News

The First Minister of Scotland has responded to Irish rap trio Kneecap after they hit out at him during a gig in Glasgow ...
The Belfast band said the row around their axing from the festival had suggested their shows were "hate-fests" but said they ...
Kneecap, three young men from Northern Ireland who rap in Irish, has risen to prominence in recent years, with controversy ...
Kneecap have a new target in their firing zone after lashing out at Scotland's First Minister John Swinney during their Glasgow O2 Academy show.
After much discussion and controversy, Kneecap played  Saturday, hitting out at British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Rod ...
In a new interview, Kneecap's Mo Chara revealed that the comments that afforded him a terror charge from the Metropolitan ...
The band landed in trouble over anti-Israel statements, and a member faces a terrorism charge. But at Britain’s biggest music ...
Read Louder's eyewitness account of what went down at Kneecap's Glastonbury set, the gig the BBC didn't want you to see ...
Trio facing terrorism charges and canceled gigs delivered defiant performance with "Free Palestine" chants while BBC opted ...
The group, Bob Vylan, criticized the Israeli military, chanting “death to the IDF” with a packed crowd at the iconic music ...
On Saturday, the English punk duo led concertgoers in a chant of "death, death to the IDF," referring to the Israel Defense ...
They read “More Blacks, More Dogs, More Irish, Mo Chara” – in reference to a discriminatory slogan, “No Blacks, No Irish, No Dogs”, used in the mid-twentieth century to indicate that ...