Hey! Manchester promotes gigs by folk, Americana and experimental bands from around the world in Manchester, England. Read more here, see below for our latest shows, check out our previous shows, contact us, or join our mailing list, above.

Upcoming shows: Lily Seabird... The Burning Hell... Jolie Holland... Bremer/McCoy... Daddy Long Legs... Blue Bendy... James Yorkston & Nina Persson... The Beths... Natalie Bergman... Rowena Wise... British Birds... Erin Rae... Ye Vagabonds... The Cords + Josie... Frankie Archer... Chloe Foy... Grant-Lee Phillips... Allo Darlin’... Robert Forster... Jeffrey Lewis & The Voltage... Martha Tilston... Vega Trails... Gwenifer Raymond... Kathryn Williams... Lilly Hiatt... Withered Hand... Constant Follower... The Lovely Eggs... Tulpa... Albertine Sarges... Jamie Duffy... Joep Beving... Admiral Fallow... Willy Mason... The Unthanks... BC Camplight... Holysseus Fly... Gustaffson... Penguin Cafe... Junior Brother... Will Varley... Ríoghnach Connolly & Honeyfeet... Jesca Hoop... Jim Moray... The Dream Syndicate... The Besnard Lakes...

When: 7.30pm on Monday 1 September 2025
Where: Gullivers, 109 Oldham Street, Manchester, M4 1LW

We’re delighted to be working with Lily Seabird for the first time!

Since 2023, Lily Seabird’s life has been in perpetual motion, spending nearly half of that time on the road performing her own music and as a touring bassist. While she thrives in transit, back home she is anchored by ‘Trash Mountain’, a pink house surrounded by other artists situated on a decommissioned landfill site at the back of Burlington’s Old North End. Here, Seabird has found belonging, friendship, and inspiration. It’s a place that hosts artists, puts on shows, and has been passed along in her friend group for the better part of the decade. It’s a symbol of transition and stability: something always evolving and growing but never losing its soul. It’s only fitting that Seabird named her new album Trash Mountain, as it also contains its namesake’s qualities. Over nine delicate but sturdy tracks of intimate folk rock, she pares her songwriting down to its most resonant essentials. It’s an album of unwelcome exits and uncertain futures, but there’s resiliency and hope at its core.

Where Seabird’s previous records – 2024’s Alas, and 2021’s Beside Myself – were written over the course of a year, Trash Mountain practically poured out of Seabird: three months of songwriting in spring 2024, followed by four days of tracking with Kevin Copeland (Hannah Frances, Lightning Bug, Allegra Krieger) in his Southern Vermont studio in the summer. While the grief that enveloped Alas,, which dealt with her best friend’s suicide, still lingers, it’s settled into healing and reflection on Trash Mountain. On It was like you were coming to wake us back up, Seabird vividly paints a brief moment of seeing a person outside her house who bears an uncanny resemblance to her dearly deceased. Rather than mourning, she finds comfort and healing in the vision. ‘In the past, I used to come to songwriting when I was in crisis,’ admits Seabird. ‘Only recently have I come to songwriting when I am feeling other things beyond emergency and disruption.’

The album’s arrangements are markedly sparse and intentional, a shift from the layered Alas, and Beside Myself, allowing Seabird’s writing to soar and stand starkly centred. Only three songs feature her longtime touring band in guitarist Greg Freeman, bassist Nina Cates (Robber Robber), and drummer Zack James (Dari Bay, Robber Robber). On the stunning How far away, she’s backed only by a piano played by Sam Atallah which makes for elegiac catharsis. ‘I’ve finally accepted that I’m a singer-songwriter,’ she says with a shrug. ‘Not everything has to be some big rock song.’ Seabird cites Elliott Smith, Neil Young and Leonard Cohen as influences on Trash Mountain, and much like the latter, her evocative, emotionally potent lyrics find her looking for cracks in the darkness where light comes in.

‘Vermont singer-songwriter Lily Seabird is one of SXSW 2025’s most compelling new voices… crushingly honest songs, and her weathered voice gives them a spellbinding quality… Seabird gave the performance that everyone would be talking about on their walks or rides home’ – Rolling Stone

‘An unflinching songwriter who’d make Leonard Cohen proud’ – Rolling Stone

Local support comes from Brain Leak. Brain Leak is Cardiff-born, Manchester-based US/French national Tara-Gabriella Engelhardt. Revolving around honesty and vulnerability, her songs consist of personal diary-entry stories that thread together themes of attachment, escapism and relationships. Sonically inspired by the punchy sound of artists like Pixies and Cherry Glazer, Brain Leak captures the vulnerability of her self-reflection in the interplay between softness and deep over-driven tones echoing her frustrations. The music is filled with frantic feelings and delicate sombre moments with an undercurrent of sincerity as Brain Leak opens up and expresses her deeply personal emotions.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.
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When: 7pm on Friday 5 September 2025
Where: YES Pink Room, 38 Charles Street, Manchester, M1 7DB

We’re excited to be welcoming The Burning Hell back – to YES this time, with special guest Jon McKiel!

