The Cranberries "Zombie" Vocal ANALYSIS by Opera Singer. You won't believe what I heard...

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2024
  • I have heard The Cranberries and "Zombie" before, but because so many of you have requested this I decided to make the plunge. And now knowing the history behind its origin, I'm even more excited to analyze Dolores O'Riordan for the first time.
    Join professional opera singer Elizabeth Zharoff, as she analyzes The Cranberries for the first time, performing "Zombie”.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Written and Performed by The Cranberries
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I definitely recommend watching the original video without interruptions. Here's the link: • The Cranberries - Zomb...
    Show The Cranberries some love: / @thecranberriestv
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    WE HAVE MERCH! Check-out the full line-up here: thecharismaticmerch.com
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    🎧 Elizabeth’s favorite headphones 🎧 : imp.i114863.net/zayoEM
    Music Gear Questions? 🎤 See my list of recommendations: imp.i114863.net/yRyGoV
    WANT MY CHAIR? I don’t blame you…and here’s a link to make it even sweeter:
    secretlab.co/?rfsn=4692958.b2...
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    🎙️Podcast: thecharismaticvoice.com/podcast/
    🌐Website: thecharismaticvoice.com
    📸Instagram: / thecharismaticvoice
    🧑‍🤝‍🧑Patreon: / thecharismaticvoice
    📺Twitch: / thecharismaticvoice
    📰Our FREE Newsletter: eepurl.com/gz7Z_z
    -------------------------------------COURSES------------------------------------------
    🎵MUSIC APPRECIATION COURSE🎵
    Want to understand how to listen to and appreciate music more? My Music Appreciation course is now live. Take a look at thecharismaticvoice.com
    🎶DEMYSTIFYING SINGING🎶
    My intensive 7-week course on vocal foundations includes weekly group sessions and private lessons. Learn more at thecharismaticvoice.com.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Elizabeth Zharoff is an international opera singer and voice coach, with 3 degrees in voice, opera, and music production. She's performed in 18 languages throughout major venues in Europe, America, and Asia. Currently based somewhere between Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona, Elizabeth spends her days researching voice, singing, teaching, writing music, and recording TONS. She also plays Diablo and Dungeons & Dragons.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    We have a sister channel: THE SINGING HOLE. Join us there to examine how ordinary creatures create extraordinary sounds. / @thesinginghole
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
    Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    #thecranberries #Reaction #thecharismaticvoice
    -------------
  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @pytawidmo
    @pytawidmo 7 месяцев назад +6384

    Oh no, everyone prepare to have this song stuck in your head, in your heaaad...

    • @wilfriedklaebe
      @wilfriedklaebe 7 месяцев назад +96

      For the Germans: Za-ahn-weh, Za-ahn-weh...

    • @braca977
      @braca977 7 месяцев назад +54

      Comment of the year ! 👍👍👍👍👍

    • @jasonregister3494
      @jasonregister3494 7 месяцев назад +16

      🤔🤨🤯😵‍💫🤪🤣😂🤣

    • @yannisgouras4482
      @yannisgouras4482 7 месяцев назад +53

      (Insert beavis and butthead headbanging gif here)

    • @shannonlasell
      @shannonlasell 7 месяцев назад +5

      Lololol

  • @Wombatmetal
    @Wombatmetal 7 месяцев назад +2907

    I grew up in an Irish Catholic neighborhood where the IRA held sway and turned my back on it, and this song has always held deep meaning for me. Dolores said at a concert in London "This song is our cry against the violence in London, and the war in Northern Ireland, and it must stop." It was the first song I learned when I picked up bass. Also, that yodel sound is called keening, and is a vocal technique in Ireland when grieving. Dolores does it very well. I so miss her voice, it left us too soon.

    • @MR-backup
      @MR-backup 7 месяцев назад

      There would be no People of Ireland had it not been for the IRA; you'd still be stuck in 700+ years of Black an Tans Rule!

    • @jimmorrison4163
      @jimmorrison4163 7 месяцев назад

      Ireland was attacked by the tyrants in the UK.

    • @seanj3667
      @seanj3667 7 месяцев назад +97

      I grew up in Irish catholic, in Boston, in the '70's and '80's. There is so much to this song, and I was crushed when I found out Delores was suppose to sing for Bad Wolves but died the day she was supposed to sing it. Also, it is fun to play on bass...

    • @bill-wd7zs
      @bill-wd7zs 7 месяцев назад +193

      I spent about 3 years in NI as a soldier in the early 80s, this song brings me to tears every time I hear it.

    • @ghomerhust
      @ghomerhust 7 месяцев назад +123

      personally, i find keening to be a beautiful and melancholy sound, because it shows so much more emotion, as if your voice is cracking from sadness or something. singers who can use it with this level of skill are able to put tons of emotion that other singers just can't do.

  • @fionnbhru5
    @fionnbhru5 3 месяца назад +152

    She is as we say in Irish ag caoineadh (crying) or caoin. This was done by women in older times in Ireland at funerals to stir up peoples emotions and get people to cry. There were women who were known for their abilities to do this and came to funerals just to caoin (cry) it was an essential part of our mourning and grieving. Dolores embodies this style throughout this song

    • @anthonywest5992
      @anthonywest5992 2 месяца назад +5

      I was hoping someone would say this!

    • @pauljordan4452
      @pauljordan4452 2 месяца назад +12

      We still grieve for Dolores.

    • @Gilly-bean
      @Gilly-bean 15 дней назад +1

      That did it 😢I am literally crying even though I have heard this a million times and knew the history.

    • @kastapostgard5306
      @kastapostgard5306 4 дня назад +1

      Im not caoin, youre caoin

  • @grantmcinnes1176
    @grantmcinnes1176 3 месяца назад +262

    This song used to get played in clubs in Canada in the 'grunge' years. Drunk kids, with no idea, screamed out zombie. I was an immigrant and I shouted along. But with tears streaming.

    • @neilofsthun2513
      @neilofsthun2513 2 месяца назад +2

      To me j acks up adenine

    • @Brimania723
      @Brimania723 2 месяца назад +11

      This song always provokes a shuddering sob at least. My grandparents came from Ireland and the Irish can capture pain and sadness and turn it into the most honest music just the incredible breakdown of humanity that occurred is so incredibly tragic . Yet she says "But you see ,Its not me, not my family." Saying that this is red war that occurs on the earth and just so happens to be happening in her country and its so heavy wow.

    • @PhoenixRising-hf5xh
      @PhoenixRising-hf5xh Месяц назад

      💔

    • @RosalieYandoli
      @RosalieYandoli Месяц назад

      Wow, simple and straight but with a deeply emotional message. Yasss, I can identify...

    • @erinl1265
      @erinl1265 Месяц назад +1

      I loved this song as a teen in the 90s and only now learned what it was about. We were clueless.

  • @Tabris93
    @Tabris93 7 месяцев назад +2249

    Her voice technique here is from what in Ireland is called "keening"in Gaelic or "Sean-nós singing" in Irish. I absolutely love how she incorporates her cultural singing into this song.

    • @Pebble_Collector
      @Pebble_Collector 7 месяцев назад +10

      Yeah, and it's really bloody annoying.
      Unpopular opinion, evidently.

    • @Tabris93
      @Tabris93 7 месяцев назад +267

      @@Pebble_CollectorWhat, no? It's what makes the song, it's amazing and sets it apart from so many other songs.
      So, yes, it is an unpopular opinion.

    • @robertcampomizzi7988
      @robertcampomizzi7988 7 месяцев назад +190

      ​​@@Pebble_Collectorknowing the context of the song, does this defintion help make sense now?
      keening
      /ˈkēniNG/
      noun
      the action of wailing in grief for a dead person.
      "the keening of grieving mothers tore into an otherwise silent afternoon"
      adjective
      (of a sound) prolonged and high-pitched, typically in a way that expresses grief or sorrow.
      "a keening soprano voice"

    • @tricitymorte1
      @tricitymorte1 7 месяцев назад +277

      ​@@Pebble_Collectorkeening is a sound traditionally used in mourning songs, so it's entirely appropriate for this song, when you enjoy it or not. This really wasn't meant to be enjoyed, but to send a message. And the world got that message.

    • @andrewbeaver1843
      @andrewbeaver1843 7 месяцев назад +36

      I might be wrong, but isn't the overall style Sean-nós (Ireland's trad style)?
      And the "yodel" sound, isnt more of a reverse yodel, as it's been described to me, technique called lilting?

  • @thomasconc
    @thomasconc 5 месяцев назад +1711

    Irish person here - Dolores is blending a traditional Irish singing style called 'keening' which is often used around singing at funerals or to remember people who have passed. I remember my mum and her sister singing old songs with some of this style coming through their tears at their mothers/my granny's funeral.

