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Reggaetón Star Arcángel Marks 20 Years With the “La 8va Maravilla World Tour”

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Twenty years in reggaetón and Latin trap is a legacy worth celebrating on a grand scale. Arcángel is doing exactly that with the “La 8va Maravilla World Tour 20 Aniversario,” an 18-date US run promoted by Live Nation that kicks off October 9 at Kia Center in Orlando and closes December 11 with a special show at Coliseo de Puerto Rico in San Juan.

The New York-born rapper has built one of the most enduring careers in Latin urban music, and the road has always been good to him. His 2023 sold-out show at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center grossed $964,854 off 10,919 tickets, proof that the demand is real and the fanbase runs deep.

This run hits Miami, Atlanta, Charlotte, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, Houston, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, and San Jose before closing out in Puerto Rico. Arcángel is part of Noah Assad’s Rimas Entertainment roster alongside Bad Bunny, and is managed by Omar Rivera.

Tickets go on sale May 28 at 10 AM local time. Full details at la8vamaravilla.com.

“La 8va Maravilla World Tour 20 Aniversario” US Dates:

Thu Oct 9 – Orlando, FL – Kia Center

Sat Oct 11 – Miami, FL – Kaseya Center

Wed Oct 15 – Atlanta, GA – Coca-Cola Roxy

Thu Oct 16 – Charlotte, NC – Ovens Auditorium

Tue Oct 21 – Fairfax, VA – EagleBank Arena

Wed Oct 22 – Wallingford, CT – Toyota Oakdale Theatre

Thu Oct 23 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center

Fri Oct 24 – Philadelphia, PA – The Met Philadelphia Presented by Highmark

Tue Oct 28 – Boston, MA – MGM Music Hall at Fenway

Sat Oct 31 – Rosemont, IL – Rosemont Theatre

Wed Nov 5 – Houston, TX – 713 Music Hall

Thu Nov 6 – Irving, TX – The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory

Sat Nov 15 – Denver, CO – Paramount Theatre

Tue Nov 18 – Salt Lake City, UT – The Union Event Center

Thu Nov 20 – Inglewood, CA – YouTube Theater

Fri Nov 21 – San Jose, CA – San Jose Civic

Thu Dec 11 – San Juan, Puerto Rico – Coliseo de Puerto Rico

Kehlani Takes the “Kehlani World Tour” Across North America With 33 Dates This Fall

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Kehlani has mapped out the North American leg of the “Kehlani World Tour,” 33 dates spanning the US and Canada starting August 6 in Minneapolis and wrapping October 3 in Mountain View, California. Special guests Durand Bernarr, Isaia Huron, TheARTI$t, and WASEEL join on select dates.

The tour rides the momentum of her self-titled album, which debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and marked the biggest debut for an R&B album by a woman this year. It hit No. 1 on the R&B Albums chart, No. 2 on Top Albums and Vinyl Albums, and charted across Indie Stores and Top Streaming Albums as well.

Anchoring the whole thing is “Folded,” now the longest-running No. 1 in Billboard Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart history, sitting at the top for over 17 weeks. The single earned Kehlani 2 Grammy Awards for Best R&B Performance and Best R&B Song.

The routing hits Minneapolis, Chicago, Detroit, Toronto, New York, Boston, Atlanta, Miami, Dallas, Los Angeles, Seattle, Vancouver, and more. Kehlani has partnered with PLUS1, with $1 from every ticket going to The Kehlani Fund by Live Nation.

An artist presale runs now. General on-sale is Friday, May 29 at 10 AM local time at kehlaniworldtour.com.

