From busking to big rooms
Setlist flavors and who shows up
[Dermot Kennedy] rose from Dublin busking to global stages, blending folk grit with pop scale and a hip-hop sense of pulse. His big, grainy baritone and clean hooks on records like
Sonder anchor a show built on tension and release. Expect a core set built around
Outnumbered,
Power Over Me,
Something to Someone, and
Kiss Me, with room for a quiet guitar moment. You will notice a mix of couples, close friends, and solo fans, many in simple layers and boots, who sing loud on choruses and hush fast when he leans in. Trivia fans note that his
Doves & Ravens EP sparked early momentum online before radio caught up. Another throughline from his street days is the occasional encore coda done solo, a nod to where it started. Production often favors warm tones and roomy drums that feel big without blinding the senses. Please treat these callouts about songs and staging as informed guesses from prior runs, not a guarantee for your date.
The Dermot Kennedy Scene: Quiet Focus, Big Choruses
What people wear and bring
Moments that mark the night
You will see denim, clean sneakers, wool beanies, and a lot of forest greens that nod to the
The Weight of the Woods era. Irish flags sometimes appear near the rail, and friends trade favorite bridge lines while they wait for lights to drop. When
Outnumbered or
Something to Someone hits, the crowd often sings the hook as one, then falls quiet for softer verses. Fans tend to hold phones low until a single ballad, where a gentle sea of lights rises and fades instead of running all show. Merch skews simple and earthy: lyric hoodies, soft tees, and a beanie that sells fast when the weather is cold. Between songs, people listen for short stories about writing or busking, showing a culture that values the craft as much as the catharsis. A steady chant of his first name before the encore feels communal without pushing boundaries, and it stops the instant the band returns.
How Dermot Kennedy Shapes the Night: Voice, Band, and Space
Whisper to roar, never forced
Small parts, big lift
[Dermot Kennedy] sings in a chesty baritone that can grain at the edges, then drop to a near-whisper for contrast. Live, many songs start with spare piano or fingerpicked guitar before the drummer shifts from soft sticks to driving toms to open the sound. The keys player fills the gaps with airy pads and simple countermelodies so the vocal sits upfront. He often uses a capo at the 2nd or 4th fret to keep bright open chords while staying in a comfortable range. Expect verses to breathe and bridges to stretch, with a quiet breakdown that snaps into a final, punchy chorus. A common tweak is a longer bridge on
Power Over Me, where the band drops to piano only, invites call and response, then hits the last hook hard. Lights favor warm amber and deep blue washes that track the dynamics rather than distract.
If You Like Dermot Kennedy, Here Are Your Next Tickets
Storm-and-still vocals
Folk heart, pop lift
Fans of
Hozier will click with the soulful baritone and a steady swell at the big refrains.
Lewis Capaldi brings piano sorrow and booming singalongs, a lane that overlaps when
Dermot Kennedy leans into confessional hooks.
James Bay shares guitar-first roots and loud-quiet-loud arcs that land clean. If you like narrative lyrics and clear, ringing melodies,
Dean Lewis hits nearby ground, though Dermot uses bigger drum builds and wider pads. Across these artists, the rooms feel respectful during verses and cathartic on the last chorus, with fans who value direct emotion over polish. The overlap is less about genre tags and more about voices that can break a room open without shouting.