An impromptu folk concert took place on a flight from Belfast to Lanzarote when an unknown passenger began doing the river dance in the aisle and a fellow passenger pulled out his violin.
While on a romantic getaway to The Canaries with his wife, Danny Walters captured the moment on film.
During the flight, musician Sean Magee allegedly begged his friend to ‘pass him the fiddle’ while he and his wife were on holiday. Danny asserts this as fact.
After that, Sean broke into a rousing performance of the 1990s folk hit ‘Las Vegas in the Hills of Donegal,’ originally performed by the band Goats Don’t Shave.

Among the most prominent figures in Irish folk music right now are the trio, which also includes Nathan Carter and Matthew Crampsey.
As the jet flies to the Canary Islands, footage captured during the flight shows fellow passengers clapping,
singing, and laughing; one individual even gets up to dance a traditional Irish dance in the aisle.
Danny clarified that Sean was exempt from leaving his fiddle in the hold because he had paid for an additional seat for it.
‘The boys were sitting behind us when we got on the plane,’ Danny remarked. ‘Someone said, ‘Guys, give us me fiddle over!’’around the one-hour mark.
Magee shouts, ‘Ave we got anyone from Donegal?’ in the video. along with a number of the passengers who likewise applaud.
I whipped out my camera the second I saw the fiddle emerge; I was seated right in front. ‘Then it all went downhill in the Hills of Donegal; it was a huge hit!’ he said.

Danny was able to go see the flying fiddler because Magee had some island concerts scheduled.
‘A couple of the lads from the plane got gigs while we were in Lanzarote, so we went down there for the craic—and they were very good!’
he exclaimed, employing an exclusively Irish expression for being in the thick of the nighttime action.