Kehlani World Tour Dates:

Thu Aug 6 – Minneapolis, MN – The Armory

Fri Aug 7 – Milwaukee, WI – Landmark Credit Union Live

Sun Aug 9 – Chicago, IL – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island

Mon Aug 10 – Indianapolis, IN – Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park

Thu Aug 13 – Detroit, MI – Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill

Fri Aug 14 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Blossom Music Center

Sun Aug 16 – Toronto, ON – RBC Amphitheatre

Mon Aug 17 – Darien Center, NY – Darien Lake Amphitheater

Wed Aug 19 – Boston, MA – MGM Music Hall at Fenway

Fri Aug 21 – New York, NY – Barclays Center

Sun Aug 23 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena

Wed Aug 26 – Camden, NJ – Freedom Mortgage Pavilion

Thu Aug 27 – Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion

Sat Aug 29 – Richmond, VA – Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront

Mon Aug 31 – Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek

Tue Sep 1 – Charlotte, NC – Truliant Amphitheater

Thu Sep 3 – Atlanta, GA – Lakewood Amphitheatre

Fri Sep 4 – Birmingham, AL – Coca-Cola Amphitheater

Tue Sep 8 – Nashville, TN – Nashville Municipal Auditorium

Thu Sep 10 – Miami, FL – iThink Financial Amphitheatre

Fri Sep 11 – Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

Sun Sep 13 – Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

Tue Sep 15 – Austin, TX – Germania Insurance Amphitheater

Wed Sep 16 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion

Fri Sep 18 – Oklahoma City, OK – Zoo Amphitheatre

Sun Sep 20 – Albuquerque, NM – First Financial Credit Union Amphitheater

Mon Sep 21 – Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

Wed Sep 23 – San Diego, CA – Viejas Arena

Thu Sep 24 – Inglewood, CA – Intuit Dome

Sat Sep 26 – Portland, OR – Theater of the Clouds

Sun Sep 27 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena

Tue Sep 29 – Vancouver, BC – Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre

Sat Oct 3 – Mountain View, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre

Operation Mincemeat Brings Its Tony and Olivier-Winning Spy Musical to Toronto This Fall

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Operation Mincemeat: A New Musical arrives at Toronto’s Royal Alexandra Theatre on October 27, and tickets go on sale June 6, the 82nd anniversary of D-Day. The timing is intentional, and so is everything else about this production.

The show is Tony and Olivier Award-winning, named Entertainment Weekly’s number one Broadway show of 2025, and holds the record for the most five-star reviews ever received by a new musical in the West End, with 131. The New York Times called it “the most rewarding theatrical experience I’ve ever had.” That’s the bar.

The story is stranger than fiction, because it is fiction built around fact. Set in 1943, it follows the wildly improbable true covert operation that helped turn the tide of World War II, involving a stolen corpse, forged documents, and a plan audacious enough to fool the Nazis. Ian Fleming is involved. So is farce, thriller energy, and a score that refuses to behave.

Written by SpitLip, the four-person collective of David Cumming, Felix Hagan, Natasha Hodgson, and Zoë Roberts, the show earned 4 Tony nominations in 2025, including Best Musical, and won Best Featured Actor in a Musical for Jak Malone. On Broadway, it’s been extended 8 times and is closing in on its 500th performance at the historic Golden Theatre.

Director Robert Hastie and choreographer Jenny Arnold reprise their work for the world tour. The creative team includes Olivier-nominated set and costume designer Ben Stones, Tony and Olivier-winning lighting designer Mark Henderson, and Tony-nominated sound designer Mike Walker.

Since its origins at the 77-seat New Diorama Theatre in 2019, Operation Mincemeat has logged over 2,000 performances and earned 64 award nominations, winning 13, including Best Musical 3 times. On Broadway, roughly 1 in 50 audience members bought tickets for multiple performances. 53 superfans attended 10 or more shows.

David and Hannah Mirvish are bringing the Canadian premiere to the Royal Alexandra Theatre, 260 King St. W., with performances running Tuesday through Sunday. Tickets are on sale Saturday, June 6 at 10 AM at mirvish.com or by calling 1.800.461.3333.

