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A worn paper ticket and a black audio cable resting on a wooden table.

Brighton giggoers get a £10.20 Hope & Ruin night

Speedway & Feels Like Heaven comes to Brighton on Tuesday, 30 June 2026, with a concert listing confirmed for The Hope & Ruin on Queens Road. The listed ticket price is £10.20, while the start time has not yet been given in the Visit Brighton Events listing.

The event is presented by Burning Water and pairs Speedway and Feels Like Heaven with support from Mashaal, Backhand and Mortal Spirit. For readers looking at a low-cost Brighton live music night at a central venue, the key details are already clear: one date, one venue, and a listed price just above £10.

The confirmed Brighton date and venue

The concert is scheduled for Tuesday, 30 June 2026, at The Hope & Ruin, 10-12 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA, United Kingdom. Visit Brighton Events lists the show as a concert and names Burning Water as the organiser.

No start time or end time is included in the event information supplied, so anyone planning the evening should treat that as an open detail rather than a confirmed schedule. The listing also does not include separate booking instructions, accessibility notes, food information or transport guidance.

That makes the fixed planning points especially useful. The date is 30 June, the venue is The Hope & Ruin, and the advertised price is £10.20. The location places the event on Queens Road, one of Brighton’s central streets, but no specific travel advice is given in the source listing.

Speedway, Feels Like Heaven and three support acts

The event billing is concise: Burning Water brings Speedway and Feels Like Heaven to Brighton, with Mashaal, Backhand and Mortal Spirit named as support. The source does not list running order, set lengths or genre descriptions, so the preview has to stay with what is confirmed rather than filling in the gaps.

For local giggoers, the appeal is in the size and shape of the night: two named headline acts on the bill and three support names attached to a single Brighton concert listing. It is the kind of listing where the support line-up matters, because it tells readers this is not a one-act appearance but a fuller evening of live music.

Readers tracking other late-June gigs in the city may also want to compare nearby dates, including this Brighton live music listing for Hill Collective, which also centres on confirmed venue, price and timing gaps.

What is listed, and what is still missing

Detail Current listing information
Event Speedway & Feels Like Heaven — Brighton
Date Tuesday, 30 June 2026
Venue The Hope & Ruin
Address 10-12 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA
Price £10.20
Start time Not listed
Support Mashaal, Backhand, Mortal Spirit
Organiser Burning Water

The absence of a listed start time is the main planning gap. It means readers should not assume doors, performance order or finish time from the current event text.

The listing also does not specify age guidance, accessibility arrangements, food or stall details, or a separate entry policy. Those details may matter for some attendees, but they are not present in the supplied Visit Brighton Events information.

Practical details before deciding

The strongest reason to put the event on a Brighton calendar is its clarity on the essentials: Speedway & Feels Like Heaven is dated for 30 June 2026, placed at The Hope & Ruin, and listed at £10.20. The support bill names Mashaal, Backhand and Mortal Spirit, giving readers a wider line-up to weigh before committing.

Anyone deciding whether to attend should work from the confirmed facts rather than assumptions. The source confirms the city, venue, date, organiser, price and support acts; it does not confirm the start time, end time, booking route, accessibility information or transport notes.

Source: Visit Brighton Events

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Aisha Turner

Aisha Turner

Author

Aisha Turner covers Manchester civic affairs with a focus on public services, planning decisions, transport, housing and neighbourhood concerns. She has worked in local journalism across Greater Manchester, checking official records, meeting papers and community responses to explain how decisions affect residents. Her reporting prioritises accuracy, clear context and practical public-interest information

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