The Burning Hell is the ongoing musical project of songwriter Mathias Kom and multi-instrumentalist Ariel Sharratt, often including additional comrades and collaborators. Their densely populated genre-shifting songs are packed with an abundance of literary, historical, and pop-cultural forebears, heroes and villains, subjects and objects, stories and hooks. They move with heavy rhyme and a light step, incorporating a frequent fixation on apocalypse and ruin into work that celebrates participation in a mutually created, ever surprising, and even occasionally beautiful world. Which is to say they’re good dance partners and they want to dance with you.

Now based in the woods of rural Prince Edward Island, The Burning Hell has famously ventured to every out-of-the-way island and inland neglected by the less adventurous, emphasising presence and connection across latitudes, longitudes, and time, affirming a commitment to the political power of sharing music. It is a profoundly optimistic gesture delivered by way of killer tunes and joyful live performances.

When Mathias and Ariel aren’t on the road or in the studio with the band, they pursue art projects at the intersection of ecology and sound with their collective Idlefield Art Lab. Recent ventures have included mobile, solar-powered recording studios in Scotland and Canada, and off-grid recording projects in abandoned farms and lighthouses.

Ghost Palace, The Burning Hell’s newest album, was released in March 2025 on You’ve Changed Records in North America and BB*Island everywhere else.

‘Funny, sardonic, and literate. Add in a new-wavey, Loaded-era VU sensibility, and it’s impossible not to be swayed by these acerbically funny story songs’ – Mojo

‘Super literate and fantastically droll, over backings that range from bubbling synth pop and acoustic folk to rattly punk and even a spot of semi-calypso. Silver Jews and Jeffrey Lewis spring to mind on the terrific Birdwatching; Bird Queen of Garbage Island sounds like a glorious revival of Tom Tom Club‘ – Uncut

Tour support comes from Jon McKiel. The songs of Jon McKiel are born of the bruised marshlands of remote New Brunswick, from the craggy shores of the Atlantic coast; places where nature is a powerful wonder and the made-world is in slow decay. His new album, Hex, is a bloodshot pop record steeped in our dystopian present, tempered, across its ten tracks, by an existential umami. It’s the follow-up to 2020’s cult favorite Bobby Joe Hope, which Aquarium Drunkard called ‘an unlikely masterpiece’ and Gorilla vs. Bear listed as one of their favourites of that god-forsaken year.

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When: 7pm on Friday 12 September 2025
Where: YES Basement, 38 Charles Street, Manchester, M1 7DB

We’re delighted to welcome Jolie Holland back to Manchester!

Jolie Holland (born September 11, 1976 at Houston, Texas) is an American singer and performer who combines elements of folk, traditional country, jazz, and blues.

Over the span of her career, Jolie Holland has knotted together a century of American song — jazz, blues, soul, rock and roll — into some stew that is impossible to categorise with any conventional critical terminology. This is her burden and her gift, to know all of these American songs of the last ten decades in her head and her heart, and to have to wrestle with their legacy. She dives straight to the pathos of a song the way the very greatest singers, singers like Mavis Staples, or Al Green, or Skip James, or Tom Waits do. Upon first encounter her songs seem challenging, perhaps unsettling at times, but as so many poets and rockers have shown us (from Dante Alighieri to William Blake to Sylvia Plath to Patti Smith to Nick Cave to Mark E. Smith) that’s where the beauty lies. As evident on her first recordings, Holland apparently has no fear of the truth, and there is no emotional core that she cannot reach in song. In fact she thrives on the red hot centre of a musical composition, in all its strange and brutal detail.

Local support comes from Inland Taipan. Inland Taipan is the pseudonym of Aisling Davis, a composer, writer, and interdisciplinary artist from the North of England whose work explores the intersections of art and science. Recently returned from a residency in the Arctic Circle, her songwriting gives nods to Bill Callahan, PJ Harvey, and Jenny Hval — blending lyricism with experimental textures. Her music incorporates field recordings made with hydrophones, DIY instruments, and environmental sound, creating immersive works that blur the boundaries between song, research, and sound art.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.
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When: 7pm on Saturday 13 September 2025
Where: Low Four Studio, Deansgate Mews, Great Northern, Manchester M3 4EN

We’re delighted to present the Manchester debut by Danish duo Bremer/McCoy!

