Skinty Fia

Album: Skinty Fia (2022)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Skinty Fia" is an old Irish swear that translates to "the damnation of the deer." It refers to the Irish giant deer, an extinct species whose range extended from Ireland to Lake Baikal in Siberia. Environmental factors in the Late Pleistocene doomed the giant deer populations with the most recent remains of the species carbon dated to about 7,700 years ago in western Russia.

    Fontaines D.C drummer Tom Coll's Irish-speaking great aunt used "skinty fia" as a colloquialism, which singer Gian Chatten took as a starting point for this song. He uses a metaphor of a doomed, paranoid relationship to explore the watering down and transformation of Irish culture abroad.

    "[It] sounds like mutation and doom and inevitability and all these things that I felt were congruous to my idea of Irishness abroad," he told Rolling Stone. "Like if you go to Boston, that expression of Irishness. That's skinty fia to me. That's that mutation. That's a new thing. It's not unlicensed and it's not impure. Just because it's diaspora, it's still pure. It's just a completely new beast."
  • The ominous-sounding song is the title track of Fonaines D.C.'s third album. After the band moved from Dublin to London to further their music careers, they retained a fondness for the land and people they left behind ("D.C." stands for "Dublin City"). Chatten was first drawn to the "skinty fa" expression, as he liked the sound of it. Then, as he thought about what it means, the frontman felt the phrase summarized the themes he wanted to explore in the album. "It's like Boston dyeing the rivers green and all that kind of thing," he told BBC Radio 1's Clara Amfo. "It's obviously a reversion for the embellishments, of what it means to be Irish."
  • Fontaines D.C. scored their first UK #1 album in the UK when Skinty Fia debuted at the top of the chart. Their previous best placing had been the #2 that A Hero's Death reached.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in Rock

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in RockSong Writing

We ring the Hell's Bells to see what songs and rockers are sincere in their Satanism, and how much of it is an act.

Vanessa Carlton

Vanessa CarltonSongwriter Interviews

The "A Thousand Miles" singer on what she thinks of her song being used in White Chicks and how she captured a song from a dream.

Justin Timberlake

Justin TimberlakeFact or Fiction

Was Justin the first to be Punk'd by Ashton Kutcher? Did Britney really blame him for her meltdown? Did his bandmates think he was gay?

Billy Gould of Faith No More

Billy Gould of Faith No MoreSongwriter Interviews

Faith No More's bassist, Billy Gould, chats to us about his two new experimental projects, The Talking Book and House of Hayduk, and also shares some stories from the FNM days.

What Musicians Are Related to Other Musicians?

What Musicians Are Related to Other Musicians?Song Writing

A big list of musical marriages and family relations ranging from the simple to the truly dysfunctional.

Dino Cazares of Fear Factory

Dino Cazares of Fear FactorySongwriter Interviews

The guitarist/songwriter explains how he came up with his signature sound, and deconstructs some classic Fear Factory songs.