LEXINGTON, Ky. ā€” Kristen McClure is a single mother, works a full-time job as a RV salesperson, and plans the annual Hollergirl Music Festival. The event is a safe space for domestic violence survivors and raises money for domestic violence support groups.


What You Need To Know

  • Kristen McClure came up with the idea for the Hollergirl Music Festival in Feb. 2022 and held the first one on August of that year

  • The goal of the festival is to support domestic violence survivors by providing a safe space for them and raising money for organizations that work with survivors

  • The festival also serves as a way to support local female musicians 

  • McClure spends a lot of time throughout the year planning the festival while raising two daughters and working a full-time job

McClure is a domestic violence survivor and her experiences, along with her grandmother, who was also a survivor, made her passionate about raising awareness of the issue.

ā€œMy dark past kind of helped, helped kind of mold who I am today and helped me realize what my purpose was in this life,ā€ said McClure.

John Soper (left) and Sarah Fightmaster (right) got together at Fightmasterā€™s house to practice for an upcoming show. (Spectrum News 1/Geraldine Torrellas)

In Feb. 2022, McClure thought of a way to combine her love for music with supporting local female musicians and domestic violence survivors. In August of that same year, she held the first-ever Hollergirl Music Festival.

ā€œWomen donā€™t get enough recognition, period, for what they do, and Hollergirl is very much about that,ā€ said McClure.

The festival brings people of all ages together for a few days of music, camping and different activities. The goal is to create a safe space for domestic violence survivors and those currently going through it.

ā€œTo me, itā€™s one of the most important things Iā€™ve ever done besides having children,ā€ said McClure. ā€œItā€™s that big to me.ā€

Sarah Fightmaster and John Soper perform together under the name Stoner Creek Shakedown. This August will be their third straight performance at the Hollergirl Music Festival.

McClure (right) works at a RV dealership in Lexington. She has been working there for about six months. (Spectrum News 1/Geraldine Torrellas)

ā€œSheā€™s (McClure) created this community of women, of like really empowered women, thatā€™s spreading,ā€ said Fightmaster. ā€œEvery year we pick up, you know, a new woman here or there that, like, has their own unique talents and gifts and itā€™s really amazing kind of how the community has grown.ā€

Even though McClure may have her hands full between raising her children, working full time, and planning the festival, for her, itā€™s worth it. The Hollergirl Music Festival is important to her to not just help others, but to also set an example for her two daughters.

ā€œHollerGirl is my passion, itā€™s what I want to do in my life, itā€™s what I want to do for me, itā€™s what I want to do for others, and itā€™s what I want to do for them (McClureā€™s daughters),ā€ said McClure.

McClure believes that music heals and wants to spread that to others.

In addition to the music, there will be a silent art auction with proceeds going to GreenHouse 17 and Oasis Farms, two organizations that support domestic violence survivors.

The festival will take place Aug. 1-3. To look at the lineup, get tickets, and find more information, visit their website.