
‘We rattled it out in 20 minutes': how Kingfishr made a hurling team song into an Irish folk smash hit
It has since spent 18 weeks in the Irish Top 10, gone four-times platinum, and become the first traditional, folk-leaning song to see this level of success since The Fields of Athenry was a hit for numerous artists in the early 80s. But the trio wrote Killeagh in 20 minutes: 'It literally could not have been more of a slapped-together job,' says Keogh.
Last summer, Fitz was back home in his east Cork village, having a drink with his friend and former hurling coach Phillip 'Yank' O'Neill (so-named 'because he tried to go to America once', Fitz explains). All the other teams round here, said Yank, have a song to sing in the changing rooms when they win. We don't. You're in a band. Write a song for Killeagh.
Fitz says playing hurling for Killeagh GAA club for 20 years was 'the biggest thing in my life, the only thing really' before the band took off in Ireland: they broke out in 2022 with their poppy breakout singles Eyes Don't Lie and Flowers-Fire. His aunt Mary is the club's secretary, his uncle Moss played for them, his grandfather Tom was their president and also a player. The junior team features Fitz's brother Cathal, and is coached by their father Ger.
Fitz said he would write a song if the juniors got to an east Cork final in 2024. In his head, 'it was not going to happen. Killeagh haven't been in the final since 2001, there's no way they'll get to a final this year. And lo and behold, October arrives and they get to the final, and Yank texts me almost immediately.'
Kingfishr were recording their debut album at the time, which is now titled Halcyon and set for release in August. The band, who started making music together as a way to pass the time during lockdown-afflicted degrees at the University of Limerick, were in a decent place – they had supported Bruce Springsteen and Dermot Kennedy, and were booked to play a few 5,000-capacity venues in Ireland over the summer. But what was about to happen in that studio would lead, Keogh says, to 'conversations about next year's venues that are hard to make sense of in your brain'.
While McGoo was laying down some moody banjo stuff for the album, Fitz and Keogh turned to their hurling song. 'We just ran off for 15, 20 minutes,' Fitz says, 'and I started rattling it out.' They wrote about local spots the River Dissour and Glenbower Wood. 'Thinking nothing of it because it was all a bit of a joke. Then we showed it to McGoo, who said: 'What if instead of la la la, it's Kill' la la?' And sure, the three of us were screaming and shouting: this is the greatest thing ever!'
The song is a heart-on-sleeve tribute to the sport of hurling and the focal point it provides for the people of Killeagh – and, by inference, communities like it all over Ireland. The first time it reached a crowd, it wasn't sung by the band, but the Killeagh junior hurlers, who went on to win their final. A few days later, despite some reluctance from Fitz – who viewed the song as 'a pisstake' and says it took him 'a long time to come round to the idea that it was about more than just my hurling team and the river that flows through my village' – the band recorded it, and it was released in December as a B-side on their single Bet on Beauty.
No dials were moved until St Patrick's Day, when for some reason – perhaps its visceral Irishness, perhaps its mention of green and white – the song began to feature in a series of 'get ready with me' videos posted on TikTok, primarily by teenage girls. 'I remember saying to someone that we'd get a great weekend out of it, but once Paddy's Day is over, it's dust,' says Keogh. 'And he said: 'You haven't thought about this – the hurling's about to start,' and the penny dropped. I thought: Oh Jesus Christ, this could be massive.'
The song was written for the people of Killeagh, and has permanently connected the band to the town – their sponsorship of Killeagh's new under-10s jerseys is testament to that. But it was adopted across the entire county of Cork as it became an anthem for an inter-county season in which the Cork team won the National Hurling League, the Munster Hurling Championship (their regional knock-out competition), and were – according to the bookmakers, their fans, and every expert going – supposed to win the biggest prize of them all, the All-Ireland.
Alas, they capitulated in the second half of the final last Sunday and let a six-point lead become a 15-point loss to Tipperary. But on their way there, the song expanded its zone of endearment from Killeagh, to Cork, to everyone in Ireland who'd ever been involved with a GAA club, to seemingly just about everyone in Ireland.
