The Field & Stream Music Fest, which had been slated for Oct. 3-5 in Winnsboro, S.C., has been canceled for 2025.
A statement from the festival’s organizers, posted on the festival’s website, noted, “Unfortunately, due to circumstances beyond our control, Field & Stream Music Fest has been canceled.”
Billboard has reached out to reps for the Field & Stream Festival for comment.
The festival was set to feature headliners Miranda Lambert, ZZ Top, Bailey Zimmerman, Lynyrd Sknynrd, Riley Green and Eric Church, with more performers on the lineup including Tyler Farr, Ashley McBryde, Ashland Craft, Kameron Marlowe.
The statement from Field & Stream Music Fest organizers added, “The refund process will commence immediately and will cover all Field & Stream purchases tied to your order, including tickets, upgrades, camping, parking, add-ons, taxes and fees.”
Last year, the festival was canceled due to Hurricane Helene. That year’s lineup was to feature Lainey Wilson, Church and ZZ Top, among others.
In early 2024, it was revealed that Church and Morgan Wallen were part of an ownership group that acquired the retail side of the Field & Stream trademark. That announcement also revealed plans to launch a fall music festival.
“I can remember my grandfather kept a few of his favorite Field & Stream magazines on the dash of his truck,” Church previously said in a statement. “That truck took us on hundreds of outdoor adventures and I all but memorized every story and every picture on every page. They were my Bible. It is the honor of my life to make sure that legacy carries on. It is both this responsibility to an American icon and also to a young boy in his papaw’s truck that will be the compass that guides our steps.”
Wallen previously said, “There’s nothin’ I love more than being with friends around a campfire, on a boat or in a deer stand — and Field & Stream represents all of those to me. Being part of its future is incredible and we want to keep bringing people together outdoors, makin’ memories, for generations to come.”
This story originally appeared on Billboard