logo
Here comes the summer... 10 of the best music festivals in Ireland

Here comes the summer... 10 of the best music festivals in Ireland

Irish Examiner14-05-2025
Love is a Stranger
Juniper Barn, Ballymote, Co Sligo May 17
Headliners: Crazy P (DJ), Susan O'Neill, God Knows
From the team behind Another Love Story, Love is a Stranger is an even more boutique option. The second edition of the festival comprises a small melange of genres, bands, and DJs from around Ireland to help kickstart festival season. There are woodland glades and the Juniper Lake, complete with sauna and swimming deck. As they say themselves, it's a showcase of all of the beauty and richness of the Sligo countryside as summer on the West coast blooms - and there's also a kids corner. But don't let all that overshadow the music. The world famous Crazy P continue their mission to spread the message of disco unity via their DJ sets while Dean Bryce makes his debut Irish bow.
Tickets: €95.50 (overnight camping); €65.50 (day attendee) €125 (family - two adults, two children)
Forbidden Fruit
IMMA, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin City May 31-June 1
Underworld, Jamie xx, Peggy Gou, Caribou
Forbidden Fruit has been running for over a decade and has solidified itself into a stellar dance-oriented event. Peggy Gou gave Kylie Minogue a run for her money at Electric Picnic last year and should draw a huge crowd, while Dan Snaith's Caribou play their first irish show since the release of their 2024 record Honey. Underworld released their latest album Chaos Saucer at the start of March, showing they've still got it in their fifth decade together. As well as the big names, Forbidden Fruit also boasts one of the buzziest acts around in New York's Fcukers, last seen supporting Confidence Man at the Olympia - uber cool.
Tickets: Weekend tickets €174, day tickets €79.50
In the Meadows
IMMA, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin June 7
Gilla Band
Iggy Pop, Slowdive, the Scratch, Gilla Band
Last seen here at All Together Now 2023 struggling a little to throw himself around the stage as much as he did in the 70s - though putting on one of the loudest festival sets we've ever heard - Iggy Pop returns to headline the second outing of In the Meadows. Affectionately known as Lankum-fest last year, it featured a superb lineup curated by the trad powerhouse. In the Meadows has broadened in scope this year, with a healthy mix of Irish acts spread across the lineup. Coming a week after Forbidden Fruit, it can feel a little like the calm after the storm, but once 'I Wanna be Your Dog' hits, all bets are off.
Tickets: €75
Beyond the Pale
Glendalough Estate, Co Wicklow June 13-15
Jon Hopkins, TV on the Radio, Ezra Collective, Broken Social Scene
Any music fans who came of age amid the blogosphere in the mid 2000s will have Beyond the Pale circled on their calendar this year after the announcement of TV on the Radio and Broken Social Scene, indie darlings who have eluded these shores for too long - this will be their first show in Europe since 2018 . Expect tears when the latter drop 'Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl'. A week earlier than their usual summer solstice listing, Beyond the Pale has cemented itself as a mid-sized, music-focused offering and while there are few accoutrements, the variety on stage will more than suffice.
Tickets: Three-day camping €238.95, Sunday day tickets €99
Night & Day
Lough Key Forest Park, Boyle, Co. Roscommon June 27-29
Jose Gonzalez, KT Tunstall, The Stunning, The Wailers
An over-20s event that also caters to families, Night & Day returns for its fourth edition at the end of June. Thanks to its location at beautiful Lough Key Forest Park, as well as the music there are activities including zip-lining courses, forest trails, boat tours, and a tree-top walk. Jose Gonzalez is making his only Irish appearance of the year at the festival and it's also nice to see Scottish singer-songwriter KT Tunstall on the bill. Sultans of Ping, Fionn Regan, and Lisa Hannigan also feature, while newer Irish acts like Skinner (post-punk) and Dug (folk) offer a glimpse of the future.
Tickets: €55 (Friday), €88 (Saturday and Sunday), €185 weekend camping
Longitude
Marlay Park, Dublin July 5-6
David Guetta, 50 Cent, Belters Only, Sonny Fodera, AJ Tracey
