In a performance that was as much a cultural statement as it was a musical showcase, Chicago-based Ghanaian artist Queen Drie made a triumphant debut at Summerfest 2026, opening the T-Mobile Stage on Juneteenth.
Summerfest, widely recognized by Guinness World Records as "The World's Largest Music Festival," is held annually at the Henry Maier Festival Park along the scenic shores of Lake Michigan. This year's star-studded lineup boasts heavyweights like Post Malone, Jelly Roll, Megan Moroney, Buju Banton, Ed Sheeran, and Don Toliver. Yet, the afternoon of Friday, June 19, belonged to a rising voice who infused the massive festival with great cultural pride, spiritual intention, and infectious Afropop rhythms.
Drie's setlist leaned into that timing when she performed "Authenticity," "Get Up," "Nothing Is the Same," and two unreleased records, "Goated" and "Paradise," an Afropop collaboration with DJ Rymzy. The "Goated" performance became the visual centrepiece of the set, with dancers taking the stage waving Ghanaian and Pan-African flags in a moment built around the Juneteenth holiday.
Speaking to American media, CBS 58 ahead of her performance, Queen Drie said performing on Juneteenth carries added meaning for her, tying the holiday directly to the themes she builds her artistry around: freedom in its many forms, joy, and mental and spiritual liberation. That framing shaped the entire afternoon set, which played as much like a statement as it did an introduction to a new audience.
The performance also placed her on a bill with real visibility. Queen Drie opened the T-Mobile Stage in the early afternoon; R&B artist and actor Tyrese closed it that night, part of an opening weekend lineup that included Don Toliver, Post Malone, Jelly Roll, Megan Moroney, Buju Banton with Stephen Marley, and Ed Sheeran. For Milwaukee audiences arriving for the marquee names, Drie's set offered something more specific: a Ghanaian artist claiming Juneteenth as her own on one of the largest stages in American music.
Summerfest itself carries its own weight in the music world. Held annually in downtown Milwaukee since 1968, the festival sprawls across Henry Maier Festival Park along Lake Michigan, next to the city's Third Ward. It holds the Guinness World Records title for World's Largest Music Festival, a certification it has carried since 1999, and the 2026 edition spans three weekends with more than 150 acts.
For Queen Drie, the debut adds another marker to a catalogue already rooted in Ghanaian and diasporic sound, and one that used a major American festival stage to make a specifically Ghanaian and Pan-African statement on a day built around freedom.