Sign up to Sleeve Notes
Get music news, bold reviews and unexpected extras. Every genre, every era, every week
after newsletter promotion
Dr Sandra Joyce and Dr Róisín Ní Ghallóglaigh, who lecture in traditional Irish music at the University of Limerick, attribute the song's success to an alchemical blend of factors. Beyond the timing and TikTok virality, Killeagh has a certain musical familiarity: it employs phrasings typical of Irish traditional music, with a verse's second line ending on a minor note before resolving itself on a major one, for example. There's the enormously singable chorus – 'any eejit can sing la la la la,' points out Joyce – and its evocation of an aspect of Irish life, the community-anchoring GAA club, that so many people either participate in or feel nostalgia for.
Joyce says that although she initially thought the song 'a bit stereotypical', she's found herself singing it around the house and would 'bet my bottom dollar that it'll be sung at [folk] singing sessions around the country.' Ní Ghallóglaigh's first words are 'what a great song!', and thinks Killeagh is 'a modern addition to the Irish folk canon. 100%'. Joyce agrees.
When I tell the band this, they're gobsmacked. Keogh says he always thought of Ireland's canon of folk ballads as a fixed entity, not something anyone could hope to add to. I ask him if adding to it is, more than streams or venue bookings or TikTok fame, the ultimate success for Kingfishr.
'For me, personally,' he says, 'success is being in the middle of a crowd of people and singing it with everyone, grabbing on to the lads next to you and looking at the people around you and thinking: you'll always remember this. I think that's what sport is, and what music is. People are absolutely crying out for that: being part of something bigger than yourself. Being part of a fucking team.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
43 minutes ago
- The Sun
Big Brother legend marries husband AGAIN in stunning renewal a year after welcoming second child
BIG Brother star Brian Dowling has renewed his wedding vows with his husband for a second time. The 47-year-old said I Do to Arthur Gourounlian today with their two daughters present - ten years after they first walked down the aisle. 4 4 Arthur posted a snap of them suited and booted, surrounded by flowers and their little ones in their arms. Their famous pals rushed to congratulate them on the special occasion, with Natasha Hamilton writing: 'How beautiful- huge congratulations to you all.' Brian shared a series of pictures this morning, telling fans: 'You know what, it's a GORGEOUS DAY for a wedding @gourounlian …………… Wanna do it again TODAY.' The Six O'Clock Show host and his Dancing With The Stars judge hubby Arthur first married in Powerscourt Hotel in Enniskerry, County Wicklow, Ireland. To celebrate their tenth wedding anniversary, Brian took to Instagram to pay a special tribute to Arthur. The Virgin Media star posted a video of himself flicking through his wedding album and said: "10 years ago to this very day 30/07/15. We @gourounlian called it OFFICIAL in front of all our loved ones. "We literally had no idea what was ahead of us in the years to come or what was expected from each other as husbands. Well, let's just say it's been ONE HELL OF A RIDE." Brian spoke about the realities of being in a marriage. He wrote: ""Married life is not a walk in the park, it's FULL ON and can be a bit of a s*** show at times, but you've got to work at it, people. "We have ALWAYS LOVED each other, but I'm sure there may have been times when we both didn't like each other and listen, that's expected. "Let's just say the spare room has been occupied a couple of nights over the last 10 years, and that's ok." Baby struggle It comes a year after the couple welcomed their second daughter, Blu. They are also parents to a little girl called Blake. Brian's sister Aoife was their surrogate on both occasions. Brian - who first shot to fame on Big Brother series two - found out he was infertile when they started their surrogacy journey. 4 Speaking on Ireland AM in November, he said: "It's something I have been very embarrassed about, I don't know why I'm embarrassed about it. "The issue of the infertility for me is a much bigger issue, and that is of our daughter. "I'm still her father - when I say I'm infertile, I still have a child. I'm very mindful of the words that I use and the conversations I have. "I don't want our daughter seeing something when she's older or reading something when she's older." "People would always say to me, 'She's the image of Arthur',' he added. 'It was like a knife in my heart each time people said that because they were unaware of my own issue.


