The Guide: New Year’s Festival Dublin, Kojaque, Katie Boyle and other events to see, shows to book and ones to catch before they end

December 28th, 2024-January 3rd, 2025: The best movies, music, art and more coming your way this week

Cian Ducrot performs at the Dublin Castle New Year’s Eve Countdown Concert
Cian Ducrot performs at the Dublin Castle New Year’s Eve Countdown Concert

Event of the week

New Year’s Festival Dublin

From Monday, December 30th, until Wednesday, January 1st, Dublin Castle, various times, €49.90, nyfdublin.com

This three-day festival is one of those all-ages audience pleasers that rarely fail to deliver. On Monday, December 30th (3.30-9pm, free), the Echoes of Ireland event features Cormac Begley, Ispíní Na hÉireann, Niamh Regan, Róisín Ó and Stomptown Brass. On Tuesday, December 31st (4-6pm, €12.90), the Countdown Concert Matinee features Aby Coulibaly, Kabin Crew & Lisdoonvarna Crew, and Saibh Skelly. The New Year’s Eve Countdown Concert (10.30pm-1am, €49.90) features Coulibaly and Cian Ducrot. New Year’s Day concerts (1-5pm, free) include Hothouse Flowers, Emma Langford and the Bonny Men, plus (at Meeting House Square, 2-6pm, free) John Francis Flynn, Saileog Ní Cheannabháin and Paahto & the Bull. Emerging Irish acts get a decent look-in, too, with a Music Trail (December 30th and January 1st, various venues, free) that includes Anna Leah, Fynch, Pebbledash, Hot Girl, Problem Patterns and Burnchurch.

Gigs

Kojaque

Monday, December 30th, Index Dublin, 8pm, €39.66, indexdublin.com
Kojaque
Kojaque

After last year’s acclaimed Phantom of the Afters album, Kojaque (aka Kevin Smith) has kept busy by doing what he does best: collaborating with like-minded musicians intent on doing things their way. This end-of-year show features the Dubliner with Soft Boy DJs as well as other sonic adventurers, such as Silent Jee, Brién and DJ Baby Guinness.

The Ritual at Slane Castle

Tuesday, December 31st, Slane Castle, Co Meath, 6pm, €200/€160/€59.50, eventbrite.com

Featuring a mix of DJs (including Colin Perkins, Holly Foyle, Sofia Kourtesis, Boots & Kats, Marcus O’Laoire and Speedy P), venues (a tented courtyard, castle rooms and an underground nightclub) and food (designed/prepared by Crudo of Sandymount and served in the castle’s historic diningroom), the Ritual at Slane Castle is a New Year’s Eve bash with a difference. Is there a dress code and a chill guide at this strictly over-21s event? You bet there is. Masks are mandatory, photography is a no-no (phones will be placed into a guarded cloakroom) and charisma is strongly advised.

Mik Pyro

Tuesday, December 31st, Whelan’s, Dublin, 9pm, €30, whelanslive.com

Not that the former lead singer of the Republic of Loose has ever been out of the picture frame, but the recent 20th-anniversary reissue of This Is the Tomb of the Juice, his former band’s album, will certainly jog people’s memories about the exceptional presence of Mik Pyro, whose natural habitat is the stage. Along with Republic of Loose songs and tracks from his masterful 2023 solo album, Exit Pyro, you can be assured that your journey from 2024 to 2025 will be a sublime, soulful and very sweaty blues/rock blend.

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Comedy

Willa’s White Christmas

Saturday, December 28th, Ambassador Theatre, Dublin, 7pm, €39.90, ticketmaster.ie

The Irish comedian Willa White ends a successful year (including sell-out shows at the 3Olympia and Gaiety theatres) with a seasonal show at Dublin’s newest venue. Along with emceeing the event, White will perform his well-received routines and introduce short sets from his fellow comics Enya Martin, Eric Lalor, Joe Dowlin and (the especially smart) Jim Elliot.

Katie Boyle

Thursday, January 2nd, Coughlans, Cork, 9pm, €20, coughlans.ie
Katie Boyle
Katie Boyle

Dating, therapy, sex and shame are familiar topics for Katie Boyle, an Irish comedian home from New York for the festive season. Undertaking a few gigs to keep the coffers ticking over, Boyle is on the rise stateside. In the summer of 2023 her debut comedy album, I’ll Do It Myself, hit the top spot on iTunes’ comedy chart, while her second full-length comedy special, Terapy, filmed in November during New York Comedy Festival, is released early in 2025. In the meantime, Boyle will continue to curate Irish-related comedy shows at the Dead Rabbit, the New York Irish bar, and host her highly amusing podcast, The Shift, which discusses – yes, you guessed it – dating, therapy, sex and shame.

Visual art

Turner’s Watercolours: Scotland’s Vaughan Bequest

From Wednesday, January 1st, until Friday, January 31st, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin, free, nationalgallery.ie
JMW Turner: The Piazzetta, Venice, 1840 (National Galleries of Scotland)
JMW Turner: The Piazzetta, Venice, 1840 (National Galleries of Scotland)

To mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of JMW Turner, the National Gallery of Ireland hosts an exchange exhibition. While the National Galleries of Scotland showcases Ireland’s Turner collection at the Royal Scottish Academy building in Edinburgh, the Dublin gallery displays almost 40 of Turner’s watercolours from the Vaughan bequest. A prolific artist – he left behind more than 500 oil paintings, 2,000 watercolours and 30,000 works on paper – Turner became known as “the painter of light”; his works in the exhibition range from scrupulous topographical views to vivid watercolours of Venice.

Children

What I Like Most

Until March 30th, 2025, Museum of Literature Ireland, Dublin, €15.50/€12, moli.ie
What I Like Most
What I Like Most

An ideal museum visit for children during the holiday period, this interactive exhibition brings Mary Murphy’s charming story to vivid life, making superb use of Zhu Cheng-Liang’s illustrations. The Dubliner’s book celebrates the young narrator’s favourite things, focusing on what means the most to her. Visitors can participate in various activities depicted in the book; youngsters can also contribute their artwork.

Still running

The Dedication 2025: Remembering Philip Lynott

Friday, January 3rd, and Saturday, January 4th, Button Factory, Dublin, 7pm, €39.87, buttonfactory.ie
Thin LIzzy: Philip Lynott, Brian Downey and Eric Bell
Thin LIzzy: Philip Lynott, Brian Downey and Eric Bell

Starting where the Vibe for Philo stopped (there wasn’t one in 2024), this event continues to celebrate the memory of the Thin Lizzy frontman – who died on January 4th, 1986 – with a slew of bands lashing out his songs. Bands featured include the Swedish tribute act Just Lizzy, and Grand Slam Rocks.

Book it this week

The Flaming Lips, 3Olympia Theatre, Dublin, April 28th and 29th, ticketmaster.ie

Bonnie Raitt, Ulster Hall, Belfast, June 1st, Vicar Street, Dublin, June 3rd and 4th, ticketmaster.ie

Raye, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin, August 22nd, ticketmaster.ie

Al Porter, Vicar Street, Dublin, September 5th and 6th, ticketmaster.ie

Tony Clayton-Lea

Tony Clayton-Lea

Tony Clayton-Lea is a contributor to The Irish Times specialising in popular culture