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HomeMusicKneecap: FENIAN Album Review | Pitchfork

Kneecap: FENIAN Album Review | Pitchfork

You are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge, straight from the boulevards of West Belfast, the north of Ireland. NWA’s pistol-gripped provocations extracted only a letter of concern from the FBI, which the Comptonites predictably flouted with wild abandon. Kneecap’s exploits, meanwhile, have sparked condemnation from British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and saw member Mo Chara hauled in front of a judge on terrorism charges (a case that has since been thrown out of court). These are rare levels of infamy for rappers; the tag of “world’s most dangerous group” hasn’t felt so apt since the days of Eazy-E posing on the hood of his Chevy Impala.

The NWA comparison is not arbitrary: Kneecap members Mo Chara, Móglaí Bap and DJ Próvaí have cited their gangster rap forebears as a critical influence on their role as righteous agitators. Since arriving on the scene almost a decade ago, the trio have presented themselves as firebrands, ready to stick it to an establishment seeking to strangle the last remnants of 20th century Irish republicanism. Kneecap didn’t pardon their Gaeilge. They distrusted the police, embraced the balaclava, and screamed “Brits out” at every opportunity. Frustrated politicians and outraged right-wing pundits who dismissed their work as shock tactics missed an inconvenient truth: Kneecap epitomize how republican sentiment can manifest in the post-Good Friday Agreement generation. Young people of their cohort prioritize Irish language rights and migrant rights, see a historic parallel between the oppression of Irish Catholics and Palestinians, and have a deep yearning to to bear witness to the end of British presence in the North and the reunification of Ireland.

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No musician can hope to change the world, however, without the tunes to back it up. Forged in the wake of the group’s rise in notoriety—the spotlight really mushroomed after last year’s Coachella Festival—Kneecap’s savage second album FENIAN translates that increased visibility to more sophisticated songcraft. Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap have always been ferocious rappers, two goliaths spitting bilingual bars over gritty electronica with the couplet-completing precision of Run the Jewels. Here, the trio sharpens its focus, marrying clever production with the soul-eating intensity that propelled its rise.

Take highlight “Big Bad Mo,” where a jittery Knight Rider-jacking riff percolates over a colossal baseline while a house-influenced piano break occasionally washes in to ease the tension. The title suggests a play on Mo Chara’s recent controversies, but the song’s real power comes from how he interacts with Móglaí Bap, their dual energy reeking absolute carnage as they pass the mic back and forth. It’s one of a collection of monstrous bangers on FENIAN, where beats are pulped in Kneecap’s hands and choruses are colossal and infinitely chantable. Even the comparatively tranquil “Carnival” features some belligerent but sticky hooks that resurrect Eminem’s MTV-conquering, bleach-blonde, hell-child era.

For FENIAN, Kneecap linked up with producer Dan Carey, better known for working with contemporary post-punk artists like Fontaines D.C. and Wet Leg, who enables the group to test themselves over a more diverse set of sounds. “Cocaine Hill,” for example, might have been one of their druggy electro tunes with Mo Chara, blinded by the lights, stumbling through the dark side of his trip “like a smicked-out banshee.” Instead, the dusty guitar riffs and heartbeat-monitoring beeps sound like Portishead on a journey of fear and loathing through the Nevada desert. And there’s even something resembling a ballad in the form of “Irish Goodbye,” Móglaí Bap’s grief-soaked ode to his mother, which is smartly placed at the end of the album so as not to be crushed by the record’s more discordant beats.

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