The Unthanks ‘In Winter’
No Support/ Band plays two sets with an interval.
THURSDAY 17TH DECEMBER 2026
Doors : 7.00pm
From £40.00
Reserved Seating
Age Limit :
Over 14’s only (Under 16’s must be accompanied by an adult over 18)
Seating in the Lower Balcony area has no lift access
Described as ‘the gold standard’ of all winter records alongside Frost and Fire by TheWatersons in a five star review from the Times, The Unthanks In Winter is a dream-like winter
fantasia, embracing both the dark and the light in the most ritualistic of seasons.
Moving in and out of focus, like a memory, In Winter is a bittersweet hymnal to our shared winter experience. It’s an extensive, completist time-capsule of the season, featuring Christmas tunes known throughout the world from multiple cultures, mixed with the traditional and the newly written, all passed with great care and love throughThe Unthanksfilter.
In Winter has been described as “an artful triumph” (Songlines), “a massive statement”(Klof), “the definitive folk album for winter” (TradFolk), “the essence of winter in all its emotional complexity” (Fatea), “an absolute gem and one of the finest albums the Unthanks have given us yet” (Narc), “truly beautiful music, full of winter chill and familial warmth“ (Buzz), “As breathtaking as freezing air” (The Telegraph), “a rare beast that transcends the notion of a Christmas album” (Silent Radio), “the familiar made strange (The Wire) and “a timeless celebration of winter. One of the few albums of its type to transcend its limited purpose.” (Record Collector). In their typical magpie style, The Unthanks collect and reimagine, at once unique and familiar, inventive but natural and effortless. Hear a Tyneside band playing a German Christmas song in the style of The Beach Boys; a Spanish carol performed by English folkies through the filter of Tom Waits; a French carol given desert-blues menace, a newly written tribute to the NHS to the tune of O Holy Night; a wintry opening piece inspired by A Ceremony of Carols by Benjamin Britten; traditional wassails and old stories coloured with folk noir and traces of Vincent Guaraldi's Merry Christmas Charlie Brown.