    • @oheyseven
      @oheyseven 5 месяцев назад +58

      Thanks for sharing this context.

    • @garyrobert9085
      @garyrobert9085 5 месяцев назад +19

      Thank you

    • @connaire9992
      @connaire9992 5 месяцев назад +9

      This song will always be an iconic song and tbh people will love it but you can hear it in the rugby World Cup how much the song means to

    • @normankennith7919
      @normankennith7919 5 месяцев назад +9

      miley cyrus does a great version of 'zombie'!

    • @SilkeSaint
      @SilkeSaint 5 месяцев назад +21

      It’s where the saying “keening and wailing “ originate. 😊

  • @weshall5679
    @weshall5679 3 месяца назад +162

    The drums with a military 'rat-tat' beat and bullet shot echo. Genius!

    • @42Mrgreenman
      @42Mrgreenman Месяц назад +3

      Yeah, especially that little drum fill in the beginning that ends with the cymbal crash...dun-dun-dun-dun-dah with the echo and guitar reverb after like you have just been hit by the last shot of an assault rifle and everything is echoing around you (Reminiscent of Tom Hanks "Shell Shock" scenes in Saving Private Ryan)...and they repeat it later as well...I agree, GENIUS!

    • @EH23831
      @EH23831 Месяц назад +1

      Never noticed it before - now I can’t unhear it…

    • @weshall5679
      @weshall5679 Месяц назад

      ​@EH23831 @42Mrgreenman it amazing when a song opens up completely to your ears

    • @terryburke2587
      @terryburke2587 Месяц назад +1

      Reminds me of U2's Sunday Bloody Sunday....

    • @BrianTheDeadhead
      @BrianTheDeadhead 27 дней назад +3

      Came here to say exactly that. That drummer is firing away with passion and anger. I have no doubt he was intentionally representing gunfire.
      He plays with a very pronounce strike on most songs, but you can hear and feel the intention behind each hit in this song.
      .

  • @marlenejojo1
    @marlenejojo1 4 месяца назад +57

    Delores felt so passionately about this and was so angry she fought for this song. She even pushed the band to play harder than they were used to because at first the way they played didn't satisfy or express the rage she felt about this event. You can hear it as you explained in her voice building but yet holding back at the same time...she was pissed and wanted the world to know that this horrid tragic thing that never should have happened occurred at the risk of their careers and everything. for the sake of stopping it from ever happening again...and god bless her for it. That's why you can feel something when you hear this, the grit and build of her voice, she sang her soul out on this like on no other song.

  • @ungenerationed9022
    @ungenerationed9022 7 месяцев назад +657

    To me, her voice conveys a searing anger beneath a valiant attempt to speak in a reasonable tone in order to be actually heard. Which is exactly what it was meant to be. Perfection.

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 7 месяцев назад +36

      Keening.... Is the technique
      but the fury at the brutal madness of the conflict.
      No toy guns in Belfast ... One mistake could be fatal..

    • @hapwn
      @hapwn 7 месяцев назад +2

      Sounds like she's hyperventilating to me. I just thought she was having panic attacks.

    • @drivemenuts3011
      @drivemenuts3011 7 месяцев назад +18

      Yes, I sensed sarcasm in her voice for a split second.
      She is constraining her anger, to be more productive in delivering her message.

    • @gmcm7432
      @gmcm7432 7 месяцев назад +14

      @@drivemenuts3011for me it’s specifically at the line “we must be mistaken”, especially given the visible attitude we can see in the video at that point

    • @lakemichigan3920
      @lakemichigan3920 3 месяца назад +3

      I also hear her voicing kids who bully eachother...kids saying na-na-na-naa... Dolores: heaaad, in your hea-ea-aad.

  • @JRBOOLERS
    @JRBOOLERS 7 месяцев назад +187

    The "yodel" technique shes using is called Keening, an old Irish style of singing. It was tradtionally a style used at wakes to mourn the loss of a loved one.

    • @followmeintofitness5578
      @followmeintofitness5578 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing that. I always called it an Irish call. Sinead O’Conner was a master of this…which I always adored.

    • @pauljordan4452
      @pauljordan4452 Месяц назад +3

      Remembering that she died at 46 devastates me.

  • @pambennett3390
    @pambennett3390 4 месяца назад +52

    This is a universal cry for the horror of human warring. It’s superb in every way.

  • @MannyGoat33
    @MannyGoat33 4 месяца назад +124

    OMG You brought a grown man to tears 😭. This is the most beautiful breakdown of a mind blowing song EVER . I'm glad I found your channel today ❤️

  • @CanwegetSubscriberswithn-cu2it
    @CanwegetSubscriberswithn-cu2it 5 месяцев назад +493

    Being Irish and living in Dublin when this song was released...... It instantly became an undisputed part of core Irish culture. This song means a LOT to Ireland. It accompanied the peace talks and the new hope that sprung from it beautifully. It also marked a subtle change in Irish opinions towards peace / Northern Ireland. Dolores was amazing, she was one of our greats. It's terrible to have lost her so young.
    And now we've lost Sinead O'Connor and Shane Mac Gowan also. Three people who absolutely embodied the Irish spirit and culture.
    To have lost three such amazing artists whose music was honest, raw, uncompromising...... it just sucks, man. Hurts my Irish soul.

    • @JK4ManC
      @JK4ManC 3 месяца назад +16

      It hurts my English soul too. A huge loss to humanity.

    • @redcapsue
      @redcapsue 3 месяца назад +9

      Yeah but they are still fighting. And its so sad. In N Ireland the catholics are still oppressed. They just don't seem to want the violence anymore. Of course we can't speak for all the of Ireland.

    • @Mr93GT
      @Mr93GT 2 месяца назад +11

      We miss her here in the U.S. too. ❤️

    • @tbnobs
      @tbnobs 2 месяца назад +5

      I'm going to ireland this year on vacation always wanted to go there and then found out my father's roots were from the Galway area. im definitely going to pay my respects to her she was a treasure the whole world lost

    • @CanwegetSubscriberswithn-cu2it
      @CanwegetSubscriberswithn-cu2it 2 месяца назад +1

      @johnscott33 sorry.... where on earth are you getting "islam" from in ANY of this?

  • @dasninjastix
    @dasninjastix 7 месяцев назад +280

    Very sad day when we learned she passed. Voice of an Angel and a Fury. I love the Cranberries Unplugged session, Dolores puts on an incredible performance. The live version of Linger is something else.

    • @Dave_Langer
      @Dave_Langer 7 месяцев назад +3

      I totally forgot she passed away :(

    • @michacarolus6571
      @michacarolus6571 7 месяцев назад +13

      Linger is still a favourite song of mine today. Love her voice even more today cause it is still so unique.

    • @frankolivito9242
      @frankolivito9242 7 месяцев назад +3

      so sad made me weep ,i loved her so powerful woman n!!! rock on sister!!!!

    • @travman7251
      @travman7251 7 месяцев назад +3

      I agree the live version is moving in a way the leaves you shattered.

    • @seanj3667
      @seanj3667 7 месяцев назад +3

      I live in Boston, grew up with my parents listening to Irish music on WROL every Sunday morning. I was listening to WAAF (RIP) driving to NH when they announced her passing. I was crushed.

  • @pixiecolors
    @pixiecolors 4 месяца назад +45

    "Keening" is often associated with the wailing you hear at funerals, although when used in music it's not always as harsh and raw. You may have heard the expression, "The keening of the banshee," to signify the impending death of a loved one. Same thing. Dolores was a National treasure and it's truly a shame that she was not more recognized in her lifetime. She struggled with her demons and, unfortunately, lost the battle far too young. But we are left with her music and for that, I am forever grateful. Thanks for the thoughtful analysis.

    • @David-gh6vp
      @David-gh6vp 12 дней назад

      Ahh. "Keening. . . "So that's what I did when my Missy Girl [cat of 17+ years] passed. Even Heaven heard my grief that day. [thank you for educating an Old Welshman. ]

  • @laencleardale
    @laencleardale 7 месяцев назад +336

    The way she swings from sorrow and despair to seething rage is truly amazing. I get goosebumps every time I hear this song.

    • @rebeccaadamski7743
      @rebeccaadamski7743 7 месяцев назад +7

      ❤ me to she's incredible

    • @TheFadingTale
      @TheFadingTale 7 месяцев назад +6

      even though I heard that song circa zillion times, it still brings goosebumps :D

  • @tiffymcconkey
    @tiffymcconkey 7 месяцев назад +423

    RIP Dolores, you will forever be missed. Her voice still gives me chills

    • @doloreserin
      @doloreserin 7 месяцев назад +14

      Dolores's voice is absolutely gorgeous, I listen to her everyday. I read up on The Troubles because of Zombie, I wanted to learn more. Just heartbreaking, no one sang with such emotion as Dolores did.

