Music

Lisa O’Neill – postponed

Thursday 22 June 2023

We are very sorry but the date of this concert has changed from Thursday 22 June to Tuesday 25 July 2023 due to a logistical problem. All existing ticket holders have been contacted and your ticket will remain valid for the new date. Lisa sends huge apologies & is looking forward to performing on the new date.

Book Now

Bar opens 7:00 P.M.
Starts 8:00 P.M.
Early Bird standing £16.00
Advance seated £21.00
Advance standing £18.00
On the door (seated or standing) £23.00

10% off for members

Book online at any time, at the Lyme Regis Bookshop and Bridport Tourist Information Centre during normal opening hours, the Marine on Monday and Friday mornings 10 – 1, and over the phone on 01308 424901. The displayed price includes a £1 restoration levy.

Booking fee may apply

We are very sorry but the date of this concert has changed from Thursday 22 June to Tuesday 25 July 2023 due to a logistical problem. All existing ticket holders have been contacted and your ticket will remain valid for the new date. Lisa sends huge apologies & is looking forward to performing on the new date.

Lisa O’Neill has quietly built a reputation for herself with her unique folk sound, strong song-writing and distinctive voice. Her debut release ‘Has an Album’ was followed in 2013 by Choice-nominated ‘Same Cloth Or Not’. 

Lisa’s first release on the Rough Trade ‘Heard A Long Gone Song’ has garnered huge acclaim both at home and abroad. It received a 5/5 star review from the Guardian on release and a coveted ‘Best Folk Album of 2019’ from the same publication. The new album – ‘All of this is chance’ – is scheduled for release in February of 2023, with the first single due in mid November 2022.

“This is as beautiful as it gets.”

The Irish Times

“Uncompromising, stunning, soul-shaking stuff.”

The Guardian’s Folk Album of the Year

“At a time when sameness threatens to drain the world of charm and surprise, Lisa O’Neill stands tall for difference, as an outlier with a mission to frame the world as she sees it and to perform it accordingly. Her voice is her own. No small achievement.”

The Irish Times