Carsie Blanton & The Burning Hell Gig
- Carsie Blanton and The Burning Hell played a two-night run at Whelan’s in Dublin on April 23 and 24, with the Friday show listed sold out and Thursday tickets still available. - Whelan’s priced both dates at €28 in its main venue, while Blanton’s own tour page marked April 24 in Dublin as sold out before the tour moved on to Cork. - The Dublin dates sat inside Blanton and The Burning Hell’s wider Ireland run, which continued through Cork, Limerick, Belfast, Dundalk, Doolin, Galway and Clonakilty. (carsieblanton.com)
Carsie Blanton and The Burning Hell wrapped a two-night stand at Whelan’s in Dublin on April 23 and 24, with Friday’s date sold out. (whelanslive.com) Whelan’s listed both shows in its main venue at 8 p.m. and priced tickets at €28, with a €1 service charge on online sales. The venue marked April 24 as sold out while April 23 remained in stock. (whelanslive.com 1) (whelanslive.com 2) (whelanslive.com 3) Blanton’s own tour page matched the Dublin booking, listing Whelan’s on April 23 and April 24 with The Burning Hell and flagging the second night as sold out. It placed the next stop in Cork on April 25. (carsieblanton.com) Whelan’s billed the run as “Carsie Blanton & The Burning Hell plus support” and described Blanton as an American songwriter and activist returning to Ireland in spring 2026. The venue tied the tour to her single “Little Flame” and to her forthcoming album *Red Album Vol. II*, due January 16, 2026. (whelanslive.com) The Burning Hell is the Canadian project led by songwriter Mathias Kom and multi-instrumentalist Ariel Sharratt. The band’s official bio says the lineup often expands with additional collaborators, but Kom and Sharratt are the core names attached to the project. (theburninghell.com) That made the Dublin bill a pairing of two touring acts already traveling together across Ireland rather than a one-off local booking. Blanton’s schedule showed the run continuing to Cork, Limerick, Belfast, Dundalk, Doolin, Galway and Clonakilty after Whelan’s. (carsieblanton.com) For Dublin, the clearest signal of demand was simple: one Whelan’s night was gone before doors, and the second had only limited inventory left on the venue’s combined ticket page. (whelanslive.com)