    • @troystibal2151
      @troystibal2151 7 месяцев назад +7

      She was one of a kind!

  • @Dragonours
    @Dragonours 3 месяца назад +16

    I was a teenager when the song came out. It was, I believe, the first I heard from them. I instantly fell in love with the band's music and especially with Dolores' voice. I still remember the first time I heard it. I couldn't leave my dad's car even after we arrived home until the radio finished playing the song. It's truly a masterpiece.

  • @markfellows74
    @markfellows74 4 месяца назад +24

    “Seething energy”. You nailed it. Well done. Respect.

  • @johnpearson6251
    @johnpearson6251 5 месяцев назад +594

    Rest in Peace Dolores O'Riordan. You are missed and your beautiful, amazing voice lives on for all time.

    • @MKitchen75
      @MKitchen75 4 месяца назад +6

      my thoughts her too .. she is very much missed.. bf from finland

    • @CiceroSantiagobrasilia
      @CiceroSantiagobrasilia 3 месяца назад +5

      Cantoras boas parecem que morreram todas

    • @davidvernon3119
      @davidvernon3119 3 месяца назад +2

      I read this post while listening to the song. The combination brought me to tears. Ugly tears

    • @BarahonaDonQuijote
      @BarahonaDonQuijote 3 месяца назад +7

      I never meet/knew her. But when I did heard she died (in the way she died) I cried. I cried like if were my family whon died.
      Dolores, you didn't even know me. You didn't even know about my existence, but I hope to know you in the future. I know very well that is posible... Love you (your voice) for ever!

    • @koolkim
      @koolkim 2 месяца назад +2

  • @shilohauraable
    @shilohauraable 7 месяцев назад +562

    Dolores is one of those once in a lifetime voices that is terribly missed. 😢

    • @paulwilkinson8308
      @paulwilkinson8308 7 месяцев назад +14

      Unfortunately too damn true😢

    • @summerrose1545
      @summerrose1545 7 месяцев назад +19

      I don't think there exists anyone in this world (who actually sings professionally at least) who has a voice such as hers. Many singers around the world can have similar type of voices but Dolores' was very unique one of a kind.

    • @woeshaling6421
      @woeshaling6421 7 месяцев назад +15

      Her passing hit me hard

    • @seantodd8875
      @seantodd8875 7 месяцев назад +4

      I couldn't have said it better

    • @TheFadingTale
      @TheFadingTale 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@woeshaling6421 still hurts like hell, Dolores was the one and only :(

  • @itsPenguinBoy
    @itsPenguinBoy 3 месяца назад +5

    They say analysing stuff takes the emotion out, but I am crying all the way through.
    I think what works particularly well is the way every part of the performance is another demonstration of how opposing pairs are connected, lyrically, visually and musically... High and Low, Loud and Quiet, Silence and Violence, Soldiers and Children. It takes incredible skill to join all those dots in multiple layers, and speak to something so profound with your words and the inflection of your voice.
    It also makes me realise the lyrics "in your head" and "zombie" are in conflict too; a zombie being unthinking and unfeeling, and yet the lines arround "in your head" describe an almost overwhelming heartfelt internal experience and recognition of the violence.

  • @zomgoose
    @zomgoose 4 месяца назад +8

    The song hits a lot harder when you understand the angst and pain of the real world killing that the song is about. It means a lot more when you understand where the all of the emotion is coming from.
    "Her pain was real: Zombie was a visceral response to the death of two children in an IRA bombing in the Cheshire town of Warrington. Three-year-old Johnathan Ball was killed when two bombs hidden in litter bins detonated on a busy shopping street in March 1993. Tim Parry, aged 12, died five days later."

  • @Paultimate7
    @Paultimate7 7 месяцев назад +477

    As an Irish man, that used to be an Irish boy that fell in love with this song, then her, she still brings me to tears like nothing else does. This song in particular. Its a song about every tragic battle and innocence lost and the desperate, subtly seething attempts to understand why. We miss you, Dolores. You were one of the few in the world I will always admire.

    • @w3tua
      @w3tua 7 месяцев назад +13

      Delores and I share the same day and year of birth. I couldn't believe it when she passed. 😞

    • @specialsause949
      @specialsause949 7 месяцев назад +12

      ​@w3tua that's awesome. My wife dragged me to a Cranberries concert in the early 2000s which I groaned at the time but I appreciate now that I got to see them.

    • @normankennith7919
      @normankennith7919 7 месяцев назад +6

      take a listen to miley cyrus's brilliant version of this song!! she sings it in her own style & is not trying to sound like dolores!!

    • @robertoarmenio3516
      @robertoarmenio3516 7 месяцев назад +14

      As an Italian man that is miles away from all of this, still this song bring me to tears almost every time.
      Just yesterday I was explaining the meaning of Zombie to my 6 years daughter, after we heard it from a street artist in Modena (with small singalong included, that triggered her curiosity) and I was nearly cracking.
      Few artists deliver their message as strongly as Dolores did with this one.

    • @normankennith7919
      @normankennith7919 7 месяцев назад

      take a listen to miley cyrus's brilliant version of this song!
      she doesn't try to sound like dolores but she sings it in her own style!
      remember, she was in her late 20's when she sang it - a far cry from hannah montana!@@robertoarmenio3516

  • @Dornul
    @Dornul 7 месяцев назад +219

    Great example of the difference between hearing something and listening. Elizabeth heard the song before, but now she listened to it for the first time.

    • @mattburgess5697
      @mattburgess5697 7 месяцев назад +8

      First time knowing the context, too. Changes things.

    • @hapwn
      @hapwn 7 месяцев назад

      She needs to listen to Chester Benningtons voice from LP, if she hasn't already!

    • @Dornul
      @Dornul 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@hapwn she has. There are four LP videos on the channel

    • @MaskinJunior
      @MaskinJunior 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@mattburgess5697 When you know the context, you probably agree Bad Wolves butchered this song. Sometimes I think God took dolores from us to prevent her from enduring that indignity. Because Bad Wolfs version does not make you feel conplicit in whit those you put in power are doing. To be honnest I dont get any message at all from their version.

    • @nerissarowan8119
      @nerissarowan8119 3 месяца назад +4

      @@MaskinJuniorI had not heard about the cover until reading the comments here; I was just about to track it down, but I am very prepared to listen to the original again straight after because I can’t imagine anyone doing this song justice.

  • @lumpyfishgravy
    @lumpyfishgravy 4 месяца назад +7

    Vocal distortion (aka Saturation) not only helps a vocal stand out in a dense mix by accentuating transients, but can work at a subliminal level by putting the listener in mind of other songs they have heard - and so enhance the experience. Just as a classical composer may reference a previous work by imitating a motif, a particular sound or treatment does the same thing in pop. It's why musicians are so precious about particular guitars, amps, microphones etc: because they have "the sound".

  • @scottcook2643
    @scottcook2643 2 месяца назад +6

    This is one of the most important and beautiful songs ever written. Thank you for doing it!

  • @RippPryde
    @RippPryde 7 месяцев назад +722

    I have a pretty personal connection to this song, as a lot of people do. Jonathan Ball was one of the children killed in the Warrington bomb, I was in the same nursery group as him. His death, the effect it had on our community and the way it shaped me at a very young age has been....impactful. I find it profound that somebody like Dolores could see and the express the pain people in Warrington suffered, despite the fact she was from the "other side" of the conflict.
    That simple human act of sharing and understanding what our community was going through forever changed the way I thought about war and conflict. The people on both sides are human, the world would be a much better place if we could rememebr that more often. Its fine to disagree or even be disgusted by the actions of others, but never dehumanise them or we will all suffer.

    • @satyasunshine9737
      @satyasunshine9737 7 месяцев назад +12

      😌🙏☮️💛

    • @TrentRidley
      @TrentRidley 7 месяцев назад

      I absolutely agree. The only way war is possible is by dehumanising the "other," as there's no way the majority of us would inflict such unspeakable horrors upon each other otherwise. It's why governments, militaries, police forces, corporations, the media, etc engage in dehumanising the other side in the lead up to and during war. They know most of us wouldn't go along with their plans, so they dehumanise other people as one way in which they manufacture consent from the broader population for committing atrocities against their fellow humans - it's f_cking disgusting!!!

    • @dharmapunk5
      @dharmapunk5 7 месяцев назад +12

      Very well said. Thank you for the reminder.

