The Banshees Sequel Is Officially Happening And The Cast Is Wilder Than Rumoured
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Dublin's cultural pulse has quickened again this month, with a new wave of galleries, gigs and pop-up nights redrawing the city's after-dark map. From Smithfield to Stoneybatter, curators are betting big on younger audiences hungry for something rawer than the usual weekend fare.
The mood is unmistakable: less polish, more attitude. Independent promoters say ticket sales are climbing week on week, with sold-out signs going up faster than they can print them. Anyone who claims Ireland's scene has gone quiet clearly hasn't been outside on a Friday.
What actually happened
Behind the surge is a generation of artists who grew up online but refuse to stay there. They want sweaty rooms, cracked mirrors, real people. And the venues bending to meet them are the ones setting the pace for what the next twelve months in Irish culture will actually look like.
Critics have already started calling it a mini-renaissance, though the artists themselves recoil from the label. Ask any of them and you get the same answer: this isn't a movement, it's simply what happens when a city stops apologising for its own noise.
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