Performance Schedule:

Tuesday to Saturday: 7:30 PM

Wednesday: 1:30 PM

Saturday and Sunday: 2:00 PM

Boys Like Girls Bring the “Soundtrack Of Your Summer Festival” Home to Boston

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Boys Like Girls are throwing a hometown festival, and the lineup hits exactly where it should. The Soundtrack Of Your Summer Festival lands Saturday, August 29 at Leader Bank Pavilion in Boston, with Cartel, Cute Is What We Aim For, and Hit The Lights on the bill for a one-night-only celebration of the music that defined a generation of rock fans.

The festival serves as the US encore of the band’s Soundtrack Of Your Life Tour, where they performed their self-titled debut and ‘Love Drunk’ in full and in tracklist order every night. Boston gets both albums, one stage, and the full experience brought home.

The bill carries some real weight. Cute Is What We Aim For make their first public appearance in nearly 10 years, making this more than a festival, it’s a genuine moment for a community of fans who grew up on this music.

Presales are underway now. General on-sale hits Friday, May 29 at 10 AM local time, with VIP packages available.

Wet Leg Drop an FDC DJs Remix and Announce ‘Moisturizer (Deluxe)’ for July

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Wet Leg have shared a new remix of “catch these fists” by FDC DJs, the duo made up of Fontaines D.C. members Carlos O’Connell and Tom Coll, and it’s a sharp left turn from the original. Darker, seedier, built on brooding synths and propulsive drums, it leans hard into Rhian Teasdale’s barbed lyrics and lands with real menace.

The remix is the first taste of ‘moisturizer (deluxe)’, arriving July 10. The expanded edition adds remixes from horsegiirL and The Dare alongside 3 previously streaming-unavailable tracks: “hi from me” (originally a Japanese CD exclusive), a home studio demo of “don’t speak” recorded by Hester, and “u and me at home intro/outro,” the latter already familiar to fans as the band’s walk-on music.

Rounding out the package are live recordings made at LA’s The Village Studios in 2025. The deluxe is available on double translucent red vinyl, CD, and digitally.

‘moisturizer’ has had a run few albums can match. It debuted at No. 1 on the UK albums chart, earned 3 Grammy nominations and 2 Brit nominations, and spawned “mangetout,” which recently hit No. 1 on the US Alternative Radio airplay chart, making Wet Leg the first female-fronted independent act to top that chart this decade.

The year has only added to the momentum. Wet Leg opened 2026 touring Australia and New Zealand as part of Laneway Festival alongside Chappell Roan, Geese, and Pinkpantheress. Japan dates followed. In March, they became the first musical guest on SNL UK’s debut season, appearing alongside host Tina Fey. Teasdale also walked Paris Fashion Week and joined comedian Joe Wilkinson for an episode of his Channel 4 show Train-ing It.

This summer brings their largest UK headline shows to date, plus festival slots at Bonnaroo, Governors Ball, Lollapalooza, and a hometown appearance at Isle of Wight Festival.

‘moisturizer (deluxe)’ drops July 10. Pre-order and pre-save are live now.

‘moisturizer (deluxe)’ Track Listing:

  1. CPR
  2. liquidize
  3. catch these fists
  4. davina mccall
  5. jennifer’s body
  6. mangetout
  7. pond song
  8. pokemon
  9. pillow talk
  10. don’t speak
  11. 11:21
  12. u and me at home
  13. hi from me
  14. mangetout (The Dare remix)
  15. CPR (horsegiirL Remix)
  16. catch these fists (FDC DJs remix)
  17. CPR (live from the village)
  18. davina mccall (live from the village)
  19. mangetout (live from the village)
  20. liquidize (live from the village)
  21. don’t speak (acoustic demo version)
  22. u and me at home intro/outro

Video: Florence and the Machine Literally Moved the Earth at Berlin’s Tempelhof Sounds Festival

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Florence + The Machine played Tempelhof Sounds Festival in Berlin on June 10, 2022, and the crowd jumped so hard during “Dog Days Are Over” that local seismological stations registered a 1.4 magnitude tremor. That’s not a metaphor. Tens of thousands of fans, moving in unison at Florence Welch’s command, left a measurable physical imprint on the city. Touring behind ‘Dance Fever,’ the band delivered a set that ranged from the raw force of “Kiss With a Fist” and “What Kind of Man” to the euphoric lift of “Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)” and “Shake It Out,” a full-spectrum performance that reminded everyone why a Florence + The Machine live show is an event, not just a concert.

