christopher pointed to A$AP Rocky, who became the first Stampede headliner to be announced this year back in January, as an example.

With A$AP Rocky currently on a world tour, Christopher said the team saw that as an opportunity to invite the New York rap icon to stop in Calgary and headline the Scotiabank Saddledome on July 4 for what’s arguably the Stampede’s biggest concert this year.

“I think when we bring someone like Rocky, that is on an established tour, those tours can be enormous, big production values, kind of a really amazing opportunity to augment the already amazing festival that we have on at Calgary Stampede,” Christopher said.

Last year, the Calgary Stampede said highly-publicized crowd safety concerns were going to be taken into consideration going forward.

A performance by Houston rapper Don Toliver — one of the most popular hip-hop artists in the world — at the Coca-Cola Stage last year led to a crowd crush, with some wondering whether the rapper was too popular to be headlining a free show in a relatively small venue.

Christopher said the safety of concertgoers is the “number one” priority of the Calgary Stampede.

That’s part of why the biggest headliners this year — A$AP Rocky and Alanis Morissette — are performing paid shows at the Scotiabank Saddledome, rather than the Coca-Cola Stage, where free concerts can amass out-of-control crowds.

“Bringing a Taylor Swift, or bringing someone kind of huge to the stage doesn’t really make a lot of sense,” Christopher said.

He said some Coca-Cola Stage shows by popular artists like Alessia Cara and Our Lady Peace could “draw some really great crowds,” but he doesn’t think those shows will “necessarily see the the crowds that we had last year.”

Three stabbings and reported crowd crushing in one night at the Calgary Stampede

Christopher said that while artists are booked well in advance, the Stampede actively monitors booked artists in the months leading up to the event — tracking whether they’re growing in popularity, going viral, releasing hits or winning awards. They then use that data to proactively plan crowd control.

Christopher said the entertainment team works very closely with internal public safety teams and the Calgary Police Service to understand how crowds move, and to ensure the venue remains safe for everyone.

Crowd control efforts a safety priority for Calgary Stampede this year

He said this year’s planning process also includes making physical changes to the stages to foster better crowd flow and allow the audience to “breathe” within the venue space.

With those new safety measures and a lineup he and others are excited about, Christopher has high hopes for this year’s event.

“I think this year, Calgary Stampede is going to have the best music festival that we’ve seen yet.”

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