AJ Tracey.
It's over 10 years since David Guetta last played in Ireland (Oxegen 2013), so what a coup for Longitude to get him to headline - 2013 was also the year when Longitude started up, with a very different outlook; headliners then included Vampire Weekend and Kraftwerk). Now Longitude is like Oxegen lite, a heady mix of the hottest rap and dance acts around. Belters Only have gotten used to the biggest stages, regularly selling out the 3Arena, while AJ Tracey is one of the most exciting names in rap right now. There's no overnight camping, though, which people travelling from outside of Dublin might note.
Forest Fest
Emo Village, Co Laois July 25-27
Franz Ferdinand, Manic Street Preachers, Travis
The brainchild of solicitor Philip Meagher, in his fifties, a father of two from Portlaoise, he created the festival after finding he couldn't relate to existing events. 'I genuinely wanted to create a local alternative to Electric Picnic and do it at a more intimate, indie level with the highest quality bands and a really good experience for an older audience,' he has said in the past. It's grown over the years - 2025 is the fourth edition of Forest Fest, boasting a capacity of 12,000 - into a fully fledged alternative that skews to the wisened, grizzled festival veteran. Orbital are rubbing shoulders with Nick Lowe and Billy Bragg; the Forest Fleadh stage features Mary Coughlan and Sharon Shannon, among more; and there's an 'Ibiza Rewind' stage too.
Tickets: Day tickets €85, weekend tickets €240.
All Together Now
Curraghmore Estate, Co Waterford July 31-August 3
All Together Now. Photo: Joe Evans
Fontaines DC, Nelly Furtado, Bicep (Chroma AV DJ set), London Grammar
The sixth edition of ATN has sold out well in advance - no surprise considering it boasts an incredible lineup headlined by Choice Music Prize winners Fontaines DC. Wet Leg and Michael Kiwanuka are stellar bookings likely drawing disparate crowds, while CMAT is rightly near the top of the bill. Currently on tour supporting Sam Fender around Europe, expect cowboy hats in various shapes and colours to dominate the beautiful estate site. Featuring beautiful bespoke stages and areas - including the stunning 360-degree-sound experience of the Immerse by AVA stage - there's so much to discover at All Together Now.
Tickets: Sold out, no day tickets
Another Love Story
Killyon Manor, Co Meath August 23-24
John Talabot, Fionn Regan, Anna B Savage
Heading into its 11th year, Another Love Story is slimming down to a 1.5-day offering in 2025 - proceedings usually finish up around 6pm on the Sunday, offering punters time to get home to their own bed and set for work on Monday morning. Despite being hit by god-awful weather in the past couple years, the boutique festival (fewer than 2,000 attendees) always has the best vibe, along with lots of kids running around and dogs helping appease weary heads. The music is a brilliantly curated mix of DJs from home and abroad and bands mostly from the folk and indie world. The Treehouse, hidden away in the forest, is probably the best-looking festival stage in Ireland.
Tickets: €115 (Saturday), €65.50 (Sunday), overnight tickets sold out
Electric Picnic
Stradbally, Co Laois August 29-31
Kings of Leon.
Hozier, Chappell Roan, Sam Fender, Fatboy Slim, Kings of Leon
The big one caps off the festival summer. Twenty-one years on from its boutique debut, Electric Picnic sells out as soon as tickets go on sale, with the lineup still under wraps five months out. It's such a huge site, with tonnes of areas to explore, from the Salty Dog to the Trailer Park, with pop-up quizzes and installations to entertain you on your journey. Electric Picnic in 2025 is whatever you want it to be. As for rumours, Sam Fender, Chappell Roan, and Hozier are some of the big names linked with an appearance, while Post Malone has August 31 free after a gig in Munich the previous night. The Wolfe Tones, who got one of the biggest crowds in the festival's history on Sunday afternoon last night, could finally bid their final farewell with a headline slot.
Tickets: Sold out
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Give me Helen Mirren's refusal to ‘age gracefully' over the tech bros who refuse to age at all
Give me Helen Mirren's refusal to ‘age gracefully' over the tech bros who refuse to age at all

