The ACN Bus Is Headed to Country Thunder Wisconsin
The ACN Bus is getting ready to roll toward one of the biggest country weekends of the summer: Country Thunder Wisconsin.
But this trip is not really about the bus. It is about where the bus is headed.
Country Thunder Wisconsin returns to Twin Lakes, Wisconsin, July 16–19, bringing four days of country music, camping, crowds, late nights, big voices, and the kind of festival energy that reminds fans why summer and country music still belong together. For fans across the Midwest, Country Thunder is not just another stop on the calendar. It is a tradition.
Set at Shadow Hill Ranch, the Wisconsin edition has become one of Country Thunder’s signature gatherings. It brings together the full range of today’s country music: chart-topping stars, fast-rising newcomers, legacy names, rowdy singalong acts, and regional performers fighting for their next big break. It is the kind of lineup that gives fans a little bit of everything — radio hits, country-rock grit, red-dirt attitude, throwback favorites, and the new wave of artists reshaping the sound of the genre.
This year’s Wisconsin lineup is built around four major festival days.
Thursday opens strong with Gavin Adcock, whose high-energy rise has made him one of country’s most talked-about live acts. Also on the Thursday bill are Gretchen Wilson, George Birge, The Wilder Blue, and Mae Estes — a mix that gives the first day both edge and range. Wilson brings the kind of country-rock attitude that still lights up a crowd, while Birge and Estes represent the fresh Nashville class that has been finding its audience one song, one streaming playlist, and one stage at a time.
Friday brings The Red Clay Strays to the top of the card. That alone makes the day one of the weekend’s most interesting. The band has built a powerful reputation by blending country, Southern rock, soul, and old-school feeling into a sound that feels both timeless and current. Also scheduled for Friday are Ian Munsick, Mark Chesnutt, Zach John King, Hannah McFarland, and Charlie Argo. That is a smart blend: Munsick’s Western-flavored sound, Chesnutt’s classic-country credibility, and newer artists giving the day a strong discovery factor.
Saturday is built for the modern country crowd, with Riley Green leading the way. Green has become one of the format’s strongest voices for fans who still want country music rooted in small towns, real stories, family, work, and Southern identity. Joining him are Nate Smith, Dasha, Lonestar, The Jack Wharff Band, and Jay Webb. That gives Saturday a broad appeal — big contemporary hooks from Smith, crossover momentum from Dasha, a dose of 1990s and early-2000s familiarity from Lonestar, and newer names ready to win over festival fans.
Sunday closes with Keith Urban, one of country music’s most proven live performers. Urban’s festival sets are built on guitar work, energy, catalog depth, and a connection with the crowd that has made him a main-stage favorite for decades. The final day also features Shaboozey, Corey Kent, Tyler Nance, and Annie Bosko. Shaboozey’s presence adds one of the most modern and genre-blending names on the lineup, while Kent and Bosko help round out the day with strong contemporary country voices.
Country Thunder Wisconsin is also expanding beyond the main stage. The Lake Stage, presented by 102.3 The Coyote, is designed to spotlight more than 20 up-and-coming artists from Wisconsin and beyond. Names announced for that stage include Chad Carlson, RIPLOCK, Lola Blu, Burn n Bush Roseland, Austin Hopkins, Mac O’Brien, Lara Bell, Bootjack Road, Nate Venturelli, Kelly Daniels, SJ McDonald, and Noah Hicks. That matters because the future of country music often starts on side stages, local stages, and afternoon slots where fans stumble onto a name they did not know when they walked in.
The Songwriters Showcase also adds another layer to the weekend. Country music has always been built on songs first, and the showcase gives fans a closer look at the craft behind the hits. Announced performers include Ryan Beaver, Neil Medley, Chase McDaniel, Benjy Davis, Trent Wayne, and the American Songwriter Contest Winner on Sunday.
That is what makes Country Thunder different from a simple concert. It is a full festival ecosystem: the main-stage headliners, the campers, the local vendors, the rising artists, the late-night stories, the fans in boots and ball caps, the families who have made it an annual tradition, and the first-timers who arrive for one artist and leave with five new favorites.
Country Thunder has also become a true North American festival brand. The organization has operated festivals in Wisconsin and Arizona since the 1990s, Saskatchewan since the 2000s, Alberta since 2016, and Florida joined the family in 2019. The 2026 Country Thunder calendar has already included Florida in Clearwater, with headliners Gavin Adcock, Zach Top, and Kane Brown. Saskatchewan brought its own heavyweight lineup to Craven, with Riley Green, Creed, and Lainey Wilson among the top names. Country Thunder also has a Winnipeg stadium concert connection, with Bailey Zimmerman, Koe Wetzel, Josh Ross, and Robyn Ottolini tied to Princess Auto Stadium on July 3. Alberta, meanwhile, was canceled for 2026 due to conditions surrounding the Calgary site, including construction and sound-limit issues.
But this weekend, the spotlight shifts to Wisconsin.
For ACN, sending the bus to Country Thunder is a natural fit. It is where the fans are. It is where the artists are. It is where country music feels alive outside the studio, outside the charts, and outside the algorithm. Country Thunder Wisconsin is not just a lineup on a poster. It is a meeting place for the culture — a place where fans come together around songs, summer, camping, friendship, and the shared belief that country music is best experienced loud, live, and surrounded by people who came to sing along.
The ACN Bus is headed to Twin Lakes.
Country Thunder is waiting.

