Kneecap

Kneecap

From LSQ by Jenny Eliscu

April 30, 2026 · 38 min · Season 9 · Episode 7

About this episode

Móglaí Bap and Mo Chara of Kneecap discuss their journey in Irish hip-hop and the importance of representing the Irish language and culture.

“ Kneecap was born out of this need to represent the identity of young people who speak Irish in the city, an identity a lot of people around the world wouldn’t know exists,” says Móglaí Bap of Irish hip-hop trio Kneecap . “When I was growing up, you wouldn’t have seen the language on mainstream radio or BBC1 or in the cinemas, so as a teenager it wouldn’t have been that cool to speak Irish. So Kneecap was part of pushing that boundary and seeing what we could do, and also having a bit of craic, as we say.” In the lead up to their powerful new album, Fenian , Móglaí and bandmate Mo Chara joined me via Zoom for an in-depth discussion of their history. They talked about how the project evolved from being something they did initially for laughs and to get free tickets to festivals into a part of their larger fight against the marginalization of the Irish-language, of which they’re native speakers, and their desire to raise awareness of the harms caused by colonialism worldwide. We also discussed their childhood: Moglai’s memories of hearing his mother play traditional Irish music on her concertina, Mo Chara’s teenage experiences learning Oasis and Stone Roses songs on guitar at a…

People in this episode

Host: Jenny Eliscu

Guests: Móglaí Bap, Mo Chara

Topics covered

  • Irish hip-hop
  • cultural identity
  • colonialism
  • music evolution
  • Irish language
  • youth culture

Keywords

  • Kneecap
  • Irish hip-hop
  • Fenian
  • cultural representation
  • colonialism
  • youth identity
  • music history

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Kneecap

Books & works: Fenian, Fine Art

Places: Belfast

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