    • @basscorner3740
      @basscorner3740 7 месяцев назад +20

      Today this song and Your comment are really sadfully actual. Thanks

    • @ac1646
      @ac1646 7 месяцев назад +15

      @RippPryde, I watched the real life drama about the Warrington bombing and the scene where Tim Parry experiences the first bomb and then rushes out of the shop...straight into the path of the second. They way the filmmakers made this scene put you in the moment as much as it possibly could. I've NEVER forgotten it.
      I was 33 when these particular bombings happened and if I remember, Jonathan was a much loved only child.🥹

  • @howardsmith3758
    @howardsmith3758 7 месяцев назад +136

    Dolores O'Riordan in this song is the very essence of a "charismatic voice." I've heard this song perhaps 1,000 times since it was first released, and every time I cry for the senseless loss of innocent life. The video takes the song from deeply sorrowful to utterly heart-wrenching. The second definition for "charisma" in Oxford is "a divinely conferred power or talent." It should be followed by "see: Dolores O'Riordan"

    • @TheAtticradio
      @TheAtticradio 7 месяцев назад +3

      Excellent comment

    • @hackzan2475
      @hackzan2475 7 месяцев назад +2

      O'Riordan

    • @howardsmith3758
      @howardsmith3758 7 месяцев назад

      @@hackzan2475 Thanks, I was typing from memory. Could have checked, but didn't.

  • @77Samuel75
    @77Samuel75 4 месяца назад +32

    Though it was written about the war in Ireland, the lyrics ring true for all wars and conflicts! Such a powerful song in all of its aspect. The music, the vocals, and the message are timeless in their perfection. RIP Dolores, your voice and message will continue to have an impact, and touch people's lives forever! 🙏❤🕊️

    • @mick1406
      @mick1406 11 дней назад

      There was no 'war', but a terrorist campaign by the IRA trying to force Northern Ireland to rejoin with the Republic. The IRA failed, but more than 3,500 died, many civilians, like the two small boys who inspired the song. Blown up by an IRA bomb left in a waste bin in Warrington town, England. Horrific terrorism, not war, carried out by 'zombies' killing for their misguided beliefs.

  • @nerissarowan8119
    @nerissarowan8119 3 месяца назад +6

    I adore this song, it’s devastatingly beautiful and meaningful and Dolores’ voice is honestly amazing. I always tried to emulate her when covering this song but she just had such an amazing range of vocal techniques at her disposal that it was virtually impossible. The vibrato is particularly amazing. Her passing was such a huge loss.
    It is one of the most emotional songs I know, and I really appreciate your take on it.

  • @Ogsonofgroo
    @Ogsonofgroo 3 месяца назад +15

    When I first heard this song years ago I knew what it was about and it made me cry, and I'm an old rocker from the '60's, Delores' keening is magical, deep, and hits right to the heart of the matter. Thank you for re-covering this beautiful and timeless song.

  • @ako8357
    @ako8357 7 месяцев назад +194

    They played this at the Rugby World Cup recently when Ireland beat South Africa (reigning champs) and it was incredible to hear an entire stadium singing this song at their top of their lungs - they even cut out the sound at one point and let them sing acapella, it gave me _chills_

    • @mikesuttles8059
      @mikesuttles8059 7 месяцев назад +20

      I looked it up and found a couple of clips. I'm not even Irish but knowing the meaning and hearing the crowd singing it like that gave me chills as well! Cheers friend!

    • @MrNikolidas
      @MrNikolidas 7 месяцев назад +25

      I'm Scottish, but I was in a pub in County Laoise for that match. The whole pub (around 150-200 people inside and outside) was belting it along with the TV.

    • @titaniapurple
      @titaniapurple 7 месяцев назад +16

      I'm a South African who was disappointed by the loss BUT hearing them singing this sent me over the edge...incredible!

    • @joycastle.
      @joycastle. 7 месяцев назад +6

      I'm German and was in my teens when this came out. And when it came out, the Troubles were very much still a thing. And when that song was played in a bar or a club, people would belt out the chorus because it's such a fun song to sing along to, and that always rubbed me the wrong way, because if there's one thing that this song isn't, it's "fun". But most German teens back then didn't know any better.
      I got a similar vibe when watching the game - kind of like the French stadium guys picking this song only because of its undeniable beltability to give the Irish fans something to happily sing along.
      Now, the Irish singing along to this might be something entirely different - I'm pretty sure that most Irish, even 30 years later, know very well what this song is about, and it is actually (albeit probably by accident) a fitting choice for a team that's made up of players from both NI and the Republic. But I still find it an odd choice for a celebratory song.

    • @MrNikolidas
      @MrNikolidas 7 месяцев назад +9

      @@joycastle. I can’t speak for the Irish, but my guess is that the song has become meaningful in other ways. Just as old folk songs are, by modern standards, obsolete, yet still sung anyway because it brings people together. In that sense, I believe that The Cranberries fulfilled their objective in writing it.

  • @christophergamedev
    @christophergamedev 7 месяцев назад +216

    3:25 - you're absolutely right about the anger here. I've heard that Dolores was so angry after the bombing, so she wrote this song and when she met with the band she told the drummer "play as loud as you can".
    This song is a little bit of everything - demonstration of anger, appeal for empathy, accusation of being mindless (zombie) and it's also appeal to reason - reminding how long this has been going on and that violence has only proven completely pointless by now, and yet people still doing it mistakenly thinking that this is the way without giving it any actual consideration.

    • @cloudyxcloud
      @cloudyxcloud 6 месяцев назад +4

      i always thought the drums mimic the bombs in that song

    • @robw3325
      @robw3325 6 месяцев назад +2

      I see the zombie reference as atrocities infecting survivors with hate in the style of a zombie virus. The hate after an atrocity is now 'in your head' & you are now a zombie of hate.

  • @thefall-downkings6556
    @thefall-downkings6556 4 месяца назад +5

    I'm crying with you. As many times as I've heard (and performed) this song, the video breaks me down in tears. War; the loss of life and innocence. Beyond tragic and so powerfully expressed in this video.

    • @nerissarowan8119
      @nerissarowan8119 3 месяца назад +2

      In my experience, performing this song is the only time I don’t cry to it. But trying to emulate Dolores’ voice is a folly. She was one of a kind.

  • @gregnoland1627
    @gregnoland1627 3 месяца назад +3

    This song brings tears to my eyes every time I hear it. The beauty of her voice combined with the haunting lyrics is just...so powerful.

  • @joergojschaefer3521
    @joergojschaefer3521 7 месяцев назад +280

    Dolores O’Riordan 1971 - 2018 😔 A life full of demons and struggles 😔 May she now rest in peace

    • @muireobrien4642
      @muireobrien4642 7 месяцев назад +19

      Generational trauma is a plague in the North of Ireland. The suicide and drug/alcohol abuse rates on both sides of the 'walls' is heartbreaking

    • @joergojschaefer3521
      @joergojschaefer3521 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@muireobrien4642 I hope that Brexit doesn't fuel the conflict again... 😟

    • @muireobrien4642
      @muireobrien4642 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@joergojschaefer3521 If the DUP would get off their arses and honor the Good Friday Accord and agree to a power sharing agreement with Sinn Fein and other republican leaning parties (the major in Stormont) it should be fine.

    • @jeffmalloy8200
      @jeffmalloy8200 7 месяцев назад +14

      Childhood sexual abuse she suffered from a family member just infuriates me. I'd love to have a piece of that guy!

    • @gemmamartin5157
      @gemmamartin5157 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@muireobrien4642exactly 👏🏻

  • @mr_ozzio5095
    @mr_ozzio5095 5 месяцев назад +284

    There's a interview I saw many years back, that Dolores said she's trying add a feeling for screaming out in anger whilst just managing to it hold back.
    Because she was so enraged by the death of two children aged 3 and 12, who were in Warrington buying a card and gift for mother's day. 30yrs ago this year!!
    This song also got the NI peace talks going, because of how much it high lighted and on a such global level... Music can bring change.

    • @LizzieJaneBennet
      @LizzieJaneBennet 5 месяцев назад +7

      I didn't know the details about the two kids, OMG can't stop crying ...😭😭😭😭

    • @chulainn32
      @chulainn32 4 месяца назад +37

      Amazing song but sorry you are mistaken on the details. I'm from the north of Ireland and grew up during the troubles. This song was released a few weeks after the ceasefire and the start of the peace process, so it's not possible that it got the peace talks going. Ceasefire was Aug 94 and peace talks had already started and led to the ceasefire. Zombie was released September 94.
      Also, Dolores said the song was about the war on both sides - a song of peace and anti war against both the British occupation in the north of Ireland (their tanks) and the IRA (the bombs). If you look at the video, it shows British soldiers and the kids growing up around it in the north as well. Its not just about the two poor kids in Warrington - it's about all the children that were killed in the conflict. Some interesting numbers regarding children being killed in the troubles are that 257 kids died in the conflict - 245 were killed in the north of Ireland and 12 were killed in the UK. 74 children murdered by loyalist paramilitaries, 73 murdered by the IRA and 67 by the British Army/RUC. She wrote the song about all of those children.
      Source: cain.ulster.ac.uk/issues/violence/cts/smyth1.htm
      Dolores pointed out in 2017 that there was a line in the song about Tim Parry - not the entire song. I geunuinely don't want to nitpick but I've seen the narrative of what this is song ia about shift and change recently. This song is about the kids that were murdered in the north over 30 years, not just one poor English kid. It's also in protest against the British Army but for some weird reason, lately I see comments everywhere saying that this about Warrington. It's not. It's for every poor child that was murdered, and their parents left behind....since 1916 as she sings.
      She said
      "There were a lot of bombs going off in London and I remember this one time a child was killed when a bomb was put in a rubbish bin - that's why there's that line in the song, 'A child is slowly taken'. [ ... ] We were on a tour bus and I was near the location where it happened, so it really struck me hard - I was quite young, but I remember being devastated about the innocent children being pulled into that kind of thing. So I suppose that's why I was saying, 'It's not me' - that even though I'm Irish it wasn't me, I didn't do it. Because being Irish, it was quite hard, especially in the UK when there was so much tension."