Metro
2 hours ago
- Metro
'Deeply moving' TV show that will break your heart lands on Netflix
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video BBC drama Normal People has just arrived on Netflix, and people are warning new viewers to 'grab your tissues'. The widely acclaimed adaptation of Sally Rooney's bestselling novel of the same name made waves when it first came out in 2020 on BBC Three – leaving a trail of broken hearts in its wake. The Ireland-based story follows Connell and Marianne from their late teens through to their early 20s as they navigate love, loss and all the ways your first love can haunt you. Portrayed by Paul Mescal and Daisy Edgar-Jones, the roles not only catapulted them into global fame but the show landed seven Bafta nominations, including a win for Paul as lead actor. The show has touched several lives for its portrait of the complex relationship our star-crossed lovers share – from their school days when Marianne felt socially rejected by Paul through their early adulthood as they both grow into themselves, and must navigate their own traumas. Set across 12 episodes, it has topped the list of people's favourite TV shows and amassed a loyal fanbase. 'Deeply moving. Lives long in the memory after watching,' Dermot M wrote on Rotten Tomatoes where it enjoys an outstanding 91% score. 'Powerful Perfection. Doesn't get any better than this. Literally my favorite series to ever been made. No flaws from me. Will re-watch again and again. Have the tissues ready every time,' Jackie H said. I have never experienced such a variety of feelings during a show. I was happy, sad, laughed, cried and at some point felt an immense anguish. That's how well these actors performed,' Jerry F declared. Over on Google Reviews, Noel Woodward described it as 'wondrous, magical, messy, complicated and oh so relatable'. 'A beautiful, patient, poetic series about messy love between two damaged, self-loathing people who find meaning and transcendence in a relationship despite their mistakes and inability to quiet the noise in their heads,' Michael Duran echoed. Adeline Jugler called it 'exquisite' while Andy David called it 'painfully beautiful in every possible way'. Last year, Twisters star Daisy told the BBC she 'loves those characters [and] would be wonderful to explore them again.' She added: 'Normal People was a series that was such a lockdown phenomenon. I think it introduced Paul and I to a lot of people and film-makers.' More Trending Since the show both have seen huge success in their careers with Paul landing an Oscar nomination for Aftersun and featuring in the blockbuster sequel Gladiator II. Meanwhile, Daisy has starred as the lead in another hit book adaptation, Where the Crawdads Sing, and is set to lead the remake of the classic novel Sense and Sensibility. So whether it is your 10,000th time rewatching or you have been putting it off for five years, this is your sign to grab a tub of ice cream and click play on Normal People episode one. View More » Normal People is available to stream on Netflix in the UK now. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Mrs Brown's Boys loses 8,500,000 viewers as fans complain 'it's got even worse' MORE: David Attenborough's new Parenthood documentary – Everything you need to know MORE: Strictly Come Dancing faces fresh crisis after 'BBC launches probe into cocaine use'


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
The ‘gentle giant' put out to pasture after 14 years serving the Royal family
What makes a horse fit to carry a monarch? Standing at 18 'hands' (6ft, or just shy of two meters) tall, striking an elegant and almost ghostly figure with his smooth silver coat, there was surely never a more obvious choice than Tyrone. The 'gentle and dependable giant' – in the official estimation of the Royal family – was trusted to work at almost every royal occasion for more than a decade, from the Diamond Jubilee to King Charles's coronation. Now, at the ripe old age of 19 (about 58 in human years) the Irish draught horse is being ushered out to pasture. