Dolores O'Riordan: The Voice That Defined the Cranberries and a Generation
Dolores O'Riordan, the lead singer of The Cranberries and one of the most distinctive voices of the 1990s, was found dead in a London hotel room on January 15, 2018, at age 46. Her death stunned the music world and left millions of fans grieving a singer whose work helped define an era.
Born in 1971 in Limerick, western Ireland, O'Riordan grew up as the youngest of seven children in a Catholic working-class family. She sang in church choir, learned piano and flute, and wrote songs from an early age. Later, she revealed that between ages 8 and 12 she had suffered prolonged sexual abuse by someone close to her, trauma she said contributed to years of anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and emotional turmoil.
Her life changed in the early 1990s when the young Limerick band The Cranberries was looking for a new singer. She arrived at the audition with her own lyrics and melodies, impressed the band immediately, and soon joined them. Songs such as “Linger,” “Dreams,” “Ode to My Family,” and “When You're Gone” turned the group into a global success, but “Zombie” became her defining protest song, written after the Warrington bombing in England that killed two children in 1993. Released in 1994, it denounced violence and the human cost of political conflict.
Even at the height of success, when The Cranberries sold tens of millions of albums and toured worldwide, O'Riordan said she struggled with her past and with the pressures of fame. The band slowed down in the early 2000s, she pursued solo work, and they reunited in 2009. In London in January 2018, she was there for scheduled meetings and recording sessions when she died. Months later, investigators said she drowned in a bathtub after consuming a large amount of alcohol, and ruled the death accidental.