    • @mr_ozzio5095
      @mr_ozzio5095 4 месяца назад +6

      @@chulainn32 The song was used as a reference point by John Major, the then Priminister as a political tool to make the talks more poiniant and in the public eye. As it was globally a smash hit, all the news media outlets used it numerous times too.

    • @chulainn32
      @chulainn32 4 месяца назад

      Apologies but this is totally untrue. Show me evidence of John Major referencing Zombie. There should be plenty of links if so. You might also be surprised to know that the main state owned TV stations in the UK and Ireland banned the song - quite the opposite to them using it as part of the news. Anyway, these points are nothing to do with your original statement that this song was only for two English kids and not ALL the children murdered in the conflict. Not just by the IRA but also by the British Government and their army. @@mr_ozzio5095

    • @remargreg
      @remargreg 3 месяца назад +7

      @@chulainn32 eloquent, factual and very well written explanation. Thank you.

  • @stevewarren2595
    @stevewarren2595 3 месяца назад +6

    This song has haunted me since the first time I heard it. We did not have children at that time so the impact became more intense as our children grew and my sons came of age.
    Thank you for breaking this song down. The message has always come through but you brought out points that I hadn’t considered.
    The crying in her voice is more evident now. As you were describing that passion I was struck that the quiet portion of the song was the crying of privacy in a home. The distortion during the chorus and the crying there seem more like the crying of outrage in the public arena.
    The boys at first seemed distinct with a specific meaning to a particular group but as the song progresses they become nondescript until the middle to end of the song.
    There is still no distinction based upon their appearance, only in their actions, the cause and effect. Whose children are suffering? Whose children are causing that suffering? It’s not me. It’s not my family……
    Then to see only some of the children with Deloris beneath the cross! Wow! Again, we don’t know if they are Protestant or Catholic children but they are under the one cross of the one Christ! Divided or united there?
    This song has always had a powerful impact on me. I did not imagine that the impact could have been made greater but it has.

  • @user-dr2fd7jo5v
    @user-dr2fd7jo5v 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you so much for a great reaction. The best comment I have seen is somebody said it should be a World Anthem for PEACE! Rich man's greed with poor mans blood. Peace and Love to you all. Pray for people in Gaza, Palestine and all over the world who are suffering. Love from Ireland

  • @masoncochraniii7671
    @masoncochraniii7671 7 месяцев назад +74

    When this song came out I was intensely drawn to it. Her voice, style, the message. But one aspect of the song that I feel does not get the recognition it deserves for making the song feel so intense throughout is the drummer. Those drums, the way they are played and when the heavy beats are hit add so much to this. This song still gets me to this day, 30 years later. And the drums just add to the emotion of the song, IMO.

    • @chrisbetts4738
      @chrisbetts4738 7 месяцев назад +5

      Fergal Lawler kicked ass in this, absolutely

    • @travisr4in
      @travisr4in 7 месяцев назад +6

      I wholeheartedly agree regarding the drums! This entire song is so intense and powerful but the drums have always stood at the forefront for me. In the nearly 30 years since I first heard this song I've still never heard drums more powerful. The force and crack of the snare drum here is unparalleled. I've also always loved the emotion and body language the drummer shows between 22:53-23:17. It's almost as if he himself isn't playing the drums. He's simply letting his emotions play the drums while simultaneously letting those emotions bleed right out of his facial expressions and body movements. It's as if he's taking his anger out on the drum kit. So raw and powerful!

    • @seanj3667
      @seanj3667 7 месяцев назад +1

      First time it heard it on the radio, I was only casually listening until I heard "it's the same... old teem, since nine... teensixteen..." I remember thinking "holy crap, she's singing about The Trouble, today." And it is SO different than anything else they had put out before then.

  • @davepetrusma5517
    @davepetrusma5517 6 месяцев назад +712

    This song is as powerful, relevant and appropriate in the world today as it was when first released. Just a brilliant song, RIP Dolores.

    • @rendratvandonkereschrijver2912
      @rendratvandonkereschrijver2912 6 месяцев назад +10

      like she said "its the same old team"

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 6 месяцев назад +7

      And it was released almost 30 years ago.

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 6 месяцев назад +28

      @@rendratvandonkereschrijver2912 “It's the same old theme since 1916”. The Easter Rising in April 1916 is considered as the start of the Irish struggle for independence, and thus the root of the Northern Ireland Conflict.

    • @rendratvandonkereschrijver2912
      @rendratvandonkereschrijver2912 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Nikioko fun but I did not need the history lesson

    • @talonsoftheraven6693
      @talonsoftheraven6693 6 месяцев назад +7

      Daughter of Eire , she will live on forever , Limerick Abu!

  • @danejensen6064
    @danejensen6064 4 месяца назад +5

    I never realised how not just talented but absolutely stunning she was. I just never did. I just love this channel

  • @chrisclark2747
    @chrisclark2747 4 месяца назад +3

    The music is so brilliant, too. The effect of drums throughout mimicking gunfire. The relentlessness of the outro mimicking the ceaseless violence. Amazing song.

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 7 месяцев назад +715

    First female rock singer to have 1B views on RUclips. That's the power of this song and to the great artist she was. RIP Dolores O'Riordan
    Also, if it helps, this song helped end the war. She was a popular pop/folk/traditional singer and when she came out with this heavy metal song, sounding so bitter, people were shocked and it became an anti-war anthem.

    • @Inferiis
      @Inferiis 7 месяцев назад +31

      the power of this song and the actuality of the lyrics to this day

    • @demoui7
      @demoui7 7 месяцев назад +64

      I love this song, but please don't call it heavy metal.

    • @splorticussuii3303
      @splorticussuii3303 7 месяцев назад +19

      It's definitely heavy metal.

    • @demoui7
      @demoui7 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@splorticussuii3303 OK

    • @cornbredx
      @cornbredx 7 месяцев назад +50

      Its a folk rock song not heavy metal, but otherwise yes.

  • @dresdyn100
    @dresdyn100 7 месяцев назад +306

    It's such a pity more people don't understand the significance of this song but in addition to the wonderful musical and vocal analysis you've covered it beautifully Elizabeth.
    My father is Irish, my mother Australian. I was born in Australia but we moved to Belfast soon after I was born. Along with many other family members, we returned to Australia in 1974 after my young cousin was beaten up by a bunch of teens for for walking down the wrong road; she was six years old. Hate breeds hate so my parents decided to break the cycle and leave. Years later during the 80's when I was in high school in Australia my best mate was Irish protestant, we were Catholic. His mother didn't want us to be friends so my father paid her a visit and asked why she even moved to Australia if she was going to bring all that baggage? She eventually saw reason and became like a second mum to and both sets of parents are very close to this day.
    Rest in peace Dolores, your legacy is so much more than many realise.

    • @ladyevil64
      @ladyevil64 6 месяцев назад +6

      I am mostly of Irish descent, born in New England in the mid-sixties, and grew up south of Boston. I wasn't allowed to have Protestant friends for the longest time. My three siblings had them long before I could, and I finally said "enough!" in 1979. My parents were so ridiculous, and controlling of me, especially. My two sisters believe that they have broken the cycle, but I had to go No Contact with them, because they embody the hatred that seethed quietly through the family for decades. My paternal grandmother, and her family, were able to escape Northern Ireland in 1923, and come to the US. She was 9 years old, and her and her siblings were constantly fighting with each other, and others, right up until their deaths. They definitely turned their fear and anger back on each other, their children, and grandchildren. Never moved past it all. Not the best legacy to pass on.

    • @dresdyn100
      @dresdyn100 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@ladyevil64 Interesting point I hadn't thought of. My father has 12 brothers and sisters and there's 56 cousins of my generation on his side alone. it's hard to keep up with who's talking to who and in 2 cases outright hatred for at least 30 years now. You've made we wonder if they were just so used to hating they transferred it when the original object of their derision was not longer an option.