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Royal Family (@theroyalfamily) After 14 years spent ferrying kings and queens to and from their most important engagements, never spooking under the glare of hundreds of press cameras and throngs of adoring fans, he will spend his retirement years at a sanctuary nestled in the tranquillity of the Chiltern Hills. It marks a fitting conclusion for the Windsor grey, whose first outing as a state ceremonial carriage horse came in 2012 when he brought Queen Elizabeth II to the state opening of Parliament that autumn. He was particularly adored by the late monarch, who was known to go out of her way to bring him carrots at the Royal Mews stables on Buckingham Palace Road. Recognition, it seems, for his steadfastness. After all, Tyrone was trusted to lead the Queen's carriage for so many important moments of her reign: including the Diamond Jubilee a mere four weeks after his service started, at several state openings of Parliament and during her visit to Royal Ascot in 2019. The late monarch herself was a dedicated equestrian who championed the role of horses in royal ceremony, particularly of the Windsor greys, who with their distinctive silver coats have been alongside the Royal family since the time of Queen Victoria. Perhaps it was Tyrone's famously tender temperament that endeared him to Elizabeth II. Those who looked after him have spoken in recent days of his 'stoic' and 'kind-natured' character. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Royal Family (@theroyalfamily) 'He's a very popular chap – a big fan favourite,' Colonel Toby Browne, the crown equerry who oversees the Royal Mews, told The Sunday Times. 'Everyone loves Tyrone. He's totally dependable, very hard-working and really deserves his retirement.' Others at the Mews recalled a giant without a single 'bad bone in his body'. He was reported to have been something of a mentor to younger horses during his time at the stables, helping them through the training process as they readied to carry carriages themselves. Tyrone's many public outings showed exactly how it was done, holding his nerve alongside the armed police and flashing motorbikes that are a necessary presence at royal outings. Whether it was Harry and Meghan on their wedding day, the King and Queen at their coronation or during French president Emmanuel Macron's state visit last month, there he was, working in a pair with another grey, or with seven others who had all been bred and reared for the task of carrying the Royals. That included his sister, Meg, who he was paired with to lead the Gold State Coach as 'wheelers', the calmest horses positioned closest to the carriage, on many occasions. Last June, Tyrone was trusted to help carry the coach as the Princess of Wales made her return to public life after announcing she was battling cancer – dutifully escorting Catherine, Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis as they made their way from Buckingham Palace to Horse Guards Parade and back again as part of annual Trooping the Colour celebrations. The late Queen 'loved the fact there was a family connection', Col Browne said. Tyrone has an especially venerable ancestry. His father Carrickrock Storm (known affectionately to the Royals only as Storm), born in 2002, stood out from the other foals on the paddock in Ardstraw, County Tyrone. 'He had a great temperament,' Harry Wilson, a farmer who helped to rear him, told the BBC in 2015. 'The first time you put the head cover on he was quiet as a lamb.' After moving to London, Storm quickly earned the Queen's trust. In 2012, he modelled for a statue to mark the Diamond Jubilee alongside another grey, called Daniel, that now stands on a roundabout near Windsor Castle. Both Tyrone and Meg clearly inherited something of their father's spirit. The latter, now 20, was first to leave the family paddock in Ireland (where many royal carriage horses are bred) for the Royal Mews in 2008. Tyrone left two years later, aged four. At 11am on Monday, the siblings and their father, now 26, were reunited at the Horse Trust in Buckinghamshire, a sanctuary for retired working horses. Some 75 per cent of the creatures there have served in the Army, with the police, or with the Household Cavalry. According to those who witnessed his arrival, Tyrone immediately bounded over to Meg and Storm. The trio touched noses as they greeted one another. Given that Irish draught horses regularly live to see 30, it is hoped that Tyrone has many happy and healthy years ahead. 'After all his years of public service, bringing joy and pride to the country, it's time for us to serve him and give him the best possible life here, where our horses are treated like royalty,' said Jeanette Allen, chief executive of The Horse Trust, the charity which counts Princess Anne as its patron and to which the late Queen was a donor. Tyrone left London in a covered red horse box, a typically understated exit for a mount who never tried to steal the limelight. But he will always be special, as the gentle, handsome and above all loyal creature who calmed the nerves of the Royals in their most strained hours.