
The Guide: Peter Kay, Camila Cabello, Galway Film Fleadh and other events to see, shows to book and ones to catch before they end
Peter Kay
Thursday, July 10th, until Saturday, July 12th, 3Arena, Dublin, 6.30pm, €180.75/€54.25 (Fri/Sat sold out),
ticketmaster.ie
After he won Channel 4's So You Think You're So Funny in 1997 (Tommy Tiernan won it a year earlier), the English comedian Peter Kay became a cult hit with his TV series Phoenix Nights, set in a working men's club in northern England. Within a couple of years he was one of Britain's best-known comedians, not least through his charity cover of (Is This the Way to) Amarillo, which became the UK's top-selling single of 2005. Kay, whose mother was born in Co Tyrone, set another record when he sold more than a million tickets for his standup tour of 2010-11. The Bolton comic didn't go on the road for more than a decade after that – his projects in the meantime included Peter Kay's Car Share, the BBC sitcom set largely in a Fiat 500L – but he's been selling out arenas again since 2022. This Better Late Than Never Again! tour made headlines in February when Kay had hecklers – just noisy fans, according to some of the people around them – thrown out of a show in Manchester. That won't deter long-term admirers. But perhaps don't get too rowdy if you're heading for 3Arena.
Gigs
Longitude
Saturday and Sunday, July 5th & 6th, Marlay Park, Rathfarnham, Dublin, 2pm, €199/€149.90/€99.90, ticketmaster.ie
Longitude: David Guetta
Ireland's premier dance/techno/hip-hop/house festival comes around again with another heavy-duty line-up that will keep arms in the air and legs on the move all weekend. Headliners include David Guetta and Belters Only, on Saturday; and 50 Cent and Sonny Fodera, on Sunday. Other acts to look out for across the two-day event include blk., Hannah Laing, A Boogie Wit da Hoodie and Patrick Topping. Keep an ear out, also, for Irish DJ talents such as Cody Wong, Robbie Doherty and Caz.
Ludovico Einaudi
Tuesday, July 8th, 3Arena, Dublin, 6.30pm, €106.25/€49.20, ticketmaster.ie
The Turin-born pianist and composer
came to prominence
in the 1990s through the use of his music in Italian-language films, but since the early 2000s – specifically through the use of his music in the British film This Is England – he has been one of the go-to ambient, neoclassical and electronic composers. Einaudi's latest album, The Summer Portraits, continues his fascination with quietude, so you are kindly advised to keep your thoughts to yourself until after the concert. Support comes from the British traditional/folk singer Sam Lee.
Coheed and Cambria/Alexisonfire
Tuesday, July 8th, Telegraph Building, Belfast, 7pm, £56.50; Wednesday, July 9th, National Stadium, Dublin, 7pm, €67.35, ticketmaster.ie
Sharing the spoils, creative or otherwise, is rare in many music genres, but this co-headline tour by New York's Coheed and Cambria, and Ontario's Alexisonfire makes amends. Each band is a law unto itself. The former's style is a mix of prog metal and alternative rock, while the latter has described their post-hardcore/punk-rock music as 'the sound of two Catholic high school girls mid-knife-fight'. Get there early for the support acts: Meryl Streek in Belfast, and Molly Vulpyne Band in Dublin.
READ MORE
Camila Cabello
Wednesday, July 9th, 3Arena, Dublin, 6.30pm, €181.75/€80.25/€75.25, ticketmaster.ie
Camila Cabello
The Cuban-Mexican singer and songwriter Camila Cabello has effortlessly graduated from her 2012 career start in the US version of The X Factor. As part of the girl group Fifth Harmony (formed by the X Factor judges Demi Lovato, LA Reid, Britney Spears and Simon Cowell), Cabello sold more than 30 million records. Her departure in late 2016 paved the way for a solo career that has progressed alongside her acting. Plugging C,XOXO, her 2024 album, Cabello tours Europe for the first time in seven years, and returns to Ireland for her first headline show.
Film
Galway Film Fleadh
Tuesday-Sunday, July 8th-13th, Pálás cinema/Galmont Hotel, Galway city, various times and prices,
galwayfilmfleadh.com
Ever since its foundation, in 1989, Galway Film Fleadh has prided itself as a festival of discovery, and this year's, the 37th edition, is no exception. An agreement with Galway City Council to reopen the city's arthouse Pálás cinema (which closed in February) has added a subtle wow factor to the scheduled programme of films. Documentary highlights include David Keenan: Words on Canvas, and In Time: Dónal Lunny. Many of the workshops, panel discussions, masterclasses and networking events take place at the Galmont Hotel.