    • @durantwiggans2212
      @durantwiggans2212 6 месяцев назад +4

      Understand the significance of the song? I am literally here because of what is happening in Israel and Gaza right now! I needed the refresher of the cost of war.

    • @patginty
      @patginty 6 месяцев назад

      @@ladyevil64 I hate to staty in the 2000's I still know sectratian Irish bars in New England that want to continue the war against Margret Thatcher.

  • @RaminTork
    @RaminTork 3 месяца назад +5

    I love this song and video. I think it was when I first heard this song that I realized that Dolores has a very distinct voice and that she is a true Artist. The video also blew me away, and the band was fantastic too. Watching you analyse it made me relive the first time I saw this video. That mix of rock and folk sounds and the intensity of the emotional expression made them so special. Rest in peace Dolores, you were one of a kind!

  • @tykeinburton
    @tykeinburton 3 месяца назад

    This is the first of your videos I have watched, thank you for this. I have loved The Cranberries for years, and this song in particular, and you have added so much more to my enjoyment.

  • @blockbertus
    @blockbertus 7 месяцев назад +85

    I'm going to be a mess watching this. It always brings tears to my eyes. After her passing even more than before.

    • @sefander74
      @sefander74 7 месяцев назад +2

      Same. Remember when it came out, how much it brought attention to the ongoing Irish conflict and how it suddenly became real to us in our American family rooms.

    • @gemmamartin5157
      @gemmamartin5157 7 месяцев назад +1

      This song always brings me right back and those scary memories that my mind somehow buried rise all over again. 😢 but when it came out it was also validation.

    • @deviousraul
      @deviousraul 7 месяцев назад

      I cried my eyes out watching this video, everytime she appears in the video it bring tears to my eyes, and shivers all over my body. God she is missed, I still can't get over her death and the way it all happened, so I get really emotional whenever i watch her singing, specially this song in particular since it means so much to me.

  • @georgehays4900
    @georgehays4900 6 месяцев назад +321

    There will never be another like her. She was unique. Makes me cry when I hear Zombie.

  • @kizunadragon9
    @kizunadragon9 Месяц назад +1

    I saw Bad Wolves in concert shortly after Delores passed away, when they did their cover of this song they said "Sing it! Sing it loud enough so Delores can hear us!"
    gave me chills.

  • @juliajones1425
    @juliajones1425 3 месяца назад +3

    I watched a documentary on PBS about how trauma can be passed through generations because the trauma leaves an impact on the actual brain cells and is then passed on genetically to the future generations. As a person of Irish ancestry, I see in myself and my parents and grandparents the trauma of centuries of invasion and subjugation going back to even the Roman era that has left its scars on the diaspora of Irish peoples, and I hear this ability to sing the keen or cry. Perhaps that’s why people of Irish ancestry can so often sing with the keening or crying sound without being taught. Something in the physical construction of our vocal cords and our brain controlling all that has been passed down. Something to consider.

    • @khplaylistyt9729
      @khplaylistyt9729 16 дней назад

      Filipinos also have this long era of being conquered and we are known for being great singers. We almost always betray each other though. 😂

  • @IrishWookie26
    @IrishWookie26 6 месяцев назад +305

    I grew up a child of 'The Troubles', my parents left Belfast and moved tp Monaghan (a border town) because the were a mixed marriage (Catholic/Protestant) which meant this song has always had special place in my heart. Delores's voice is always unique and unapologetic. She is one of this countries music legends and always will be. RIP Delores

    • @TheUToobGirl
      @TheUToobGirl 4 месяца назад +3

      Miss her presence in music so much. One of my favourite songs, although it is so sad. Happening right now in Palestine.

    • @loquayrocks
      @loquayrocks 4 месяца назад

      My mum is from Clones.. She and my Dad left Belfast in 1960 and moved to Limerick to get away from the sectarianism. Also, I spent many a night getting drunk and meeting girls in the Hillgrove... and I once saw the Drifters there (1987/ or 88)

    • @mollydooker9636
      @mollydooker9636 4 месяца назад +5

      I grew up in the 70 and 80 in Belfast, the image of the soldiers walking around fully armed still gives me chills. It was indeed a fearful, angry and very tragic time for everyone involved.

    • @jasonbodden8816
      @jasonbodden8816 4 месяца назад +1

      When you said "The Troubles" it made me think of the tv series "Haven."

    • @labradoriteatheart
      @labradoriteatheart Месяц назад

      ​@@TheUToobGirl Happening now where???

  • @gamesnstuff657
    @gamesnstuff657 7 месяцев назад +107

    A few years back I learned the context of this song, and since then it always leaves me weepy after listening to it. Dolores's ability to express rage mixed with pain mixed with grief along with the power of the lyrics is just an emotional overload for me. At the point of the writing of this song the Troubles had been going on for 30 years. She could barely remember a different Ireland. And you can hear how frustrated, enraged, and emotionally spent she was with the senseless violence in her home country. Dolores O'Riorden may no longer be with us, but she still inspires and challenges our preconceptions from the power of her art.

    • @tricitymorte1
      @tricitymorte1 7 месяцев назад +7

      After I learned the meaning behind the song, I can't listen to it without bawling, anymore. Especially when I think of the children my own family has much more recently lost to violence.

  • @darkonc2
    @darkonc2 8 дней назад +1

    Anguish. I once did Zombie at a well known Karaoke bar in Vancouver ("Funky WInkerbeans"). I did it from anguish,, afterwards, I met EVERY Irish person in the bar (more people than I thought were even in the bar). They were literally lined up to talk to me.

  • @martab.716
    @martab.716 4 дня назад

    She was so sweet. Miss you Dol!!!!!! Always. The Cranberries, their music, and Dolores' voice literally saved my life when I was a teenager. I will never forget that.

  • @stephanjulich8094
    @stephanjulich8094 5 месяцев назад +427

    Even though they are singing in a language that is foreign to me (I am German), I still got goosebumps every time. You can hear the dispair and anger very clearly. It`s as language could bleed.

    • @jennalamain2448
      @jennalamain2448 5 месяцев назад +13

      Sehr tiefer Satz 🙏🏻

    • @OverlordUser
      @OverlordUser 4 месяца назад +5

      Ich bin Brasilianer und denke ähnlich

    • @klaudiaschickling476
      @klaudiaschickling476 3 месяца назад +1

      Das war deep bro

    • @ThornyRoseV
      @ThornyRoseV 3 месяца назад +2

      Is english foreign to you. Why ? Im from N Europe myself.

    • @geedee1264
      @geedee1264 3 месяца назад +11

      English would be a foreign language to someone from Germany who speaks German as their first language, like, obviously?

  • @michaelgalok2426
    @michaelgalok2426 7 месяцев назад +210

    My favorite part of this song is when you see Dolores do the slides on the guitar that mimics her yodel flips. It's like the guitar is crying along with her.

    • @Jotanna7
      @Jotanna7 6 месяцев назад +2

      Actually, I so agree with that assessment about the guitar crying with her. I noticed that some few years after it originally came out.

    • @Nikioko
      @Nikioko 6 месяцев назад +7

      These yodel flips are actually sean-nós, a traditional Celtic lament singing technique. You see this in perfection in this video: ruclips.net/video/-Cz8nQAi2A4/видео.html

    • @irisbenjaminsen
      @irisbenjaminsen 6 месяцев назад +3

      Not yodel but Keening aka Sean-Nós Singing (typically used in Irish and Scottish songs mourning the dead)

  • @wayne00k
    @wayne00k 4 месяца назад +2

    I will always miss O'Riordan's voice. Every time I heard her sing brought me to tears of happiness, sadness, compassion and enlightenment.

  • @vatoloco1911
    @vatoloco1911 2 месяца назад +1

    I was blessed to watch her live. RIP lovely Dolores.
    Thank you for doing this video

  • @danbal4185
    @danbal4185 7 месяцев назад +70

    They wrote so many other jewels like this. Dolores was such a powerful and original singer, yet her heartbreaking fragility and vulnerability always cut through. Rip Irish Angel.

  • @rambler209
    @rambler209 7 месяцев назад +80

    The opening lyrics of this song always make me think of someones voice cracking from crying and emotion. It just rips tears from me too, every time i hear it.

    • @constructionbootgazer
      @constructionbootgazer 7 месяцев назад +2

      Like someone is out of breath and panting from fighting/running/crying/etc

  • @carlosvejar3896
    @carlosvejar3896 4 месяца назад +1

    Hello charismatic one. I believe you have one of the most accurately creative ways of observing and explaining the sounds you hear and the intention or the driving force behind each artist’s form of music. You allow yourself to be malleable in all genres. Thank you for sharing your gift with us!

