Ny låt av Sinéad O’Connor spelas i BBC-serie

Ny låt av Sinéad O’Connor spelas i BBC-serie

En ny låt från den avlidna sångerskan Sinéad O'Connor premiärspelades i BBC-programmet "The woman in the wall" i helgen, skriver NME.

Muséet plockar bort Sinéad O'Connor-figur – efter kritikstorm

Muséet plockar bort Sinéad O'Connor-figur – efter kritikstorm

National Vax Museum i Dublin avtäckte en vaxdocka som föreställer sångerskan och aktivisten Sinead O´Connor. Det var på årsdagens av hennes bortgång som museet invigde dockan för att hedra hennes minne. Museet fick stor kritik för att vaxdockan inte alls var en lik avbildning av den bortgångna sångerskan. Hennes bror John instämde i protesterna som kallade vaxdockan ”olämplig”. – Den såg inte alls ut som henne och jag tyckte den var gräslig, sa han till den irländska radiostationen RTÉ i fredags. Han kontaktade själv museet för att de skulle ta bort dockan. Irländska Sinead O'Connor hittades död i sin lägenhet i södra London förra året. Hon blev 56 år gammal och konstaterades ha dött av naturliga orsaker. Hon blev allra mest känd för sin låt "Nothing Compares 2 U" som utsågs till bästa singel 1990 av Billboard Music Awards. Hon släppte tio album under sin karriär. Gör om – gör rätt Museet säger nu att de tar bort dockan för att skapa en mer porträttlik vaxdocka för att hedra den folkkära sångerskan. ”Vi uppmärksammar att den nuvarande representationen inte mötte våra höga standards eller förväntningarna hos Sinéad's hängivna fans”, skriver de i ett offentligt uttalande efter kritiken. Andra avbildningar av kändisar som har väckt stora rektioner är en Ronaldo-bysten på flygplatsen i Maderia och trästatyn föreställande Melania Trump i Slovenien. Den stod i hennes hemstad, fram tills dem blev uppeldad.

