
Event guide: Olivia Rodrigo, Van Morrison, and the other best things to do in Ireland this week
Olivia Rodrigo
Tuesday, June 24th, Marlay Park, Dublin, 4pm, €119/€89.90 (sold out),
ticketmaster.ie
Olivia Rodrigo
's debut single, Drivers License, shattered one streaming record after another when it was released in 2021. Her life, she said at the time, 'shifted in an instant'. Rodrigo's combination of lyrically insightful piano ballads and streamlined pop-punk has helped to make her one of today's biggest stars. This open-air Dublin gig is the singer's second stop in the city on her Guts world tour, which is about to segue into a summer of outdoor dates that include Hyde Park in London and the pyramid-stage headline slot on the final day of this year's Glastonbury Festival, on Sunday, June 29th. Fans can expect a 20-song set featuring hits such as Good 4 U, Traitor, Bad Idea Right?, Happier, Enough for You, Drivers License and Brutal. Support comes from the excellent English singer-songwriter
Beabadoobee
and the rising Irish band Florence Road.
Gigs
Ani DiFranco
Sunday, June 22nd, NCH, Dublin, 8pm, €55/€45,
nch.ie
Ani DiFranco
By the age of nine
Ani DiFranco
was busking and playing cover versions of Beatles songs at bars and cafes in Buffalo, New York. Within a few years she was writing songs – and by the age of 15, when her mother moved to rural Connecticut, she was legally living as an emancipated minor. Since then DiFranco has lived by her own rules. In 1989 she founded the independent label Righteous Babe Records and developed a singular creative output that blends opinion, discourse, and manifesto. In other words? Pay attention.
Van Morrison
Monday, June 23rd, and Tuesday, June 24th, Europa Hotel, Belfast, 6pm, £331 (sold out) europahotelbelfast.com
Rumour on Cypress Avenue has it that
Van Morrison
is back in the game. With his recent album Remembering Now – his 47th studio work – gathering plaudits, and his 80th birthday on the horizon – it's on August 31st – there is an expectation that the prolific songwriter and performer will revisit his classic-era recordings for these two homecoming shows. The atmosphere is more that of a softly lit nightclub than of a sweaty venue, however: the ticket price includes a three-course gala dinner, plus birthday cake. With new music that references the romantic lyricism of his 1989 album, Avalon Sunset, Morrison appears to have emerged from a post-Covid fugue into, if not the mystic, then a latter-day phase of serenity.
Gang of Four
Thursday, June 26th, and Friday, June 27th, Button Factory, Dublin, 8pm, €40, ticketmaster.ie
After the deaths of their bandmates Andy Gill, in 2020, and Dave Allen, this year, Gang of Four's two remaining original members, Jon King and Hugo Burnham, soldier on. The band – augmented by the American musicians Gail Greenwood and Ted Leo – originally formed in Leeds in 1976, and they visit Dublin as part of their Long Goodbye tour. The shows will feature two sets: a track-by-track rundown of the band's punk/avant-garde 1979 debut album, Entertainment!, and a best-of selection of fan favourites.
READ MORE
Stage
Wreckquiem
From Thursday, June 26th, until Saturday, July 5th, Lime Tree, Limerick, 8pm, €28/€25,
limetreebelltable.ie
Pat Shortt
Is it really a problem if you own eight copies of Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band? Not if you're the owner of Dessie's Discs, a beloved if somewhat ramshackle second-hand-record shop that comes under threat of closure when redevelopment plans circle around it. At the heart of this new play by the award-winning playwright Mike Finn is the worth of community spirit, underdog tenacity and the obsessive nature of committed music fans. Pat Shortt, Patrick Ryan, Sade Malone and Joan Sheehy star. Andrew Flynn directs.
In conversation
Frank Skinner
Friday, June 27th, Seamus Heaney HomePlace, Bellaghy, Co Derry, 7.30pm, £22.50 (sold out),
seamusheaneyhome.com
You might not have associated one of Britain's best-known comedians with literature, but for the past five years Frank Skinner's acclaimed Poetry Podcast (now in its 10th series) has featured discussions on and explorations of a wide variety of his favourite poems and poets (including Personal Helicon by Seamus Heaney). Skinner is in conversation with the poet and critic Scott McKendry.