  • @rachellambropoulos3402
    @rachellambropoulos3402 Месяц назад

    I love your analysis of this amazing song, you got it spot on! Being a trained opera singer, you noticed all the breaths and techniques that Dolores used. This is such a powerful and emotional song laced with anger and deep grief and it never fails to give me chills and brings me to tears.

  • @johnlong9534
    @johnlong9534 5 месяцев назад +163

    They should have won a Grammy, an Emmy, an Oscar and anything else they could have given the band. This video goes way beyond song.

  • @stephgreen3070
    @stephgreen3070 7 месяцев назад +99

    Oh this song. It is gut wrenching. The Cranberries had *such* an impact on me as a teenage girl. The video shoots me right back to my senior year. The furious, driving guitar and the way the drums are played with such intensity just gives me shivers. They really were so extraordinary. RIP Delores.

    • @heidimobley4897
      @heidimobley4897 7 месяцев назад +2

      First rock video I ever saw as a kid. I remember it so clearly, the emotions that it brought up in me. RIP indeed.

  • @RiadDai
    @RiadDai 4 месяца назад +2

    This analysis is going to change how I sing this song in the future. I've never thought about the song this way before. Thank you!

  • @alabamacoastie6924
    @alabamacoastie6924 17 дней назад

    Your deep understanding of music, vocals, production and recording tech is amazing and highly entertaining! Plus you're beautiful, charming and a great communicator. Great combo!

  • @cptpackrat1
    @cptpackrat1 7 месяцев назад +66

    Nearly 30 years later and this song is just as powerful as the day it was released. Dolores was a talent gone far to soon...

    • @GenX1964
      @GenX1964 7 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah and no shortage of zombies in the world to heed D's words either these days.

  • @toddzino58
    @toddzino58 7 месяцев назад +139

    Dolores was in a league of her own. Stunning.

    • @aceofspades6667
      @aceofspades6667 7 месяцев назад

      Check out the transatlantic sessions on RUclips there are many special performances. Sarah jarosz has 3: Annabelle lee, runaway, ring them bells. Dan tyminski boy who wouldn’t how corn is just mind blowing. Transatlantic sessions is where it’s at

    • @MrMelichor
      @MrMelichor 7 месяцев назад

      That was Lori Petty

    • @ericcartmansstrengthandpow5960
      @ericcartmansstrengthandpow5960 7 месяцев назад

      Wow, did you just assume her gender? Stunning and brave.

  • @charlesbouthillier7216
    @charlesbouthillier7216 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for your reactions. You break music down to an understanding,no not an understanding, a way of seeing music in a different light. Because of you and others such as Peter Barber, Jennifer G., and one of my personal favorites The Fairy Voice Mother. You all have taught so much about different aspects of music I never knew before. What an absolutely beautiful journey this has been. A joy I never expected and I'm truly grateful. Blessings to you and your family and again thank you 😊

  • @meganwoehl5277
    @meganwoehl5277 2 месяца назад +1

    The keening in her voice brings me to tears every time. Its truly the sound of someone experiencing heartbreak, grief, and anger. Its just so powerful. In a weird, indirect way, it brings back feelings of Kurt Cobain at the MTV Unplugged concert when he covered "where did you sleep last night" ... the cry he does at the end gives me a similar emotion. Just gut wrenchingly sad and beautiful at the same time.

  • @hopeevans5216
    @hopeevans5216 7 месяцев назад +56

    The way she incorporated keening into her songs was heartbreakingly brilliant. Hers is a voice that will never be forgotten😢

  • @edster612
    @edster612 7 месяцев назад +133

    Every time I hear this song I tear up. Delores puts so much of herself into this. I'm glad you finally covered this one Elizabeth. She was so talented and had the ability to get her message across.

  • @michaelolivari7854
    @michaelolivari7854 2 месяца назад +1

    Your passion for music is contagious. Please don’t stop sharing.

  • @variable7833
    @variable7833 13 дней назад +1

    Music from the soul. One of a kind woman. Amazing music

  • @never2late_mtb349
    @never2late_mtb349 7 месяцев назад +121

    The two guys in the mural on the end of the house at 2:29 in the original video were from my regiment. One was a friend of mine. We saw what happened to them on TV. The BBC used my friend's full name, not the name we all knew him by. It was a couple of days before I realised who it was. I was based out in Berlin at the time. Another mate passed me when we were both out running and said "What about Bob?", "Bob who?", "Bob Howes". Then the penny dropped. The IRA funeral that two guys had driven into a couple of days earlier. March 1988. I love this song, but always feel a pang when that brief image flashes past.

    • @Gurtsak
      @Gurtsak 7 месяцев назад +4

      "Corporal killings" I believe, correct. I just left Ireland and toured Belfast with the Black Taxis. Sorry for pain you deal with, tragic stuff. Loved the people of Ireland and all the culture there.

    • @never2late_mtb349
      @never2late_mtb349 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@Gurtsak That is correct. Derek Woods and David "Bob" Howes.

    • @jeffmalloy8200
      @jeffmalloy8200 7 месяцев назад

      What else can be expected from 700 years of British occupation and suppression? Tragedy enough to go around.

    • @marcellemccalla6325
      @marcellemccalla6325 7 месяцев назад +3

      I'm so sorry. It hurts enough watching helpless from afar, but when it's someone that you've fought beside and had that bond of brotherhood, it takes a part of you.

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 7 месяцев назад +3

      I'm so sorry about your trauma. I didn't know about this horrific incident, and I hope it's not too insensitive of me to link to the (lengthy) Wikipedia article, and to urge everyone to read it:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporals_killings
      It conveys the climate of the day *very* well.

  • @russcattell955i
    @russcattell955i 7 месяцев назад +55

    I'm 64 and this song still brings on a tear often. My wife was in the London army barracks blown up by the IRA, she was unhurt but saw the carnage. A very long time friend of ours, a Kerry gal can imitate Dolores's singing well. She told us that when the Cranberries songs we played in the pub, she & her mates sang along.

  • @sandyshoals7565
    @sandyshoals7565 3 месяца назад

    Always have loved this song & video. The emotion just bleeds through to the listener. Thank you for heightening my appreciation for it.

  • @GregiiFlieger
    @GregiiFlieger 4 месяца назад

    You are the right person to do this review. Well done and thank-you. Nailed it in so many ways.

  • @t.a.k.palfrey3882
    @t.a.k.palfrey3882 7 месяцев назад +316

    One of the disturbing elements in this song for many US "Irish-American" listeners is that this proud and patriotic real Irish woman sang about both sides in this paramilitary conflict being complicit in indoctrinating children to see violence as the answer to disagreements. She was a brave, if also tragic spokeswoman for peace.

    • @OlderThanTime09
      @OlderThanTime09 7 месяцев назад +41

      I am so glad she got to see the ceasefire.

    • @jeremydavis8256
      @jeremydavis8256 7 месяцев назад

      as a native to america, its almost the same here. we glorify violence and sending people off to war, we cant even effectively combat our mass shooting problem because of our obsession with guns and violence. we'd rather children die as a sacrifice to keep our weapons.

    • @andrealarocco4941
      @andrealarocco4941 7 месяцев назад +12

      Well said!! Here’s to PEACE ✌️ ✌️✌️💚💚💚

    • @kennethmacalpin7655
      @kennethmacalpin7655 7 месяцев назад +20

      There is something about the Troubles that gets woefully mistranslated when it crosses the Atlantic. Irish-Americans who wouldn't know Cork from Cavan support the IRA from behind the Atlantic ocean where they don't actually have to live with sectarianism. This song is about the Warrington Bombing in 1993, when the IRA killed two children, aged 3 and 12. But so many Americans think the Troubles were all "England"'s fault. Never mind that the "English" in question are Ulster Scots who have been in Northern Ireland since before the Mayflower, and the conflict has far more to do with Scotland than England.

    • @vaskylark
      @vaskylark 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@kennethmacalpin7655 Where do you get your info about Americans supporting IRA? Where does that come from? I'm Catholic and I have Irish ancestry along with some other European roots, but I'm American first and Americans believe in religious freedom. I'd be surprised if what you're saying is the majority since pretty much all Americans believe in freedom of speech and religion. We wouldn't have a problem with the Ulster Scots in other words.

  • @moniqueyap9193
    @moniqueyap9193 7 месяцев назад +105

    This song and Dolores delivery is haunting. It's weird, so sweet and so hard both at the same time. A once in a lifetime voice. RIP Dolores.

  • @BD-py6og
    @BD-py6og 4 месяца назад +1

    This video always brings tears welling up in my eyes. So powerful! Dolores will always have a place in my heart. Wish I could have known her.

