Doll Fest, returning this weekend for Volume II (Sat/28–Sun/29 at Oakland’s Oakstop California Ballroom), was born out of founding director and talent buyer Maria Chaos’s growing frustration with man-stream festivals like Coachella, Lollapalooza, and Austin City Limits.
The experience had become so predictable that she knew exactly what to expect beforehand: The same white male artists get top billing, the women and people of color are relegated to early spots, and the trans and nonbinary communities remain peripheral.
“Consistently watching all white man bands regularly filling the stages and lineups at festivals [while claiming] they were open to diversity without any follow-through,” Chaos says of her experience at previous fests. “The most diverse part of the music festivals I had attended domestically and internationally all had that issue… So, really just anger at the patriarchy.”
That frustration morphed into Doll Fest, the femme-fronted, femme-run, all-ages festival that doesn’t just talk about inclusion, it builds itself around it.

Following its debut last year at Cornerstone Craft Beer & Live Music in Downtown Berkeley, the festival returns bigger, but still rooted in the same DIY ethos. And the lineup reflects that intention.
At the top, Bad Cop Bad Cop brings its hook-heavy, no-nonsense punk energy, while War On Women channels blistering, politically charged hardcore. Girl in a Coma adds a darker, melodic edge, and Descartes A Kant pushes things into theatrical, genre-defying territory—part performance art, part controlled chaos. It’s the kind of top line that feels deliberate, not just in sound but also in presence.
Elsewhere, the bill stretches in every direction: VIAL’s scrappy, internet-bred punk urgency; Wheelchair Sportscamp’s sharp, irreverent blend of hip-hop and punk; The Dreaded Laramie’s witty, heart-forward indie rock; Suzie True’s dreamy, emotionally raw pop; and Oceanator’s soaring, introspective indie that lands with weight. Audiences can drift between sets and still feel like they’re in the same conversation, even as the sounds shift.
Oh, there’s more: Bitchfit (riot grrrl fury), Pretty Frankenstein (garage rock with teeth), Voluntary Hazing (rowdy ska-punk), Wonderland Rejects (glam-kissed alt attitude), and Black Gold Sun (lush, genre-blurring indie).
When asked about her booking process, Chaos says, “This is a complex question with many factors. But one point: if the band aligns with every part of our mission, they are already 50 percent in.”

For the Oakland weekend, part of the proceeds will benefit the Transgender Law Center—making the festival not just a gathering but a form of support in a moment when visibility and solidarity matter.
“The transgender community is specifically being targeted right now, and they are doing amazing work trying to push back,” Chaos says. “Doll Fest is a celebration of community and of helping one another through this hard time. The next step is always to have a charitable aspect to each of our events. It feels like the right thing to do. We are not a nonprofit, but we want to support nonprofits.”
Still, even with that clarity of vision, there’s always a little uncertainty.
“I always worry that an event won’t be successful, but I can’t turn it off,” says Chaos. “Seeing the success [of the inaugural] Doll Fest—everyone was having so much fun, from the attendees to the bands to the staff—made it a very magical event.”
The year’s festival kicks off with an official Pre-Party (Fri/27 at Albany’s Ivy Room). Chaos wants attendee to leave with the knowledge that “they are part of the Doll Fest Fam, and they always have a fun, safe, community event to go to, no matter what or where it is,” says Chaos.
DOLL FEST VOLUME II runs Sat/28-Sun/29 at Oakstop California Ballroom, Oakland. Tickets and more info here.
DOLL FEST VOL II PRE PARTY! w/ SKIP THE NEEDLE Fri/27. Ivy Room, Albany. Tickets and more info here.


