Naima Bock
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THE CINDYS
After her two London shows in November sold out, we are pleased to announce that Naima Bock will play OMEARA on Thursday 10 July 2025.
Tickets are now SOLD OUT.
Support comes fromThe Cindys.
After her two London shows in November sold out, we are pleased to announce that Naima Bock will play OMEARA on Thursday 10 July 2025.
Tickets are now SOLD OUT.
Support comes fromThe Cindys.
To celebrate the release of After the Solstice, her first single on PRAH Recordings, Clémentine March was invited by Bad Vibrations and Eat Your Own Ears to curate a special night at Moth Club.
She invited the Brighton-based surreal poetic pop/spoken collage of Radio Anorak, led by Hugo Winder-Lind and Toma Sapir, and the fierce electronic/avant garde contemporary music, courtesy of Magdalena McLean and Annabelle Möedlinger from The Umlauts and caroline. Clémentine will perform with her band the songs of her upcoming album and pay a tribute to Brian Wilson, with special guests and the visual and expert musical skills of her dear friend Evelyn Gray.
One of the finest singer/songwriters to emerge from the indie rock scene of the late ’80s, Bill Callahan uses the images of the American West in ruggedly thoughtful ways that speak to the present as well as the past.
After 4 sold out shows at ICA last autumn, Bill Callahan is back to headline EartH Theatre in Hackney.
Tickets are now SOLD OUT.
The Hard Quartet (Emmett Kelly, Stephen Malkmus, Matt Sweeney, and Jim White) bring their live show to EartH Theatre on Friday 27 June
In the fall of 2023, that treasure came in the form of a shoebox filled with home videos Powers found in his parents’ basement while he was looking for a pre-war harmonica that once belonged to his grandma. “When I took the tapes home and popped in the first one, it was my brother Bobby and I at the state fair. I was 4 years old choking on a corn dog,” he laughs. “If anything’s a summary of life, that is.” Powers spent the following week recording his favorite moments off the TV — Easter egg hunts, backyard baseball, bloody noses, birthday parties, road trips, and all the life in-between.
Rooted in love and childhood memoir, Rarely Do I Dream is a triumph of American gothic imagination — where storybook innocence dissolves into a radioactive billow of teenage drifters, drug-addled hustlers, and old-world folklore. Drifting between propulsive electronica and hallucinatory rock songs, Powers’ singular voice always glows front and center as the neon road sign pointing home.
The performance will be recorded and form part of a album release on Prah Recordings.
Ben Watt and Tracey Thorn, best known together as Everything But The Girl, return to the MOTH Club to play 3 rare and intimate seated shows in June.
They will perform as a part-acoustic part-electronic duo accompanied by Rex Horan (double bass) and Family Stereo’s Blake Watt (guitar, vocals), drawing on songs from their 40-year careers as both solo artists and a best-selling duo.
The evening will consist of two sets and an interval. Ben and Tracey will be on stage at 8pm. There is no support. The venue will be mostly seated with some additional standing. Seats allocated on first come first served basis. Doors 7pm.
Sunday 8 June – WAIT LIST
Monday 9 June – WAIT LIST
Tuesday 10 June – WAIT LIST
Josephine Foster is a North American artist celebrated as a singer, multi-instrumentalist, and composer.
Foster’s artistry draws from timeless spiritual wells, her performances hypnotic and dreamlike. Her otherworldly voice weaves seamlessly with her instruments—guitar, piano, harp, and autoharp—creating folk-inspired songs with intricate and unexpected arrangements.
Jade Bird plays One NinetyFour on Thursday 5 June.
Tickets are now SOLD OUT.
Support from Fred Roberts.
Adrian Crowley is an award-winning Irish songwriter, singer, and composer who has, in over two decades, created a deeply affecting body of work. The Dublin-based artist is noted as having a uniquely dark poetic sensibility and an arrestingly resonant voice.
Tickets are now SOLD OUT.
Support comes from Angèle David-Guillou.