The Tirith Are Back With a Prog Monster Album and a Single That Demands Your Attention

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UK progressive rockers The Tirith have a new album arriving July 3, and the lead single “Save The Oak” makes a strong case for why it’s worth your time.

‘Quetzalcoatl’ is the band’s fourth studio album, and it arrives as their most expansive and cohesive work yet. Blending folk, jazz, and heavier rock into a signature prog framework, the record showcases intricate musicianship, shifting dynamics, and the kind of atmospheric storytelling the band has built their reputation on.

The Tirith’s story is a compelling one. Founding members Tim Cox and Dick Cory first played together as schoolmates in the 1970s under the name Minas Tirith, then reunited in 2010 after more than 3 decades apart. They came back with a catalogue of unreleased material and serious credentials behind them.

Tim Cox, the band’s guitarist, earned his stripes as a professional songwriter and producer, co-writing Rozalla’s iconic dancefloor staple “Everybody’s Free (To Feel Good).” Dick Cory spent those intervening years writing prolifically, and much of that work found its way into The Tirith’s sound.

Since reforming, the band released ‘Tales from the Tower’ (2015), ‘A Leap into the Dark’ (2019), and ‘Return of the Lydia’ (2022), all recognized for their conceptual ambition and expressive guitar work. Each record moved the needle. ‘Quetzalcoatl’ moves it further.

With drummer Paul Williams and keyboardist Anthony Hill now firmly in the fold, the band operate with a tighter, more unified sound. The live circuit has taken notice too. The Tirith have played Cambridge Rock Festival and HRH Prog, sharing stages with Focus, Karnataka, and Gnidrolog.

“Save The Oak” is a confident entry point into the new album, a track that channels the band’s layered approach into something immediate and gripping. The video is out now on YouTube.

‘Quetzalcoatl’ drops July 3. Twelve tracks, one of the UK prog scene’s most seasoned outfits, and a record built to last.

‘Quetzalcoatl’ Track Listing:

  1. Intro
  2. Quetzalcoatl
  3. The Slide
  4. Moon King
  5. Back to Space
  6. Rabbit Ings
  7. Dancing With Vampires
  8. Spirit of the Volcano
  9. Masters of Highways
  10. Save The Oak
  11. No Mind (Mushin)
  12. The Riddles

Reddit Asked for the Most Beautiful Album You’ve Ever Heard. Here Are 20 of Their Answers.

Someone on Reddit posed a simple question: give me the most beautiful album you’ve ever heard. Any genre, any timeframe. The thread exploded. Hundreds of answers poured in, covering jazz and goth and ambient and folk and everything in between. Here are twenty of the best responses, and honestly, it’s a pretty great list.

‘Kind of Blue’ — Miles Davis

The most upvoted jazz answer in the thread, and no one should be surprised. This is the album that invented a mood. Cool, unhurried, and so perfectly recorded it sounds like the musicians are in the room with you.

‘Dark Side of the Moon’ — Pink Floyd

It showed up multiple times, and with good reason. One commenter who played through it for a New Year’s gig said that learning all its brilliant thematic connections and back-door transitions made them love it even more. Fifty-plus years in and it still sounds like the future.

‘In Rainbows’ — Radiohead

Multiple commenters called it out without hesitation. It’s the album where Radiohead stopped being cold and started being warm, all without sacrificing a single ounce of what made them great. Side two alone is worth the price of admission.