Classical
West Cork Chamber Music Festival
From Friday, June 27th, until Sunday, July 6th, Bantry, Co Cork, various venues, times and prices,
westcorkmusic.ie
Rachel Podger
With more classical performances than you can shake a violin bow at, this year's West Cork Chamber Music Festival once again presents a blend of prestige concerts, emerging musicians, sidebar events and interesting fringe shows. Highlights include Barry Douglas playing Schubert's Piano Sonata in A Minor (Saturday, June 28th, Bantry House, 7.30pm, €50/€40/€30), Meliora Quartet (Monday, June 30th, Amar's Cafe, Schull, 2.30pm, free) and the violinist Rachel Podger (Sunday, July 6th, St Brendan's Church, Bantry, 11am, €22/€16).
Literature/arts
Hinterland Festival
From Thursday, June 26th, until Sunday, June 29th, Kells, Co Meath, various venues, times and prices,
hinterland.ie
Heritage-town festivals don't come any sharper than Hinterland, which since 2013 has been bringing multidisciplinary artists and creatives to its base in Kells, Co Meath, for a four-day event that features history, literature, television, religion, memoir, music, futurism and current affairs. Must-see events include
Lara Marlowe
talking about How Good It Is I Have No Fear of Dying, her book with
Lieut Yulia Mykytenko
, the young commander of a Ukrainian drone unit; John Creedon on his acclaimed memoir, This Boy's Heart; John Banville discussing his latest crime novel, The Drowning; and the music journalist Simon Price talking about his love of The Cure.
Still running
Liam Gillick
Until Saturday, June 28th, Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, free,
kerlingallery.com
Mean Time Production Cycle, 2025
The latest exhibition by the British artist Liam Gillick, a 2002 Turner Prize nominee (and, with Sarah Lucas, Tracey Emin and Damien Hirst, one of the Young British Artists movement), features colourfully vivid work exploring forms of production in a postindustrial landscape.
Book it this week
Monty Franklin, Sugar Club, Dublin, September 17th, ticketmaster.ie
Clonakilty International Guitar Festival, Clonakilty, Co Cork, September 17th-21st,
debarra.ie
Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Vicar Street, Dublin, October 7th, ticketmaster.ie
Caribou, Vicar Street, Dublin, December 10th,
foggynotions.ie
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Sunday World
5 hours ago
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Sharlene Mawdsley puts GAA star boyfriend through his paces on training holiday
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Irish Times
9 hours ago
- Irish Times
Some might say the big Oasis payday is here: Gallagher brothers and Dublin city set for a bonanza
'Was it worth the £40,000 you paid for a ticket?' Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher asked the Cardiff crowd on the opening night of the band's reunion tour, which arrives at Dublin's Croke Park this weekend. His reference to the dynamic-pricing controversy that surrounded the sale of tickets for the tour – dubbed a 'cheeky quip' by the Daily Mail – was, of course, slightly exaggerated. But both the outlay for fans and the estimated payday for the Gallagher brothers from the Live '25 tour are not exactly modest. Some Might Say it is definitely, not maybe, enough to shell out for a Champagne Supernova or two. Let's start with the consumer spending side. Anyone lucky enough to get a standing ticket at face value for the Croke Park gigs on August 16th or August 17th paid €176.75, including the Ticketmaster service charge. Prices for seats without obstructed views were higher again still. READ MORE But, as almost everyone in the virtual queue for tickets soon found out, prices went up at Supersonic speed. Within an hour of the start of the general sale, as high demand triggered system crashes and error messages, the only tickets left on sale cost more than €400. Even the example of a fan who escaped the ravages of dynamic pricing and spent €176.75 for a single standing ticket at the 82,000-capacity Croke Park is on track to have a much bigger total outlay on the concert. Let's assume they have aged out of their original 1990s T-shirts – or ditched them in the years when Liam and Noel Gallagher seemed unwilling to ever share a stage again – and are now in sudden need of some Oasis-branded gig attire. A trip to the band's official merchandise pop-up store on St Stephen's Green could set them back €40 for a T-shirt and €30 for a bucket hat. How about pre-gig refreshments? Some Dublin hotels and restaurants have gone out of their way to say Hello to Oasis fans and make sure this opportunity to rake in some extra dough doesn't Slide Away. The adjacent Croke Park Hotel, owned by the Doyle Collection, is offering an all-you-can-eat (in 90 minutes) pre-concert barbecue for €50 per person. [ I'm going to Oasis both nights, tissues at the ready Opens in new window ] Think bingeing on burgers would only lead to mid-concert regret? Another Dublin hospitality outlet overtly targeting Oasis fans is Molloy's Pub on Talbot Street, which makes a virtue of the fact it has 'no food, just top pints and fast service' – plus a DJ playing some Oasis deep cuts 20 minutes' walk from Croke Park. Tot up the cost of food and drink, transport and maybe some merch and it's not hard to see why even those Oasis fans who managed to swerve the most expensive tickets could still end up spending more than €300, all in. And what about fans who need somewhere to stay overnight? Unless they have a friend with a spare sofa, they could be paying hundreds of euro more. Taylor Swift performs on stage during The Eras Tour at the Aviva Stadium last summer in Dublin, Ireland. