Gorey Guardian

They’re queuing up to play the Opera House

OVER 50 SHOWS ON BUSY CALENDAR AS VENUE GAINS FOOTHOLD ON NATIONAL STAGE

- By JIM HAYES

THE pulling power of the National Opera House as a top entertainm­ent venue is now in little doubt, with over 50 shows on the calendar in coming months, among them some mouthwater­ing prospects.

With planners giving the go-ahead for a new music venue off North Main Street, the future looks very bright for live music in Wexford.

Mike Scott and the Waterboys’ appearance at the National Opera House is one of December’s top attraction­s, but if you haven’t booked tickets for the Wednesday, December 5, show, you’re out of luck - at the time of writing a mere handful of single seats remain unbooked.

The sellout is hardly surprising as the Waterboys always deliver the goods in their live shows and it’s almost 20 years since they last played Wexford with a full electric line-up.

Another December gig sold out bar a few stray seats is Tommy Tiernan’s ‘Paddy Crazy Horse’ show on the 12th - it seems Wexford can’t get enough of the Donegal comic who is no stranger to a Wexford stage.

Country fans have been mopping up tickets for Nathan Carter’s double-header at the High Street venue on Saturday and Sunday, December 8 and 9 at an alarming rate. There’s more availabili­ty on the Sunday night, but not in the stalls as fans obviously want to get up close and personal with the singer whose most recent album topped the Irish charts.

Lantern, the people behind the Spiegelten­t Festival, are promoting Foil, Arms & Hog at the Opera House on Friday, December 14, and it is expected that by the time the date comes around it will be another Wexford sellout for the trio who have sold out every show they’ve played here since 2014. There are some tickets still remaining, mainly in the top tier of the theatre.

Dublin Northsider­s Aslan, perennial darlings of the Irish live scene, visit the Opera House on Friday, December 7, as they near the tail end of a very special year marking 30 years since the release of ‘Feel No Shame’, a debut that surely ranks among the best Irish albums of that era. Tickets are still plentiful, but Christy Dignam and his band have a large and loyal fanbase, so seats will fill up fast as the day of the gig approaches.

One local event of note in the O’Reilly Theatre is the Wexford School of Ballet and Performing Arts’ production of Swan Lake on Saturday, December 15, It’s a mammoth production involving students from around the county, coached by a team of nine teachers. Tickets are becoming scarce and the show is expected to sell out shortly.

Other local production­s to consider in December include the HFC Concert Band, directed by Ann Wickham, performing music for all tastes this coming Saturday (December 1), and youngsters from Becci Whelan’s after-school dance programme, 2 Many Dance Moves, on Friday, December 21, both shows taking place in the Jerome Hynes Theatre.

January highlights at the Opera House include Waterford ‘mind magician’ Keith Barry’s aptly-named ‘Deception’ show on Friday, 11; the return of one of folk’s finest, The High Kings, on Saturday, 12; and the soothing tones of Tommy Fleming on his Voice Of Hope II tour (referencin­g the album of the same name), on Saturday, 26.

Sharon Shannon, Mary Black and Mary Coughlan join their considerab­le forces for a concert on Friday, January 18, during which each of the three will play a set with their own musicians before coming together for what should be a rousing finale.

Looking further ahead, it should come as no surprise that Bell X1’s Opera House appearance on February 2 is already a sellout.

Paul Noonan, Dave Geraghty and Dominic Philips cannot put a foot

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