‘Disintegration’ — The Cure

The thread had genuine enthusiasm for this one. One commenter pointed out that the opener ‘Plainsong’ alone is a gorgeous piece of music, and they’re right. Lush, oceanic, and genuinely moving in a way that goth rock rarely gets credit for.

‘Astral Weeks’ — Van Morrison

Two separate commenters called it, one of them with a response that can only be described as enthusiastic punctuation. Recorded in two days in 1968, it sounds like it came from another dimension entirely. Nothing before or since sounds quite like it.

‘Heaven or Las Vegas’ — Cocteau Twins

Paired with ‘Mezzanine’ by Massive Attack in one of the thread’s best double picks. Elizabeth Fraser’s voice operates at a frequency that bypasses the brain entirely and goes straight somewhere deeper. Lush and completely otherworldly.

‘Mezzanine’ — Massive Attack

Dense, cinematic, and unsettling in the best possible way. This is trip-hop at its absolute peak, a record that sounds equally at home in a late-night headphone session or a film you’ll never forget.

‘Ágætis byrjun’ — Sigur Rós

The thread had enormous love for Sigur Rós across several albums, but this one and ‘( )’ came up the most. One commenter described discovering ‘Svefn-g-englar’ on college radio a quarter century ago and being changed by it. That tracks.

‘( )’ — Sigur Rós

Called an art rock dark masterpiece in the thread, and that’s about right. An album sung in a language the band invented, which somehow makes it more emotionally direct, not less. You don’t need to understand it to feel it.

‘Vespertine’ — Björk

Two separate commenters landed on this one. Intimate, wintry, and constructed from the tiniest sounds imaginable, harps and music boxes and whispers, built into something genuinely majestic. One of her very best.

‘The Seeds of Love’ — Tears for Fears

One commenter called it gorgeously recorded, and that’s the word. An album that took four years to make and sounds like it. Layered, ambitious, and emotionally enormous in ways that still catch people off guard.

‘Pet Sounds’ — The Beach Boys

It showed up and kept showing up in the replies. Brian Wilson building a cathedral out of car horns and sleigh bells and heartbreak. Still the most audacious thing anyone has ever done with a pop album.

‘Five Leaves Left’ — Nick Drake

Quiet, fingerpicked, and deeply melancholy in a way that feels like autumn afternoon light. Nick Drake barely got to make three albums, but this debut announced someone operating at a level most artists spend careers chasing.

‘Automatic for the People’ — R.E.M.

One commenter grouped it with Kraftwerk and Julien Baker, which is a very good triple bill. This is R.E.M. at their most spare and grief-stricken, an album about loss that somehow never feels hopeless.

‘Avalon’ — Roxy Music

Came up more than once, and one commenter said they were glad to see it right off the bat. Brian Ferry at his most cinematic and seductive, an album that sounds like the last slow dance of the evening and makes you wish it never ended.

‘Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots’ — The Flaming Lips

One commenter said they think ‘The Soft Bulletin’ might edge it out, which is a perfectly reasonable argument to have. But ‘Yoshimi’ has a warmth and gentle sadness that sneaks up on you completely.

‘What’s Going On’ — Marvin Gaye

One commenter said it’s the only album that can make them cry. That’s as good a definition of beautiful as any. A concept album about war and poverty and love that feels, impossibly, more relevant with every passing decade.

‘Wildflowers’ — Tom Petty

Called a masterpiece in the thread, and the response to that was pure emoji and gratitude. Petty at his most open-hearted, an album that sounds like driving somewhere good with the windows down and nothing on your mind.

‘Ghosteen’ — Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds

One commenter described it as saturated with the spirit of his deceased son but also so beautiful and hopeful. Made in the wake of profound grief, it somehow transcends it. One of the most quietly devastating albums of the last decade.

‘Carrie and Lowell’ — Sufjan Stevens

Called haunting by the commenter who suggested it, which undersells it slightly. This is one of the most intimate and gut-wrenching records ever made, a meditation on loss and memory so personal it almost feels wrong to listen to, and yet completely impossible to stop.