Irish Times

time43 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Give me Helen Mirren's refusal to ‘age gracefully' over the tech bros who refuse to age at all

My mother recently attended the funeral of an acquaintance. In true Irish mammy fashion, she relates these outings with a detour through the family tree of the deceased: 'Her youngest was great friends with your older brother when they were in play school ... a very clingy child.' This woman – let's call her Janet – was always a great beauty, my mother tells me. At 80 she was still handsome – a face you would stop to look at on the street. Janet, it turns out, was striking even in repose. My mother describes how elegant she looked, laid out – like a much younger dead woman. 'An ageless beauty,' she pronounces. While I draw the line at worrying how I'll look in an open casket, I'm not immune to the allure of ageing gracefully. It's the promise behind the peptide serum I bought last week without knowing – at all – what a peptide is. It's an ideal I see presented more and more by luxury brands. Joni Mitchell channelling chic Americana for St Laurent, Joan Didion a kind of cerebral restraint for Celine. Actresses like Meryl Streep, Iman and Helen Mirren also embody what it means to age gracefully. Inspired by this 'ageless beauty' trend, my personal ambition is to look like Olwen Fouéré when I'm older – elegant, sharp, a little formidable. Never mind that Fouéré has the cut glass cheekbones of a Celtic Goddess and mine are procured with a contouring crayon clutched in my fist. I won't look like Fouéré in 20 years, any more than I'm going to wake up at 60 and suddenly play the trumpet. 'But seriously, Mum, you don't look that old,' my eight year old told me last week apropos nothing. (Why? When did he learn that looking old is bad?). 'You don't look 40. You could pass for ... 38.' A devastating pause as he takes me in, slumped on the couch in my pyjamas ' ... 39' Ageing is so undignified. READ MORE Mirren agrees. 'I'm not ageing gracefully at all. I hate that term,' the actress said last week, when asked to reflect on turning 80. 'We just do grow older, there's no way you can escape that. You have to grow up with your own body, your own face and the way it changes.' I think – somewhat unkindly – that it's easy for the genetically blessed to dismiss our anxieties about ageing. By refusing to entertain the concept, isn't Mirren simply refusing to play a game she has already won? And isn't that what beauty, youth and elegance is all about? 'Graceful ageing' is code for look good, but don't try hard; accept decline, but discreetly correct it; grow old, but make it luxury. It's the kind of grace that takes a lot of free time and even more money. 'It's not always easy but it is inevitable.' Mirren says of the ageing process. 'You have to learn to accept it.' Or not. While many in the entertainment industry aspire to the sort of 'natural' ageing that takes a top-notch aesthetician, a billionaire class has emerged who want to conquer age entirely. Jeff Bezos has poured billions into Altos Labs, a research institute working to halt or reverse the ageing process. Peter Thiel – who else? – is a patron of Aubrey de Grey's LEV Foundation , which aims for 'longevity escape velocity', adding more than one year of life expectancy per year of research. Recently Thiel donated more than $1 million to the Methuselah Institute with the goal of making '90 feel like 50 by 2030', including programmes focused on rejuvenating bone marrow and blood cells. Meanwhile, the fintech mogul Bryan Johnson is probably best known for his anti-ageing protocol Project Blueprint (also known, bluntly, as 'Don't Die'), which, along with supplements and full body tracking, includes plasma infusions from his son. [ A tech entrepreneur chases immortality: Bryan Johnson is 46. Soon, he plans to tur Opens in new window ] A recent fictional bestseller – Notes on Infinity by Austin Taylor – extrapolates from real-world research on senescence happening at the author's alma mater. David Sinclair's Harvard lab is controversially at work on so-called Yamanaka factors, a set of genes that researchers hope might be used to 'reprogramme' ageing cells back to a more youthful, embryonic-like state. Anti-ageing was once a woman's pastime, but these innovations suggest a wider preoccupation with the process. 'Bro science', for example, is a grassroots movement that emerged online in the pandemic. Proponents treat ageing like an open-source design challenge – the term most often used is 'biohacking' – with testosterone injections, gym rituals and a dizzying variety of supplements: creatine, protein, collagen, NAD+, metformin. The focus here is less on looking younger than your years so much as a refusal to submit to anything as weak as cellular death. On the surface, these worlds couldn't look more different: Dame Helen marking her 80th in Elie Saab versus some guy named Travis shilling NMN supplements on TikTok. But whether it's 'age gracefully' or 'don't die,' both frame time as a threat to be managed through purchasing power. Karl Marx famously wrote about capital as a kind of 'living death' – a vampire draining the life-force from workers and natural resources. A bloodsucking Johnson was probably not what the German economist had in mind, but the resonance is hard to ignore. Graceful ageing and biohacking both offer to smooth the rough edges of mortality – but only for those who can pay. Youth might soon be wasted on the super-rich. Janet, I think, didn't have a peptide or a protocol. She had a good haircut, maybe a lipstick she liked, and people who turned out to remember her face. That isn't nothing. It might even be grace.