  • @jeanpauls123
    @jeanpauls123 8 дней назад +1

    So so so SAD and I have watched it many times before but I still can't resist watching it again 😥😢😭😭😭

  • @rickbelden2319
    @rickbelden2319 7 месяцев назад +116

    I watched a really interesting breakdown of the music theory used in this song. Basically the melodic line never really resolves back to the root so it gives this feeling of no resolution just like the conflict. The Cranberries put so much thought into this song to get their message across and they created a timeless master piece.

  • @LPfanmichael
    @LPfanmichael 7 месяцев назад +97

    Elizabeth, don’t let any comments saying that you pause too much or rewind too much change how you do your videos. We love the analysis! Anyone who doesn’t can find a different video. I Love your channel! Also there is an awesome cover by Bad Wolves. Delores was originally going to be featured in it but when she passed they released it in memory of her (I think) instead. I think you might enjoy it.

    • @theaikidoka
      @theaikidoka 7 месяцев назад +13

      Yeah, I want an analysis, not a video of someone nodding along to a song. I'll always watch the music video seperately to get a 'clean' run through.

    • @2727rogers
      @2727rogers 7 месяцев назад +5

      Yes the title says it is a vocal analysis not just a reaction.

    • @Michael-----
      @Michael----- 7 месяцев назад +3

      It is a wonder anyone gets upset about Elizabeth pausing too much. When she does pause, she goes back like 5 times and nothing is missed ever.
      The only thing Elizabeth sometimes does is get too caught up in the video content and loses focus on the vocal and song briefly. That is annoying, but it's rare and she makes up for it in other ways.

    • @ghostgirl6970
      @ghostgirl6970 7 месяцев назад +2

      I think I recall also that RUclipsrs have to pause/rewind and do commentary after a certain number of seconds of playback, to avoid a copyright strike?

    • @-Devy-
      @-Devy- 7 месяцев назад +2

      Funny how other people manage just fine to analyze and give interesting commentary without rewinding literally every 10 second section 30 times.

  • @leandropoli8434
    @leandropoli8434 4 месяца назад

    How many tears has been falling listening this song since 90s... thanks a lot for your precious judgement and for your emotions...❤. A big Ciao from Italy 👋

  • @Tabletop_Turtles
    @Tabletop_Turtles 3 месяца назад

    Such a moving song that the video just takes to another level. I always shed a tear and i have been listening to this for 30 years

  • @binlid1969
    @binlid1969 7 месяцев назад +64

    I grew up in belfast in the 70s/80s and those kids played the same way me and my mates did in very similar places. Some of them are no longer here and the rest of us have memories we wish we could forget. This video has me in tears every time I see it and even hearing the song unexpectedly can trigger memories. Some people are horrified by 'funny' stories I tell of my childhood and it took me a while to realise why they were so upset at things i remembered as funny. I know this song was written about the tragic taking of young lives but to me it'salways been the taking of young innocence and the manipulation of my generation by those with twisted agendas that have an equal sense of loss. All these years later the lessons haven't been learned so this song is still as relevant today for my childrens and grandchildrens generations. Thank you for your analasis ,you've hit the mark yet again

    • @alangarde2928
      @alangarde2928 7 месяцев назад +8

      Very well said. I grew up near an army base just outside London in the 70s/80s and had to unlearn a lot of things we heard all the time to see the agendas being pushed from many directions and start to see people instead. This song was a large part of that re-examination. I cannot express enough how important this song was at the time, nor how relevant it is to this day. Hearing it always brings tears to my eyes and takes me back to those times.

  • @bronwentillman8385
    @bronwentillman8385 7 месяцев назад +77

    Dolores wrote and performed the guitar riffs in this song, and absolutely nailed the darkness that makes the song what it is. I love her voice and her passion that she put into this song. We miss you, Dolores!!!

    • @Patrick-857
      @Patrick-857 7 месяцев назад +4

      She didn't do that in other songs to my knowledge. Her guitar playing sounds kind of unsure if itself and almost amateurish in those iconic leads. It absolutely is the cherry on top that makes the song in a way that defies logic. The guitar has the same shaking, quivering quality as her voice. It's wild how those few simple notes convey so much emotion, and so much of her artistic identity.

  • @spideymcgee4718
    @spideymcgee4718 4 месяца назад

    And yes! She does seem like she is weeping! I live that you pointed that out! I’m so in love with your breakdowns.

  • @leon_sale
    @leon_sale 4 месяца назад +1

    I remember this many years ago, one of a handful of songs I'll never forget hearing and listening to many times. Stupidly powerful and emotional, performed by a girl who had seen it all. Amazing voice, one of a kind, beautiful and scary all in one RIP Dolores O'Riordan - legend.

  • @markbryan2287
    @markbryan2287 7 месяцев назад +51

    Dolores Riordan was so amazing and is sorely missed. Every song she sang made us feel it to the core.

  • @user-pm1xh4so5x
    @user-pm1xh4so5x 7 месяцев назад +38

    Amazingly talented artist, incorporating her music culture with a strong message. If you want to hear Cranberries "Dreams" next, up vote it 😊

  • @KaleidoCult
    @KaleidoCult 6 дней назад

    I was obsessed with O'Riordan's vocals when I was a teenager. I spent hours practicing that signature breathiness of hers.

  • @Tony-gq8pi
    @Tony-gq8pi 8 дней назад +1

    Amazing song
    I always loved that song
    Dolores Rules ❤ RIP angel 😢😢❤

  • @JC-wr7mu
    @JC-wr7mu 7 месяцев назад +64

    Having a child makes some things hit you differently than they did before. RIP Delores

    • @Enallorai
      @Enallorai 7 месяцев назад +6

      I agree; I've got two little ones now, and i feel so much more from this song than i did when i was a child myself

    • @CosmicPhilosopher
      @CosmicPhilosopher 7 месяцев назад +3

      I always liked "Cat's in the Cradle" by Harry Chapin, but after I became a dad, the song just hit me like a ton of bricks. I absolutely did not want to be that sort of father.

    • @MR-backup
      @MR-backup 7 месяцев назад +1

      " ..a gamble the youth dem life like racehourse
      and gi dem a uniform and shave dem head with razors
      and now the clock a strike war.."
      -Confrontation, Welcome To Jamrock

    • @BlackAdder665
      @BlackAdder665 7 месяцев назад

      Indeed!

  • @joiedevivre2005
    @joiedevivre2005 7 месяцев назад +104

    Dolores O'Riordan's voice is like a raw, exposed nerve that rips at your soul. The video shows footage of actual British soldiers patrolling, real memorials to those who have died in The Troubles & actual kids playing on the rooftops because it was too dangerous to play on the street. My great grandmother came to the US from Belfast as a young child & I've worked with kids from Northern Ireland as part of the Irish Children's Summer Program, so this song has always had an intensely emotional impact on me.

    • @Amy-cu2ky
      @Amy-cu2ky 7 месяцев назад +1

      A family friend hosted a boy for a couple of summers through that program. I occasionally wonder how he's doing.

    • @amyaeschbach3581
      @amyaeschbach3581 7 месяцев назад +3

      I feel so lucky to have seen the cranberries live in New York City in December 1995. As far as I know the cranberries were on tour when this bombing happened and they canceled the tour and wrote this song. For this video they snuck into this town under the guise of filming a documentary. All of the old buildings and paintings and graffiti were filmed then and most of the video. Her voice was actually “keening“ rather than the term yodeling. This is what the women did at funerals representing their weeping. Dolores was from this area and the violence had been happening her entire life. You can tell how close to her heart. This song became an anti-violence anthem throughout the world. RIP Delores Gone too soon.

    • @elemar5
      @elemar5 7 месяцев назад +1

      Playing on rooftops because the streets were too dangerous! Bull. That's just what kids do. I'm from Belfast and was 12 when this started. I never had any fear playing on streets in my own area. It's when you went somewhere where nobody knew you it may have become dangerous. It's not like there were drive by shootings every day.

    • @elemar5
      @elemar5 7 месяцев назад

      I don't know where you get your info from but it's wrong. Dolores never experienced any of this personally as she lived over 200 miles away in a different country.@@amyaeschbach3581

    • @Tijuanabill
      @Tijuanabill 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@elemar5 I have never seen children playing on roofs, other than this video. It might not be due to danger, but it's most certainly not a thing everywhere. Most buildings in America, the residents don't even have roof access. We aren't allowed up there, as adults, let alone children.

  • @DevinDeCremer
    @DevinDeCremer 3 месяца назад

    I can listen to this song on full blast and on repeat.
    It's one of those that is so good, I never want it to end.
    R.I.P Dolores. 😇 And thank you for the music.

  • @AlienVolt
    @AlienVolt 4 месяца назад +1

    She was absolutely amazing! Heard their music for the first time in the 90s and they instantly were one of my favorite bands.