The Ocelots

The Arc, Winchester.

The Ocelots

Under 14s must be accompanied by an adult. We cannot issue refunds to under 14s who are not accompanied by an adult.

Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
RESERVED SEATING I1 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I2 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I3 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I4 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I5 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I6 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I7 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I8 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I9 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I10 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I11 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I12 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I13 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I14 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I15 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I16 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I17 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING I18 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING H1 £13.75 (£12.50)
RESERVED SEATING H2 £13.75 (£12.50)

More information about The Ocelots tickets

The Ocelots are twin brothers Ashley and Brandon Watson from Wexford, now residing in Leipzig, Germany. Building on the folk-rock essence of their debut, the duo are excited to announce the release of their highly anticipated second album, Everything, When Said Slowly, set for February 2025. This album unveils a richer, more expansive sound, masterfully produced by long-time collaborators Cillian and Lorcan Byrne (Ailbhe Reddy, Susan O’Neill). The narrative woven throughout the album explores themes of Irish migration, the perception of time, love, and the simple joys of cycling.

 

“The title Everything, When Said Slowly is a response from an old Irish man’s perspective on people leaving our hometown of Wexford over the years past. He said it was a very long time since they left, but not much time if you said it fast. I found it wonderful and profound, but also deeply moving and fitting for the album’s sentiment. How time flies or drags depending on what you’re experiencing, especially when it’s time in a place you said goodbye to.” 

 

Blood harmonies are the centre of The Ocelots' sound - imperfections of a voice breaking or a tempo shifting. Recorded live in Orphan Recording Studios, by Gavin Glass (Lisa Hannigan, BellX1, David Keenan, John Grant, Villagers), the band’s performances help form a driven, energetic scrapbook, coloured by flutes, synths, harmonica and harmonium. The twin brothers blend absurdity and sincerity in an array of literature-inspired musings. Open tunings and clawhammer banjo bring country-folk contemplation, but the imagery is very much urban, living outside of the romanticised glaze of wood cabins and cottage-core nostalgia. 

 

“Apart from recording the majority of the album in an intense window of three days, we had a long overdubbing phase back in Leipzig. We were able to be more creative with the final touches. I worked in a bookstore and inside we had this beautiful noisy harmonium. I had a lot of fun with that, and I was in love with the sound. Brandon worked day after day on lead guitar parts, harmonica parts and arrangements for cello lines or extra harmonies. It took way longer than it should have, but it was worth it”.

The debut single taken from the album will be About You, scheduled for release on October 9th. The song is an inspired attempt at bringing  ‘Aha Shake Heartbreak’ back to this decade.  It’s an indie-pop anti-love song, using the extra artillery of chromatic synths, jangling electric guitars and a tight rhythm section. By observing self-importance About You is a cynical, culturally relevant single, as songwriting becomes increasingly more self-involved and narcissistic: