
BIIRD – have announced Belfast and Derry shows
BIIRD is a brand-new Irish trad supergroup made up of 11 of Ireland’s finest musicians, singers, lilters and lunatics. Bursting onto the scene Paddy’s 2024 at

BIIRD is a brand-new Irish trad supergroup made up of 11 of Ireland’s finest musicians, singers, lilters and lunatics. Bursting onto the scene Paddy’s 2024 at

Sometimes endings bring new beginnings, this was the case for Dublin based duo T R Y S T E. As Gabriel Gaba’s (vocals/guitar) previous project

Diamond-certified global superstar The Weeknd brings his record-breaking After Hours Til Dawn Stadium Tour to Croke Park for two shows on Saturday 22nd & Sunday 23rd August 2026, subject to licence. A limited number

Following on from the release of his EP ‘Travelling’, Finnian returns with his new single “Remember My Name”. Straight off the bat, “Remember My Name”

Multi-award-winningband Ye Vagabonds release their fourth album, and third for Rough Trade’s River Lea label, ‘All Tied Together’ on Jan 30th 2026. Listen to the first

Since her self produced and recorded EP We, Myself, I in 2021, touted as her finest and most honest work to date, Laura has been quietly working

Nearly two decades after first bursting onto the UK pop scene, JLS proved at Dublin’s 3Arena on Tuesday night that their energy and charm remain

Two decades deep, The Devil Wears Prada could easily have coasted on nostalgia but Flowers is proof they’re still pushing the limits of what metalcore

Due to phenomenal demand, superstar DJ producer, Calvin Harris has announced a second open-air summer 2026 show for Dublin, having sold out his Marley Park show in

GRAMMY Award winning band HALESTORM have shared their new two-track bundle of singles, the retrospective ballad ‘How Will You Remember Me’ and the sultry tribute to bisexuality ‘Like A Woman

Napalm Records is proud to announce the signing of EYE OF MELIAN – the Tolkien-inspired symphonic project founded by Martijn Westerholt (Delain) and Finnish vocalist Johanna Kurkela

Often depicted as a chameleonic artist who constantly ‘changes his style,’ Joe Jackson insists that most of his albums are in ‘his own mainstream’ – collections of