With 400,000 monthly listeners, Bremer/McCoy have, against all odds, created their own subdued cosmos in a noisy era. Appropriately, Kosmos is the title of the duo’s sixth album. Here, they aim to convey a worldview rooted in deep connectedness and a sense of freedom. The raw material includes tracks that have been simmering for 15 years, alongside pieces that emerged in an intense moment within 15 minutes.

Kosmos is a statement without exclamation marks or large fonts. It’s the attempt of two Danish musicians to capture the world they stand for – and wish to share with others. The album represents a worldview, and in Bremer/McCoy’s cosmos, we can meet each other without words.

‘Humans have always played music. We’ve sat around fires and sung. We’ve danced. When we play together or listen together, we communicate wordlessly. And right now, it’s important to remember to communicate, as many feel we are in tough times. What we represent is an apolitical communication. One of my biggest concerns is division. The fact that people’s political stances prevent them from talking to each other, despite so much common ground. Everyone enjoys a walk in the forest, and I believe everyone feels a fundamental joy and peace when experiencing something beautiful being created,’ says Morten McCoy.

At the group’s concerts, this intimate and immediate atmosphere arises. The starting point for Kosmos was to capture the emotions from their concerts on record. Hence, they approached the initial studio session as if they were performing a concert and began improvising. Their improvisation style is unique: they don’t improvise solos but songs. They don’t riff aimlessly but delve into a story. They don’t know what story they’ll tell when they start, but they discover it together.

They share a common background and have known each other since Ryvangen Lilleskole. Yet, they are two men living very different lives today—Morten McCoy lives in a commune on a farm with his wife and children, while Jonathan Bremer leads a fast-paced city life. In music, however, they always find each other because they can be fully present together.

‘We are very flow-oriented. One must be careful not to try to force too much into the music or have a plan for what one wants. Only when you remove all ego is there room for what needs to happen. If a musician thinks, ‘This and that should happen now,’ they stand outside the music. We want to play as if we are merely listening to the music as it arises. That is ultimate freedom,’ says Jonathan Bremer.

This approach is clearer on this album than any of their previous ones. For instance, the first single Higher Road was made in a single take, with both instruments and effects applied in the moment. The tracks contain themes of meditation, prayer, gratitude, and a quiet optimism on behalf of all of us. A song like the single Alting løser sig (Everything Will Work Out) is so named because they had a loose idea and began playing to see what would happen. Out came a song fitting for the duo’s cosmos, dealing with the notion that fear is a poor driving force; instead, one should try to trust that things will be okay. Hvor du er (Where You Are) came about because they were in the studio with Hans Philip long ago, where he put random words together as they played. Among them was ‘indtil, hvor du er’ (‘until, where you are’), which became the starting point for a separate Bremer/McCoy track. Ideas and melody fragments can need ‘to marinate for 10 years,’ as Jonathan Bremer puts it. Bøn (Prayer) comes from that pool. It is lifted from a theme the duo often played live but never managed to weave into an album. But when Jonathan Bremer played a bass ostinato, everything fell into place. As things tend to do when Bremer/McCoy put themselves and their listeners in a trance-like state.

Bremer/McCoy will follow up Kosmos with a series of concerts in the country’s largest cities this fall. The tour concludes with three concerts in the Conservatory Concert Hall in Copenhagen. In between, there is also a Scandinavian tour, where the duo will visit both Sweden and Norway. Additionally, a tour in Central Europe is expected in 2025.

This show takes place at Low Four – a recording studio situated on Deansgate Mews in the Great Northern warehouse. This intimate venue features a fully stocked Cloudwater bar.

This is a 14+ show. Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.

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When: 7.30pm on Tuesday 16 September 2025
Where: YES Pink Room, 38 Charles Street, Manchester, M1 7DB

We’re delighted to welcome Daddy Long Legs back to Manchester!

New York City’s most beloved blues bashers Daddy Long Legs have been huffing and puffing and blowing houses down on a nightly basis on their infinite world tour and always bring an elevated level of rough and ready intensity to contemporary lo-fi blues with their explosive fire ceremony!

‘A Daddy Long Legs show is equal parts roots rock, blues and guttural soul, stripping down old standards and making them shiny and new again. Some of the originals are like an all-out spiritual revival, while others are hauntingly beautiful’ – AltDaily

‘Like Chicago blues fired at the moon, played by the demented children of the Pretty Things’ – Rolling Stone

Support comes from The Lotts – rock ‘n’ roll crackerjacks.

