Your browser is not supported. For the best experience, use any of these supported browsers: Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge.
Skip to main content
PayPal Preferred Payments Partner

Rock/Pop

Metric Tickets

Concerts in Ireland

International Concerts

Advertisement

Experience

  • GOLD VIP PACKAGE

    - One general admission ticket with priority entry

    - One AUTOGRAPHED print

    - Early entry into the venue

    - Exclusive VIP gift item

    - VIP wristband

    - Pre-show tour merchandise shopping opportunity (where available)

    - Designated check-in and on-site VIP event staff


    Find Tickets

Gallery

About

All The Feelings Tour with Metric, Broken Social Scene and Stars

After ten albums and 25 years as a band, Metric’s day-one commandments still hold up: call it like you see it, live how you wanna live and dance away the sickness. 

Is there a cooler person than Emily Haines? The singer inspired the character of Envy Adams from the Scott Pilgrim universe. She was mates with Lou Reed, designed a leather jacket, and it’s her iconic voice on ‘Anthems for a Seventeen-Year-Old Girl’ (and other Broken Social Scene tunes). Her main project, Metric, has been one of the most consistent and true-to-itself pillars of the indie rock world for more than 25 years. 

Metric formed as the duo of Haines and James Shaw in 1998. Though hailing from Toronto, they came up in New York’s fertile Meet Me In The Bathroom era, their seven-room Williamsburg loft home to Interpol and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. This is where they picked up drummer Joules Scott-Key and bassist Joshua Winstead. But they’re equally entwined with the spellbinding scene in their hometown, which includes Feist, Broken Social Scene, and Stars – the latter two tour with them this year. They’ve been based in LA off and on, and cropped up in Twilight, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (‘Black Sheep’ was lip-synced by Brie Larson), and Haines even starred in the 2004 film Clean.

Through it all, Metric have never gone more than three years without putting out a record, and never signed to a major label. “The reason we’re able to be doing, I think, our best work 20 years in is because we are able to own our own music and own our own existence,” Haines said in 2023. She’s often decried big business in music and capitalism more generally. See ‘Dead Disco’ for the former and barbs like “Invasion’s so succexy… Let’s drink to the military” for the latter. Both come from their 2003 debut, Old World Underground, Where Are You Now?, an astonishingly fully-formed album that was actually the second one they recorded. 

Two years prior, Haines and Shaw made Grow Up and Blow Away, but the label they were on was going through a messy, drawn-out sale, delaying the release by six years. This experience only cemented the band’s desire for independence. And they’ve never lost sight of that: during the pandemic, they bought a church, built a studio, and made the two-parter Formentera and Formentera II in isolation. Even when they put a foot wrong – an inevitability over such a winding career – they know how to recalibrate. After a difficult period around the release of 2015’s Pagans in Vegas – "there wasn't a lot of vibing happening," Shaw later reflected in an interview – Metric made sure the follow-up, Art of Doubt, was all about band-in-the-room immediacy and connection, a return to form. This is also when Haines codified the formidable aesthetic she dubs “Iggy with tits.” 

Metric’s back catalogue is a treasure trove of great records that gently recalibrate the band’s sound while always galvanizing around the core of Haines’ spiky yet sleek vocal. Live It Out 2005 is all scratchy guitar fuzz and raw production. Fantasies is their most hit-packed and widescreen, stadium-ready but still pumping with life. Romanticize the Dive, coming April 2026, is their tenth full length, led by ‘Victim of Luck’. It’s about “the romance of a less than perfect life,” Haines wrote on Instagram. “I just wanted to reclaim the levity of a life in music. Metric know to throw a party. You come to our shows, and it’s really fucking fun because it’s real,” she told NME. For a band that inexhaustibly confronts the inequities in their scene and the systems we live in, a party is not only well-deserved but essential. And so it makes sense for us to abide by the well-aged instructions of ‘Calculation Theme’ from their first album: “I’m sick, you’re tired, let’s dance.”

Setlists

    1. 1.Breathing Underwater
    2. 2.Crush Forever
    3. 3.Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl (Broken Social Scene cover)
    4. 4.Time Is a Bomb
    5. 5.Cascades
    6. 6.Gimme Sympathy
    7. 7.Victim of Luck
    1. 1.Breathing Underwater
    2. 2.Crush Forever
    3. 3.Help I'm Alive
    4. 4.Time Is a Bomb
    5. 5.Cascades
    6. 6.Gimme Sympathy
    7. 7.Victim of Luck
  1. Fantasies

    1. 1.Help I'm Alive
    2. 2.Sick Muse
    3. 3.Satellite Mind
    4. 4.Twilight Galaxy
    5. 5.Gold Guns Girls (Additional guitar solo)
    6. 6.Gimme Sympathy
    7. 7.Collect Call
    8. 8.Front Row
    9. 9.Blindness
    10. 10.Stadium Love
  2. Greatest Hits

    1. 11.Dreams So Real
    2. 12.Youth Without Youth
    3. 13.Dead Disco (Partial song into next)
    4. 14.Monster Hospital
    5. 15.All Comes Crashing
    6. 16.Now or Never Now
    7. 17.Breathing Underwater (Slowed/simplified)
    8. 18.Black Sheep
    1. 1.Cascades
    2. 2.Doomscroller (with band introductions)
    3. 3.Gold Guns Girls
    4. 4.Satellite Mind
    5. 5.Youth Without Youth
    6. 6.Artificial Nocturne
    7. 7.Days of Oblivion
    8. 8.Gimme Sympathy
    9. 9.Help I'm Alive
    10. 10.All Comes Crashing
    11. 11.Now or Never Now
    12. 12.Synthetica
  1. Encore

    1. 13.What Feels Like Eternity
    2. 14.Monster Hospital
    3. 15.Combat Baby
    4. 16.Breathing Underwater (final chorus repeated)
    5. 17.Black Sheep
    1. 1.Cascades
    2. 2.Doomscroller
    3. 3.Gold Guns Girls
    4. 4.Satellite Mind
    5. 5.Youth Without Youth (First time since 2017)
    6. 6.Artificial Nocturne
    7. 7.Days of Oblivion
    8. 8.Gimme Sympathy
    9. 9.Help I'm Alive
    10. 10.All Comes Crashing
    11. 11.Now or Never Now
    12. 12.Synthetica
  1. Encore

    1. 13.What Feels Like Eternity
    2. 14.Combat Baby
    3. 15.Breathing Underwater
    4. 16.Black Sheep

FAQS

3Olympia Theatre, Dublin.

The 'All The Feelings Tour' opens at 3Olympia Theatre, Dublin on 9 September 2026.

Broken Social Scene and Stars.

Fans will have the opportunity to purchase two (2) VIP packages for the ALL THE FEELINGS TOUR with METRIC, BROKEN SOCIAL SCENE, AND STARS. The VIP package includes perks such as:

  • Early entry into the venue 
  • Exclusive VIP gift item 
  • VIP wristband 
  • Pre-show tour merchandise shopping opportunity (where available)

*Locations may vary.

VIP packages will be available at 10am on Friday 20 March.