How to Get Your Music in a Commercial

You’re watching TV. A car glides through a mountain pass, the cinematography is gorgeous, and then a song hits — and suddenly you’re not thinking about the car at all, you’re thinking about that song. Who is that? Where can I find it? That is sync licensing doing exactly what it’s supposed to do. And your music could be the one doing it.

Getting your music placed in a commercial is one of the best things that can happen to an artist. It generates significant income, boosts your visibility, introduces your work to new audiences, and being associated with well-known brands adds professional credibility that opens doors for future opportunities. So how do you actually make it happen? Let’s break it down.

First, Understand What You’re Actually Selling

Sync licensing, or synchronization licensing, is the legal process of placing music with visual media. When your music is matched with images in films, TV commercials, online videos, or video games, that is called a sync placement. To legally earn from these uses, you need permission from both the master rights owner, who owns the recording of the song, and the publishing rights owner, who owns the composition of the song. If you’re an independent artist who owns both, that’s actually a major advantage — you can move faster and negotiate more cleanly.

Make Your Music “Sync Ready”

Before you pitch a single track, get your house in order. Music supervisors look for tracks with emotional clarity, meaning each song conveys a distinct and identifiable mood, along with strong structure, including a clear intro, build, climax, and resolution. A track that meanders through its own arrangement is a problem for an editor trying to cut to picture.

Write songs with universal themes like love, hope, change, or resilience. Avoid super-specific references that might limit your track’s use. Commercials love broad, uplifting vibes. Always create multiple versions of your tracks. An instrumental version is essential — many advertisers love the music but need to layer their own voiceover on top.

Know Who’s Actually Making the Decision

Music supervisors are the unsung heroes of the advertising world. They are experts in music licensing, music trends, and finding the perfect song for each project. They work closely with advertising agencies and brands, search for songs that will fit the brand, and manage all the details of music licensing so the brand is in full compliance. Getting your music in front of the right supervisor is the whole game. Attend industry events, join music sync licensing companies, and connect with music supervisors on social media. These are not people who are hiding — many are quite active online and genuinely interested in discovering new music.

Get Into Music Libraries

The most reliable path for most independent artists is through music libraries. Artists submit their music to libraries, which handle curation and legal checks before offering songs to supervisors. The workflow is streamlined for speed and efficiency, with pre-cleared music ready for instant placement. Libraries like Musicbed, Artlist, Epidemic Sound, and Pond5 are good starting points, and there are dozens more that specialize in everything from indie folk to hard electronic.

What Can You Actually Earn?

Here’s where it gets interesting. The range is enormous. A placement in a small web commercial or a local brand’s online video might bring in anywhere from $50 to $300. It’s not going to pay your rent, but it’s still money earned from your music — and it builds your track record. On the other end of the spectrum, national commercials and big-budget campaigns can pay from $10,000 up to $100,000 or more, especially for popular songs or exclusive licenses. The average commercial sync license in the US runs between $15,000 and $50,000. That’s a meaningful number for any artist.

Beyond the upfront fee, sync licensing is now the second-highest royalty stream for independent artists, because every time that commercial airs, performance royalties are generated. The money keeps coming long after the deal is signed.

The Pitch Itself

Keep it short, keep it targeted, and do your homework. Don’t email a supervisor who works exclusively in horror films and pitch them your acoustic lullaby. Research what brands a supervisor has worked with, what kind of music they gravitate toward, and tailor your approach accordingly. Include a brief bio, a direct link to your music (not an attachment), and make it easy to clear. The faster a supervisor can say yes, the better your chances.

Sync licensing is no longer just for TV and film. The landscape has exploded with new opportunities, from Netflix originals and YouTube creators to TikTok trends, video games, mobile apps, and branded content. Every one of those is a door. Your job is to knock on as many as possible with music that’s ready, rights that are clear, and a pitch that respects everyone’s time.