‘A thing of great rowdy beauty’ – Steve Lamacq, BBC 6 Music

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When: 7.30pm on Friday 19 September 2025
Where: Gullivers, 109 Oldham Street, Manchester, M4 1LW

We’re excited to welcome Blue Bendy back – this time, to Gullivers!

Blue Bendy have stretched out into vast new sonic terrain with their debut album So Medieval. Their two lead singles Mr Bubblegum – a joyously intricate piece of experimental guitar pop – and the frenetic, propulsive yet incredibly deft sprawl of Cloudy, saw the band reach new heights creatively. Of the former, the Guardian enthused: ‘Indie is riddled with addled, verbose frontmen right now, but none so rapturous as Blue Bendy’s Arthur Nolan: here he dances all over splayed post-rock and micro-cataclysms.’

In one of many glowing reviews, Pitchfork described the album as ‘defiant, high-stakes art-rock’ whilst The Independent described Nolan as a ‘cherub gone through the wringer’ in their recent profile.

Having toured as main support for Squid and Cola as well as playing packed out tents at festivals like End Of The Road and Green Man, Blue Bendy have struck a balance between being obviously skilled musicians, writing complex, layered, overlapping and ambitious compositions, while also utilising space, breadth, and restraint. Their music is bursting with dynamism, exploring push-pull dynamics that results in something ceaselessly unpredictable.

 

It results in a sound that is rare for a new band: as experimental as it is confident and assured, as tender as it is visceral, as quiet as it is loud, as bloody as it is teary.

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When: 7.30pm on Friday 19 September 2025
Where: Hallé St Peter’s, 40 Blossom Street, Ancoats, Manchester, M4 6BF

We’re delighted to welcome James Yorkston and Nina Persson back – this time, to Hallé St Peter’s, with guest Faith Eliott!

Acclaimed Scottish singer-songwriter James Yorkston has announced his brand new album Songs for Nina and Johanna to be released via Domino on 22 August 2025. The album is his sixteenth on Domino and his third to be recorded in Stockholm in conjunction with members of The Second Hand Orchestra. Nina Persson (The Cardigans), who teamed up with James on his previous critically-acclaimed album The Great White Sea Eagle, this time shares singing duties with Johanna Söderberg (First Aid Kit), the two of them singing separately with James on five and four tracks respectively.

For this concert, James joins forces with Nina once more to perform songs from both albums.

‘Some of the most beautiful and moving music Yorkston’s made, which is high praise indeed’ – Allmusic

‘A work of real refinement, ‘The Great White Sea Eagle’ is peppered with jewels’ – Clash Music

‘It’s a beautiful, hand made collection of natural and unforced songs to be treasured’ – Under The Radar

Special guest is Faith Eliott. Faith Eliott is a songwriter and visual artist. Born in Minneapolis, they moved to Scotland nearly two decades ago. Through storytelling and world-building, they illustrate intuitive landscapes populated by hagfish, Pleistocene volcanoes, cursed memes, and late-Renaissance apocryphal monsters lurking in the aisles of Asda. Sonically, Eliott grounds themself in a stripped-back, lyric-driven songwriting approach that evolves through the recording process to incorporate orchestral elements – often contributed by frequent collaborator Robyn Dawson – along with electronic textures and found sounds. Their latest album Dryas was released on Lost Map Records on 30 May 2025. It follows two previous releases, Impossible Bodies (2019, OK Pal Records) and Insects (2016, Song, by Toad Records), both of which received critical acclaim, including coverage from The List and The Scotsman, as well as national radio play on BBC Radio 4, BBC Radio 3’s Late Junction, and 6 Music.

This is a 14+ show. Under 16s must be accompanied by an adult.

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When: 7pm on Saturday 20 September 2025
Where: Albert Hall, 27 Peter Street, Manchester M2 5QR

We’re delighted to welcome The Beths back to Manchester – this time, to Albert Hall!

The Beths — the New Zealand-based quartet of vocalist Elizabeth Stokes, guitarist Jonathan Pearce, bassist Benjamin Sinclair, and drummer Tristan Deck — announce signing to ANTI- and release the new single/video, Metal. Metal is the first taste of new music from the band since the release of 2023’s Expert In A Dying Field (Deluxe), the expanded version of their beloved 2022 album.