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/TAS24/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management As soon as the Dublin dates were announced, prices for hotels in the city surged, with those looking to stay in three- and four-star accommodation asked to pay more than €400 for a room in many instances. A scan of available hotel properties on shows some last-minute Saturday and Sunday night availability in the city for less than this price, but it is limited. The Competition and Consumer Protection Commission , which last year opened an investigation into Ticketmaster's handling of the Oasis ticket sale , has published a list of tips on how to keep hotel costs down headlined 'Hotel price spikes – should you just Roll with It?' Its advice for finding 'relative value' when gigs are scheduled in Dublin includes considering a hotel outside the city centre in locations such as Tallaght, Swords, Citywest, Lucan or Clondalkin – options that, as it notes, involve higher transport costs and extra transit time. Calculating the economic benefits of hosting a gig or another major event is often more speculation than science. The key factor, however, is always the number of visitors who have travelled specially for the event. [ Taylor Swift announces imminent release of new album Opens in new window ] For example, the noticeable volume of Taylor Swift fans who flew in from the US for her three-night stint at the Aviva Stadium last June meant the Eras tour gave a 'boost' to the Dublin economy, though probably not by anything close to the €150 million sum – extrapolated from a flawed UK study – that circulated at the time. More sensibly, when Garth Brooks played five Croke Park dates in September 2022, Dublin Chamber estimated that 120,000 of the 400,000-plus attendees travelled from outside the Republic to see the country star and suggested that this could be worth €35 million to the economy. Will 30 per cent of the Oasis gig-goers this Saturday and Sunday also be from outside the State? That proportion could be on the high side, though if it was the case the two Oasis dates would be worth €14 million to the economy based on similar spending assumptions. But if we say 20 per cent of the total two-night capacity of 164,000 travel to Dublin from outside the Republic and spend, for example, €200 to share a two-person hotel room, €60 on food and drink and €30 on transport once they're here – expenditure that flows back to the local economy – that would work out as a consumer spending injection of €9.5 million. What we do know for sure is that the gigs will have attracted significant overseas interest, if only because tickets for the Dublin gigs went on sale a full hour before they did for UK cities and British fans didn't want to miss out on any chance to see the band. [ 'The best night out': The Gen-Z 'Ticketmaster warriors' spending €1,500 a year on gigs Opens in new window ] But while the Oasis gigs and the Robbie Williams concert that follows on August 23rd won't exactly do the economy or the GAA's stadium rental revenues any harm, they likely won't be as lucrative as two other events at Croke Park this year. The Aer Lingus College Football Classic between Kansas State and Iowa State later this month and September's NFL game between Pittsburgh Steelers and Minnesota Vikings are both expected to lure substantial numbers of high-spending US fans for several days – a huge spending boon compared with mini-breaking gig tourists. As for how much the Gallagher brothers will make, estimates vary, but one early report by academics at Birmingham City University estimated that the brothers would earn £50 million (€58 million) each from the 14 dates that were initially announced for Britain and Ireland. That tally soon increased to 17 concerts, with dates subsequently announced for the US, Canada, Mexico, South Korea, Japan, Australia, Argentina, Chile and Brazil. This took the full tour up to 41 dates, swelling the total payout considerably. The other band members on the tour will be earning much less, while if Noel Gallagher , as the songwriter, opts to sell his rights to the band's master recordings in the future, the uptick in streaming of Oasis songs triggered by the tour will enhance their value, meaning he should clean up more than his younger brother. Whatever the actual bonanza, it's clear there is money in nostalgia, in suspending brotherly hostilities and, most of all, in being a Rock 'n' Roll Star.


