Kneecap
Latest about Kneecap

"What a night. What a gig. What a f**king band." Kneecap's wild end-of-tour party is further proof that they're utterly unstoppable
By Paul Brannigan published
West Belfast's bi-lingual hip-hop sensations Kneecap deliver a phenomenal, rapturously-received end of tour party in north London

Paul Weller, Primal Scream, Kneecap and more to play Gig For Gaza charity fundraiser in London
By Paul Brannigan published
“An opportunity to enjoy a night of powerful music, and make a tangible difference in the lives of people facing unimaginable hardship”

Kneecap to headline Wide Awake festival 2025
By Paul Brannigan published
London's best independent music festival confirms 2025 headliner and stellar supporting cast

When Kneecap met Noel Gallagher
By Paul Brannigan published
“I've been a massive fan of Blur my whole life, so growing up I was like, I want to meet this fella”

Noel Gallagher is now a Kneecap fan
By Paul Brannigan published
“We get there and the tent is absolutely smashed packed – you couldn’t get in!” Noel Gallagher on seeing Kneecap at Glastonbury festival

Kneecap are the most lairy band Glastonbury has seen in years
By Stephen Hill published
Kneecap, Ireland's most provocative rap group, kick off Saturday at Glastonbury in rude and raucous fashion

“After careful consideration of our offerings we are revising our sponsorship model.” SXSW festival drops US Army and weapons manufacturers as sponsors for 2025
By Paul Brannigan published
Austin, Texas' South By Southwest music, film and tech festival drops military sponsorship for 2025 following protests

Meet Kneecap, Belfast's mouthy, fearless, UK government-suing beastly boys
By Paul Brannigan published
With their acclaimed debut album and award-wining film, Kneecap are going global in 2024, not bad for a group who rap in what some claim to be a 'dead' language

“I don't believe that a company like Barclays, given their financial ties to war crimes, has any place at a metal festival.” Why the conversation around Britain's summer festival season has been all about Gaza, Barclays, and boycotts
By Paul Brannigan published
Barclays will no longer be sponsoring Download, Isle Of Wight or Latitude festivals following escalating protests and cancellations by musicians and comedians. Louder looks at how this discourse has dominated summer 2024 in the UK
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