Expert In A Dying Field (Deluxe) expanded upon the brilliance of The Beths’ acclaimed 2022 album – ‘another collection of tunes that cements their status as one of the great guitar-pop bands of this present moment’ (Stereogum). The third studio album from The Beths, Expert In A Dying Field was released to a wealth of critical praise, and was named one of 2022’s best releases by the likes of Pitchfork, The Ringer, Stereogum and more. Surrounding its release, The Beths were profiled by Rolling Stone, made their U.S. television debut on CBS Saturday Morning, performed a NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert, played Coachella, Bonnaroo and Newport Folk Festival, and supported The National, Death Cab for Cutie and The Postal Service. The Beths are undeniably one of the most exciting indie rock bands to emerge in recent memory.

Tour support comes from Dateline. Dateline’s music oozes emotion by blending earnest harmonies that hark back to early 00’s indie pop, with the cool burn of UK guitar groups from the 90s. Dateline’s band has had a revolving roster of friends, including musicians from bands like The Beths, Hans Pucket, LIPS, Bub and more recently Revulva and French For Rabbits.

This show is a co-promotion with Communion One.

This is a 14+ show.

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When: 7pm on Wednesday 24 September 2025
Where: YES Pink Room, 38 Charles Street, Manchester, M1 7DB

We’re excited to welcome Natalie Bergman back – this time, to YES.

My Home is Not in This World is the much-anticipated follow-up to LA-based singer-songwriter Natalie Bergman’s critically acclaimed 2021 solo debut album Mercy. If you re-envisioned and rebuilt Motown somewhere in the California desert, it might sound something like My Home Is Not In This World. Recorded analog-to-tape and produced by her brother and longtime collaborator Elliot Bergman, the 12-track record shimmers with gospel soul, country-western heartache, and rock ‘n’ roll grit, all filtered through Natalie’s unmistakable voice.

Where her critically acclaimed 2021 debut solo album Mercy was steeped in grief and spiritual reckoning, written in the wake of the sudden loss of her father and stepmother, My Home Is Not In This World emerges from new life and rebirth. Natalie gave birth to her son, Arthur, in 2024, and the experience of motherhood has transformed her music into something equally tender and transcendent.

Out 18th July on Third Man Records.

This show is a co-promotion with Form.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.
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When: 7.30pm on Wednesday 24 September 2025
Where: Gullivers, 109 Oldham Street, Manchester, M4 1LW

We’re delighted to welcome Rowena Wise back – this time, to Gullivers!

Described by Clash as ‘carefully etched indie folk’, Rowena Wise delivers songs that have a newfound sense of honesty, holding space for all of life’s beauty and mess. Her storytelling is
like a close friend, offering heady ruminations on love, loss, and alienation while giving gentle echoes of courage and empowerment. Now based in Melbourne with a burgeoning reputation as a live performer, her songs captivate in the mould of Aldous Harding, Julia Jacklin and Waxahatchee, hailing her as a ‘lyrical assassin’ by the Australian triple j community.

Growing up in the small surf town of Margaret River Western Australia, Rowena was surrounded by music from an early age. Her father, a luthier, built her custom acoustic and electric guitars, while her mother, a folk musician from Chicago, instilled in her a love of music that would shape her career. Rowena travelled and performed from a young age as part of a family band, before moving to Melbourne at the age of 18 to pursue her own music. As a performer, Rowena has the gift to connect with depth and relatability. A seasoned performer since childhood, she is quick to draw in the listener capturing hearts with her candid, vulnerable storytelling. While Rowena’s music has elements of pop, alt-rock and garage, woven through are the 1960s folk influences that shaped her musical upbringing. Her soaring melodies are combined with ‘breezy guitar with incredible lyrical poetry, showcasing her storytelling side while also cementing her status as a kick-ass musician on the rise’ (Pilerats).

Off the back of a UK tour, Rowena recently released her highly anticipated debut album Senseless Acts of Beauty, which has been hailed as a ‘masterful and endearing collection of musings on perspective’ (Tonedeaf).

An artistic hallmark for Rowena, the songs are a coming-of-age journey, exploring themes of loss, alienation and self-empowerment. Working with producer Robert Muinos (Didirri, Julia Jacklin, Little May) in his Rat Shack studio full of vintage gear, Senseless Acts of Beauty was recorded with a band live in the room, often capturing songs in just a few takes. While bottling the energy of their live show, the album also retains all blemishes and humanity. With its punchy, organic sound and genuine expression, Senseless Acts of Beauty is a heartfelt songbook that allows Rowena Wise to plant firm roots as a compelling voice for indie music and beyond.

Local support comes from Secret Admirer. Secret Admirer hope to create music that could have been written any time in the last 60 years. Front facing melodies and warming harmonies that speak as much of West Coast sunshine as they do Stockport rain.

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All shows are 18+ unless otherwise stated.
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