About Die Spitz:
When the Venn diagram of passion, friendship, identity, and artistry collide, it can feel as if fighting words are spitting from your veins. And as postmodern society crumbles, Die Spitz giddily bounce between a dozen different ways to push back. If the world of rock music were an ice cream shop, the Austin quartet have sampled each flavor, flipped the freezer over, and started dancing with the employees they helped unionize. On their debut album, Something to Consume (due Sept 12 via Third Man Records), Ava Schrobilgen, Chloe De St. Aubin, Eleanor Livingston, and Kate Halter fight against the inescapable consumption that surrounds life. “There’s a political side to it, but addiction and love can also be all-consuming,” Livingston says. And as the foursome trade off instruments, swapping songwriting and vocal duties, and generating powerful songwriting in concussive bursts, Die Spitz have created their own little pocket of the world where we can all stand on the edge together.
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”
About Kingfishr:
Kingfishr offer an earnest, pop-inflected Irish indie folk that’s suited for the festival stage as well as the beer garden. Starting out as an acoustic trio, the group went to the top of the singles chart in Ireland with 2024’s “Killeagh,” a heartfelt tribute to a sport club in the village in County Cork. Featuring fuller arrangements and bringing electric components into the mix, they made their full-length major-label debut a year later with Halcyon.
Kingfishr was founded by singer/guitarist Edmond “Eddie” Keogh, banjo player Eoghan “McGoo” McGrath, and bassist Eoin “Fitz” Fitzgibbon, who all met in the master’s program for engineering at the University of Limerick. They graduated, then started writing songs together during sustained periods of sheltering from the COVID-19 pandemic. The trio debuted on streaming services with a live track in 2022, and before the end of the year, they landed in Ireland’s Top 40 with both “Flowers-Fire” and a studio version of earlier single “Eyes Don’t Lie.” The EP Live from Doonane appeared in 2023, and that year they had their third Top 40 hit with the stand-alone single “Caroline.”