In conversation
Ian Leslie on John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs
Wednesday, July 9th, Pavilion Theatre, Dún Laoghaire, Co Dublin, 8pm, €25,
paviliontheatre.ie
One of the best music books of the year is surely John & Paul: A Love Story in Songs. The book by Ian Leslie highlights (this paper's reviewer
noted
) 'insights heretofore unexplored, which alone makes [it] essential reading for fans'. Talking to Leslie about Lennon and McCartney and their songwriting processes are two avid Beatles fans, the writer Paul Howard and the musician and broadcaster Tom Dunne.
Literature
West Cork Literary Festival
From Friday, July 11th, until Friday, July 18th, Bantry, Co Cork, various venues, times and prices,
westcorkmusic.ie
Arriving bang in the middle of summer, this year's West Cork Literary Festival features high-profile actors (Richard E Grant on his recent memoir, A Pocketful of Happiness), film directors (Neil Jordan on
Amnesiac
, his nonfiction book from 2024), television personalities (Graham Norton, on his latest work of fiction,
Frankie
) and radio presenters (John Creedon, talking about his memoir,
This Boy's Heart
; and Ryan Tubridy, who will be interviewing Norton in a sold-out event at the Maritime Hotel on Friday, July 18th). Factor in a library of authors, including
Wendy Erskine
,
Ferdia Lennon
, Sarah Maria Griffin, Alan Hollinghusrt, Claire Kilroy and Eimear McBride, and you have little excuse not to attend.
Still running
Willie Clancy Summer School
From Saturday, July 5th, until Sunday, July 13th, Miltown Malbay, Co Clare, various venues, times and prices,
scoilsamhraidhwillieclancy.com
The annual Willie Clancy Summer School is pivotal in highlighting Irish traditional music more as a way of life than a passing interest. Visitors can expect a blend of emerging and established musicians, experienced through concerts, workshops and lectures. Also includes performances by the Kilfenora Céilí Band and the Tulla Céilí Band.
Book it this week
Poor, Gate Theatre, Dublin, September 26th-November 2nd,
gatetheatre.ie
Niamh Regan, Star Bar, Dublin, October 9th and 10th,
foggynotions.ie
Robert Forster & His Swedish Band, NCH, Dublin, October 15th,
nch.ie
Aisling Bea, Vicar Street, Dublin, March 18th, ticketmaster.ie

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Irish Times
22 minutes ago
- Irish Times
‘We grew up with them': Oasis fever hits Mayo as locals hope for visit after Croke Park concerts
The sun is shining across Market Square in Charlestown, Co Mayo, as a small gathering in the shade of Murray's Bar embraces the subject of the Gallagher brothers. The pub is one of the three watering holes in the east Mayo town that has regularly hosted the Oasis boys over the years. The discussion between Pat Flatley and Padraig Durcan is, like any good Irish debate, lubricated by early-afternoon pints of Guinness and the possibility of a tune or two. There is a resident guitar hooked up on the wall. Not that the details of their pronouncements about Noel and Liam Gallagher's maternal roots in the area, the recent sale of the family's holiday home and the last time the brothers visited will go unquestioned. READ MORE Barmaid Olive Durcan is a bit of an Oasis expert and, indeed, the only one of the three who happens to have a picture to prove her credentials. It is of herself with the younger Gallagher, Liam. Olive Durcan with Liam Gallagher in Charlestown in 2015 It may be from a decade ago, but what is the passing of time when you are talking about the most famous people to put this remote area on the world map? That is, other than the children who witnessed the apparition in Knock and Msgr James Horan who had a vision about 'a foggy, boggy hill' and an airport. 'I clearly recall that Liam did the three pubs they liked to visit that weekend,' Durcan tells The Irish Times. 'Johnny Finn's first of all, around the corner here; then ours, Murray's, it's a pub since 1868; and then over across the square to JJ Finan's, that would be their home pub. It's where their granny used to bring them after Mass on a Sunday because it's a shop too. 'I remember clearly when word got round that the boys were back in town; even if it was only Liam, everybody followed him. He played the guitar in JJ's and there was a big singsong.' Pat Flatley is strumming the tune of Wonderwall on his guitar as he waits for his pint. He says there is definitely a recording of Liam's session on YouTube, and he is correct. The video shows Liam playing his solo single, Bold, at a rowdy session in July 2015 to shouts of 'Go on, Gallagher.' Bold was subsequently on his hit solo album, As You Were. Of course, this was six years after the big split of Oasis in 2009. Older brother Noel had formed his new band High Flying Birds by the following year. There might have been rancour between the Gallagher brothers, but there was always hope, peppered with sentimentality, in this town of a reunion. It's where their mother Peggy was from and the place she fostered their Irish roots. It was, as Noel once confirmed drily, a place of haystacks, nettles and lots of childhood friends. 