The Irish Sun
9 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Love Is Blind UK star Sophie caught the attention of Hollyoaks star before show
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Read More on Love Is Blind Unblinded Where the Love Is Blind UK series one stars are now from engagement to baby news She will make her debut on the Netflix show with its second series which launches today. Sophie has been described as confrontational and argumentative and won't stop until she has her own way. This fiery nature could cause the star to develop rifts with her potential partner earlier on due to her desire to look for a row. Although she if often found locked in a heated argument, Sophie has confessed there is a quieter side to her personality which she rarely ever shows. Her fear of having her heart broken is the real reason why the 28-year-old has never formed a long-lasting connection. Teasing what to expect from Sophie during the show, Netflix said: "To make it work with Sophie, her partner will have to break down her walls — and gain the approval of her very protective dad and four brothers." Love Is Blind UK cast revealed Married presenters Matt and Emma are returning to front the unconventional reality show which discovers whether love really is blind. Speaking of the new series, the streaming giant explained: "The UK and Ireland-based singles who want to be loved for who they are have signed up for a less-conventional approach to modern dating, and will choose someone to marry without ever meeting them. "Over several weeks, the newly engaged couples will move in together, plan their wedding and find out if their physical connection matches their strong emotional bond developed in the Pods. "When their wedding day arrives, will real-world realities and external factors push them apart, or will they marry the person they fell blindly in love with? "Hosted by Matt and Emma Willis, this series will uncover whether looks, race or age do matter, or if love really is blind." Meet the cast of Love is Blind UK HERE is the full list of hopeless romantics looking to find love... AARON is a 33-year-old chicken restaurateur from Milton Keynes whose best friend is England footballer Ivan Toney. BENAIAH is 33 from Preston and works as a structural landscaper who travels the world. STAFFORDSHIRE-born Bobby is 33 and works as a globe-trotting luxury shopping guide. CATHERINE, 29, works as a dental nurse from Jersey who is adopted. CHARLIE is 34 from Hertfordshire and is general manager of a gym. DUBLIN-born Conor is 31 and is the owner of a health food business . LONDONER Demi is a 30-year-old safeguarding and attendance manager. SOCIAL worker Ella is from Derbyshire and is 27 years old. GRAPHIC Designer Ellis is 27 from London and says she was raised by her dad who is "husband goals". FUNERAL director Freddie is 32 from Bolton and has a brother with Down's Syndrom. 32-year-old Jake from Leicestershire is a civil engineer who tragically lost his mum. MENTAL Health Nurse Jasmine is from London and is 29 years old and grew up in the Phillipines. JOANES is a resident service manager who was born in Angola but lives in Luton and is 33 years old. FASHION tech founder Jordan is 33 years old and lives in Surrey. LISA is a baby photographer from Edinburgh and is 34 years old. MAKE-UP artist Maria is 30 from Southampton and was devastated by the death of her dad in 2020 during Covid. NATASHA, 32, is a career coordinator from Cheshire and wants to find her forever love like her parents who have been married for 42 years. HEAD of brand and marketing's Nicole is 29 from Surrey and was previously married, but hasn't given up on love. CREATIVE project director Olivia is 28 from London but has lived and worked in Los Angeles. OLLIE works in software sales, lives in London and is 32 but hasn't been in a serious relationship for six years. 37-year-old Priya, who was once engaged for 24 hours, is from Berkshire and works as a procurement manager. RIA is 34 from London and her job is a commercial contracts manager. SPORTS-mad Richie is a 30-year-old from Gloucestershire who works as a sports turf maintenance director. TECHNO DJ and Cellist Ryan is 31 from Edinburgh, but was born in Korea. SABRINA, 35, is a director of marketing and communications from Belfast who describes herself as "unlucky in love". SAM is a 31-year-old Londoner who works as a product design manager and is desperate to find The One. MUSIC boss Sharlotte, 35, London, is a global communications director at Universal. JUNIOR Doctor Shirley, 27, is from London, but was born in the Netherlands and falls for emotionally unavailable men. STEVEN is 37 years old from London and is a gym owner. 38-year-old Tom is a PR and advertising consultant from London who describes himself as a mummy's boy. 5 Gary has been following the upcoming TV star on social media Credit: Getty