News

Their music – delivered in a powerful fusion of English and Irish – is known for its gritty lyrics about party drugs and ...
Police are still investigating Bob Vylan's Glastonbury performance, and Kneecap MC Mo Chara still faces a terror charge over ...
Police are no longer investigating Kneecap’s recent Glastonbury set having concluded that on-stage comments about a possible ...
Avon and Somerset Police say they will be taking “no further action” after reviewing video and audio footage from Kneecap’s ...
Kneecap is no longer under investigation after the Irish rap trio defended Palestine and condemned British prime minister Keir Starmer at Glastonbury.
Kneecap’s Liam Og O hAnnaidh, known by his stage name Mo Chara, has been released on bail after facing court on a terror offence.
Better known by his stage name Mo Chara, Ó hAnnaidh has been charged with a single count of terrorism for allegations that he ...
Kneecap, three young men from Northern Ireland who rap in Irish, has risen to prominence in recent years, with controversy surrounding its shows and political statements.
The Kneecap Glastonbury charges have been dropped but the investigation into Bob Vylan continues after Palestine chants.
Kneecap’s Mo Chara could make legal history if he uses an Irish language interpreter at next month’s court hearing in London, ...
Kneecap members Mo Chara, DJ Próvaí and Móglaí Bap in Belfast, 2024 - Getty. It is not an obvious leap from this to wading into the geopolitics of the Middle East, but the band members appear ...
MO CHARA: The director [Rich Peppiatt] will be f---in' loving it. The Kneecap film's gonna go global. MÓGLAÍ BAP: But yeah, at the start we had a lot of backlash from both sides.