Sad Night Dynamite at The Trinity Centre
See event details

A gig held at The Trinity Centre on Sunday 27th October. The event starts at 19:30.


Sad Night Dynamite are well acquainted with roads less travelled. The duo of Josh Greacen and Archie Blagden crept out of Somerset in 2020 with a sound that pushed the eerie psychedelia of the area’s musical history (Portishead, Massive Attack, Glastonbury Festival as a concept) through the sharp lens of contemporary paranoia. Formative mixtapes Vol.I, Vol.II and collaborations with the likes of Moonchild Sanelly and IDK have touched a nerve ever since, with the band’s signature blend of surreal character-studies, waspish humour, and serious undertones surpassing 60 million streams and selling out tours around the world - including shows with Glass Animals & easy life.

Connecting the unlikely dots between hip-hop, blockbuster pop and bugged-out storytelling, it’s a chemistry that explodes on debut album Welcome The Night. Here is a humorous soundtrack to the end of the world, but one designed to allow a disenfranchised generation some comfort amidst life’s incoherence. Despite such existential questions, there appears at least one clear answer: increasingly, it’s impossible to mistake a Sad Night Dynamite song for anyone else.



Please note this is a standing event, accessible seating is available.
Last entry: 2 hours before curfew


Venue levy: Trinity is introducing a £1 Restoration Levy on every event ticket sold. This income will be used to create a dedicated fund for critical building works that will protect and maintain the Trinity Centre building and grounds.

Other pop gigs

S&M Promotions at Lost Horizon
— Lost Horizon
dancehall dub reggae roots reggae
Day Party at The Trinity Centre
— The Trinity Centre
dub reggae
Home Counties at Dareshack
— Dareshack
pop synthpop indie rock art rock shoegaze
The Jungle Giants at Strange Brew
— Strange Brew
pop indie rock
MOSAIC plus Special Guests at Rough Trade Bristol
— Rough Trade Bristol
pop rock alternative rock punk pop punk