The song that stops someone mid-channel-surf and makes them reach for their phone to find out who made it could be yours. Start building that catalog today.

The Songs That Tell Belfast’s Story

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Belfast is hosting Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann for the very first time this August, and there is no better moment to think about the music that has always lived in this city’s bones. From Sunday August 2 to Sunday August 9, 2026, Belfast will transform into a vibrant carnival of sound, colour, culture and craic, with pub sessions, street performances, céilí bands and All-Ireland competitions filling every corner of Ireland’s only UNESCO City of Music. Belfast has been telling its story through song for centuries. The Fleadh simply gives the whole world a reason to finally listen.

From the linen mills of the 19th century to the shipyards that built the Titanic, from the darkest years of The Troubles to the hopeful rhythms of a city reborn, Belfast has always sung. Here are eight songs that tell its story.

“The Belle of Belfast City” (Traditional)

Few songs capture the warmth and wit of Belfast’s people quite like this one. A celebration of the city’s women and working-class neighbourhoods, it has been passed down through generations and remains one of the most joyful expressions of Belfast identity. Rend Collective’s toe-tapping rendition brought it to a whole new audience, but its roots go deep into the cobblestones of the city itself.

“The Belfast Mill” (Traditional)

This poignant folk ballad doesn’t romanticize the past, it tells the truth of it. The song shines a light on the harsh realities of the Industrial Revolution in Belfast, chronicling the poverty, exploitation, and human cost of the booming linen and shipbuilding industries. Behind every great industrial city is a working class that paid dearly for its growth, and this song makes sure they aren’t forgotten.

“Teenage Kicks” (The Undertones)

By the late 1970s, Belfast was living through the worst years of The Troubles. Against that violent backdrop, The Undertones from Derry gave young people across Northern Ireland something urgent and electric: a song about being a teenager that had nothing to do with politics and everything to do with desire, energy, and escape. John Peel called it the greatest record ever made, and he wasn’t wrong.

“Alternative Ulster” (Stiff Little Fingers)

Where The Undertones looked inward, Stiff Little Fingers looked outward and screamed. “Alternative Ulster” was a direct challenge to the militarized reality of life in Belfast, the checkpoints, the tension, the sense that young people had no future worth imagining. It remains one of the most viscerally honest songs ever written about the city, and it still rattles the walls.

“Belfast Child” (Simple Minds)

Written in the aftermath of the 1987 Enniskillen bombing, this haunting anthem by Simple Minds, built around the traditional melody of “She Moved Through the Fair,” is one of the most moving musical responses to The Troubles ever recorded. It doesn’t rage or protest; it mourns. And in that mourning, it became an anthem for everyone who had lost someone, and everyone who simply wanted it all to stop.

“The Town I Loved So Well” (Phil Coulter)

Written about Derry, yes, but this song belongs to the whole of Northern Ireland, and Belfast claims it too. Phil Coulter’s masterpiece traces the arc from childhood innocence to the scarred, militarized streets of the conflict years, before reaching toward something like hope. Every time it’s sung, it feels like a prayer for a place that deserved better than what it was given.

“Cyprus Avenue” (Van Morrison)

Born in East Belfast, Van Morrison immortalized the streets of his youth in music that transcends time and geography. “Cyprus Avenue” is both a specific Belfast street and a state of mind, a song about longing, beauty, and the strange ache of a place that shaped you. Morrison’s catalogue is full of Belfast’s geography and soul, and this track sits at the very heart of it.

“Into the Light” (Van Morrison)

If “Cyprus Avenue” captures the longing, “Into the Light” captures the healing. Morrison’s music has always carried a spiritual undercurrent, and this song speaks to Belfast’s own long journey toward something brighter. A city that has endured what Belfast has endured earns the right to songs like this one, full of quiet resilience and the stubborn belief that light, eventually, wins.