Storytelling and music combine in cautionary family tale at Mermaid Arts Centre
Storytelling and music combine in cautionary family tale at Mermaid Arts Centre

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Storytelling and music combine in cautionary family tale at Mermaid Arts Centre

Cautionary Tales is billed as an introduction to opera that is ideal for first-time operagoers, families and primary school audiences. It opens at the Mermaid Arts Centre on Saturday, September 13, and is aimed at children aged seven and above. The production follows the success of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as Opera Collective Ireland returns with a second production created especially for children. The production also reflects the aim to launch the careers of emerging Irish opera artists by giving them the chance to perform major roles and grow their craft in a professional, collaborative setting. With five fast-moving stories, Cautionary Tales brings to life a miniature world of mischief and moral mayhem. From zoo antics to fire brigades, each tale captures the chaos of childhood through surprising twists and sharp humour – all framed by a sleepover setting where four singers spin tall tales and draw others into their imaginative worlds. Mischievous in tone and playful in its takes on right and wrong, Cautionary Tales sits comfortably alongside the work of Roald Dahl and David Walliams. Inspired by Hilaire Belloc's sharply moralistic poems, the opera promises to deliver an entertaining mix of mischief, music, and a good old-fashioned telling off. The opera was created by Errollyn Wallen CBE and premiered in 2011 to critical acclaim. The Belize-born British composer was recently named as one of the world's 20 most performed living classical composers. Her piano-led score in this opera is a blend of musical references, leaping from Bach to the Mission: Impossible theme. Opera Collective Ireland's 2025 staging offers a fresh and timely look at how children today are immersed in screen time – and it makes the case for the joy of shared, in-person experiences. As Errollyn Wallen said: 'I am delighted that Cautionary Tales will be enjoyed by Irish audiences. I relished composing this opera about badly behaved children – and their parents.' Cautionary Tales is on at the Mermaid Arts Centre, on Saturday, September 13, 2025. Tickets are €20 and €60 for a family of four and €70 for a family of five.

‘Love Island' fans will devour this fictional take on fame-hungry contestants losing their humanity
‘Love Island' fans will devour this fictional take on fame-hungry contestants losing their humanity

Irish Independent

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

‘Love Island' fans will devour this fictional take on fame-hungry contestants losing their humanity

Irish author Aisling Rawle deftly introduces us to 19 characters who are brought to a run-down luxury property in pursuit of fame and brand deals We love watching people ruin their lives on television, while wanting to buy what the contestants are wearing and own the same make-up products. These are two of the themes tackled in Leitrim author Aisling Rawle's sharp debut novel, a riff on reality television show Love Island which is currently gracing our screens. Then again, after reading her carefully constructed story in, we know that everything is calculated and very few things accidental.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store