News

At Glastonbury, the Belfast-based group led chanting against Prime Minister Keir Starmer while Bob Vylan's set included chants of "death to the IDF," a reference to the Israeli military.
Organisers of the Boardmasters festival insist Bob Vylan will remain part of their line up despite a growing campaign calling for the group to be banned. Hundreds of people have written to Cornwall ...
Bristol band Massive Attack have joined with controversial Irish rap group Kneecap and 70s legend Brian Eno to set up a ...
It led to the cancellation of other festival appearances in this country and having their US visas revoked, scuppering an ...
Benny Avni is a columnist who has published in the New York Post, WSJOpinion, The Daily Beast, Newsweek, Israel Radio, ...
At the Royal Opera House in London, Giuseppe Verdi's opera Troubadour (1813-1901) ended in a brawl, the video of which was ...
Jewish group pushing for Kneecap and Bob Vylan to be banned from entering Canada following their controversial Glastonbury ...
Like many other Israelis, I was horrified but ultimately unsurprised by the scenes from this year’s Glastonbury festival in ...
Boardmasters Festival has decided the punk duo will play and it has sparked a new review of its licence - but the review ...
Kneecap won't face criminal charges over the group's Glastonbury concert, U.K. police have announced. Kneecap MC Mo Chara still faces a terror charge.
Wolf Alice have criticised the media response to Kneecap and Bob Vylan’s pro-Palestine statements at Glastonbury.
Wolf Alice say media outrage at Kneecap and Bob Vylan is "a distraction technique", urge others to speak up for Palestine ...