Damian McGinty delivered a soul-stirring performance of “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do” live in Ontario—one that still resonates with fans to this day. Known for his velvet-smooth vocals and emotional depth, McGinty took Neil Sedaka’s bright, bouncy 1962 hit and turned it into something altogether more intimate, mournful, and raw.
The setting was simple. A warmly lit stage, a solo piano, and Damian standing center stage with nothing but a mic and his voice. But as he sang, the atmosphere shifted. The audience—many of whom had followed him since his early days with Celtic Thunder and later Glee—fell silent. Damian’s rendition wasn’t about pop nostalgia. It was about heartbreak, regret, and longing. He slowed the tempo, lingering on each line with care, letting the emotion rise and fall naturally in his voice.
What made this performance extraordinary wasn’t just the technical control Damian displayed—it was the quiet intensity behind it. He didn’t oversing. He didn’t need to. His eyes said as much as his voice did, capturing the ache of a relationship’s end and the quiet hope that maybe—just maybe—things could still be mended.
Backed only by a soft piano arrangement, Damian’s stripped-back version highlighted the song’s lyrical vulnerability in a way few artists ever have. The room filled with a sense of shared loss, as if everyone was remembering someone they once had to let go.
Fans online still recall this performance as one of his most poignant moments:
“He took a song I’ve heard my whole life and made it mean something new.” “I’ve never cried during Breaking Up Is Hard to Do before. Damian made it hurt.” “That voice is pure comfort and ache all at once.”
Though the original version of the song was upbeat, Damian tapped into the darker, more honest side of its message. It was a performance that showcased not just his vocal maturity, but his rare ability to tell a story—to make you feel like he’s lived every lyric, and now he’s letting you live it too.
It’s moments like this that remind us why Damian McGinty continues to stand out. Whether on massive world tours or quiet stages in Canada, he brings a level of authenticity that’s hard to fake and impossible to ignore.