'Oh, we were so delighted to see them coming back together when it was announced last year,' Durcan says. 'People are expecting them to come to town either this week or next week. I have an inkling they'll come next week after the concerts.' Padraig Durcan, her brother-in-law, says: 'They have an aunt living out the road, so maybe they'll bring Peggy to see her.' He was a neighbour of their grandmother, Margaret Sweeney, and remembers them all attending her funeral in September 2000. 'She is long gone and her cottage in Sonnagh was sold, but they used to come into town with her and hang around with the local lads. Sure, they knew everybody,' he says. Across the street, Siobhán Brennan is busy in her boutique, Fashion Scene. Her eldest daughter, Sinéad, had flown in through Ireland West Airport Knock from London the previous night, Monday. It was a whistle-stop visit home. 'My three daughters are big Oasis fans, but they've already been to their concert in Wembley because they live in the UK now,' she says. 'Of course, they'd go again here if they could get tickets.' Sinéad Bailey is already in the queue back to London at Knock airport when The Irish Times catches up with her. 'It was so lovely to head to Wembley with my two younger sisters, Stephanie and Shona, and Billy my husband,' she says. 'Being from Charlestown, we've all loved Oasis from when we were younger. Well, basically we grew up with them, really.' She cherishes a grainy picture of herself in a Charlestown pub, aged about 11, with Liam. Almost 30 years later, it was off to an Irish pub in London for a few drinks before the Wembley concert. Sinéad, then 11, with Liam Gallagher in pub in Charlestown 'Obviously everyone who was in there were Irish and I was talking to a couple of lads living in Portsmouth and Kent and some people even travelled over from home to the concert as well,' she says. As they made their way to the stadium there were Oasis songs being played to the sound of all sorts of Irish accents in the queues, she says. 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The Irish Sun
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- The Irish Sun
Fuming Conor Benn fought to a ‘DRAW' by ex-Premier League star in brutal sparring session ahead of Eubank Jr rematch
FORMER Premier League star Troy Deeney had a fight with professional boxer Conor Benn as part of a reality TV show - and came away with a DRAW. The athletes came to blows in the latest series of 'Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins', where famous faces try to pass the notoriously difficult SAS selection test. 3 Troy Deeney and Conor Benn fought as part of a challenge on Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins Credit: Channel 4 3 The fight was stopped when Benn knocked Deeney to the ground Credit: Channel 4 3 The fight was deemed a draw Credit: Channel 4 Deemed "two of the physically strongest recruits on the course", they were paired together as part of a fighting challenge. Ex-Prem star Deeney attempted to attack Benn with a series of quick punches, while the pro boxer landed some powerful blows. The brawl ended with Benn landing a huge hit on the helmet of his opponent, sending him to the floor. Directing Staff member Jason Fox stopped the fight and said: "That was a f***ing good effort, a very good effort. READ MORE IN SPORT MORE MISERY Tyson Fury 'has no interest' in buying Morecambe as local club face liquidation "You both did what we asked of you, which was to go forward. "I'm calling it a draw." However, Benn was furious with the outcome and believed he should have won the bout. He later said to Deeney: "A f***ing draw?" CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Meanwhile, the former Watford man replied: "Feel my heart... I'm ready to kill someone. Lucky you can control it." Benn responded: "You've got more of a temper than me FYI. I still love you." Chris Eubank Jr vs Conor Benn 2 back on with date and location revealed for huge rematch But Deeney added: "Well you just dropped me in front of f***ing everyone. I'll get my own back." Reflecting on his fight with Benn, the former striker told talkSPORT last month: "We had a bit of a tear-up, yeah. "It was good fun, the programme is just one of those things I've always talked about doing. "When we filmed it, I was at a bit of a crossroads in my own journey as well, so it was just something I wanted to see what I could do, push my mind to. "Funnily enough actually, today is a year of not drinking, so it's been part of that process as well. "So yeah, had a nice little roll-around with Conor, and I'll let you know who wins." Meanwhile, Benn is due to fight Chris Eubank Jr in a rematch this November. He lost to Eubank Jr in April via unanimous decision.


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Secret Byrd at Kilkenny Arts Festival review: Exquisite singing, quietly searing playing
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