Därför sörjer vi när kända musiker och författare dör

Därför sörjer vi när kända musiker och författare dör

”Ingen kommer levande härifrån”, sjöng Jim Morrisson innan han dog vid 27 års ålder. Och kanske är det just påminnelsen om det som får oss att sörja öppet när kändisar vi aldrig träffat dör, resonerar The Economist. Men det finns fler förklaringar till fenomenet. När uppskattade artister dör blir det också ett tillfälle and samlas runt minnena av deras verk tillsammans med andra beundrare. ”Artistens avskedsgåva blir att ge oss en sorgesam högtid, som ett avbrott i vardagens slit och släp.” What we talk about when we talk about dead artists By The Economist 3 September, 2023 After Alexander Pushkin was shot in a duel in 1837, crowds of mourners formed in St Petersburg. Russia’s nervy authorities moved his funeral service and mustered 60,000 troops. When the wagon bearing the poet’s body reached Pskov province, where he was to be interred, devotees tried to unharness the horses and pull it themselves. The death of Rudolph Valentino, a silent-movie idol, in 1926 set off similarly fervid lamentation. Mounted police restrained the fans who mobbed the funeral parlour in New York where he lay on view (several reportedly killed themselves). In 1975 some of the millions of Egyptians who paid their respects to Um Kalthoum, a megastar singer, took hold of her coffin and shouldered it for hours through the streets of Cairo. Today’s celebrity obsequies tend to be less fanatical, and largely digital rather than in-person. But they are passionate all the same. In the past few months, grief has coursed around the internet for Martin Amis, Cormac McCarthy, Tina Turner and, most recently, Jimmy Buffett. If you stop to think about it, many such outpourings for writers, actors and musicians are odd, even irrational. Unlike other kinds of grief, this one does not stem from personal intimacy. If you ever interacted with a cherished author, it was probably during a book tour when, caffeinated to the eyeballs, she signed your copy of her novel and misspelled your name. Maybe you delude yourself that you once locked eyes with a frontman hero during a gig and that he smiled only for you. But you didn’t really know them, and they certainly didn’t know you. Nor would you always have liked them if you had. Their books or songs may be touching and wise, but (in the parlance of criticism) it is a biographical fallacy to assume that the work reflects an artist’s life or beliefs. Your favourites may indeed have been lovely people; or perhaps, beneath their curated images, they were spiky money-grubbers, consumed by rivalry or solipsists who drove their families nuts. Rarely do you know for sure. Though the artists are gone, meanwhile, the art you prize is not. Death does not delete it—on the contrary, curiosity and nostalgia often drive up sales. (David Bowie’s only number-one album in America was “Blackstar”, released days before he died in 2016.) The dead, it is true, write no more books and record no songs. Philip Roth will never set a novel in the era of Donald Trump; you will never hear another operatic Meat Loaf ballad. The cold reality, however, is that many artists’ best work was done long before their demise. The sorrow makes more sense when a star dies young or violently. Had she not perished at 27, like Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin, who knows what music Amy Winehouse would have added to her small, exquisite oeuvre? Sinéad O’Connor, another casualty of 2023, lived a troubled life that ended too soon. Buddy Holly (killed in a plane crash), Amedeo Modigliani (dead of tubercular meningitis at 35), Wilfred Owen (slain in action a week before the armistice in 1918): such premature and cruel exits are tragic. Objectively, though, the death of a long-lived and fulfilled artist is far from the saddest item in an average day’s headlines. And whereas most mortals sink into oblivion, laureates live on in their output, which Horace, a Roman poet, called a “monument more lasting than bronze”. The standard reasons for mourning don’t apply. Why, then, are these losses felt so widely and keenly? One interpretation is that the departed celebrities are merely the messengers. The real news is death itself, which comes for everyone, immortal or impervious as some may seem. If the reaper calls for Prince, with all his talent and verve, he will certainly knock for you. As Jim Morrison sang before he, too, died at 27: “No one here gets out alive.” Part of your past—the years in which the mute musician was the soundtrack, the silenced writer your ally—can seem to fade away with them. Just as plausibly, the grief can be seen as a transmuted form of gratitude for the solidarity and joy they supplied. On your behalf, they undertook to make sense of the world and distil beauty from the muck of life. Yet as much as anything else, the passing of an artist is an occasion for communion. In an atomised age, in which the default tone is abrasive, a beloved figure’s death is a chance to share benign feelings and memories with fellow admirers. Like water-cooler moments in a cemetery, these sombre holidays from spite and strife are the artists’ parting gifts. © 2023 The Economist Newspaper Limited. All rights reserved.

Sinéad O’Connor på YouTube

Sinéad O'Connor - Nothing Compares 2 U (Official Music Video) [HD]

HD Remaster of the music video by Sinéad O'Connor performing Nothing Compares 2 U. Taken from the album 'I Do Not Want ...

SineadOConnorVEVO på YouTube

Sinéad O'Connor gets booed off stage and leaves in tears.

They may protect their superstitions no matter what, but nothing compares to the truth. Please read the text in the video for more ...

knight449 på YouTube

Sinead O'Connor - The House Of The Rising Sun (Live On The Danny Baker Show 1994)

Sinead O'Connor - The House Of The Rising Sun Live (The Danny Baker Show 1994) She Also Performed "Thank You For ...

Chrome Waves på YouTube

Sinead O'Connor - Troy (Official Music Video)

Music video by Sinéad O'Connor performing Troy. Follow Sinéad O'Connor: Listen to Sinéad Online - https://Sinead.lnk.to/Listen ...

SineadOConnorVEVO på YouTube

Sinéad O’Connor i poddar

Sinéad O’Connor—“Nothing Compares 2 U”

Rob explores Irish singer-songwriter Sinéad O’Connor’s acclaimed rendition of “Nothing Compares 2 U” by discussing how she made the Prince-written song her own, her fervent commitment to activism, and the controversies that derailed her career. Host: Rob Harvilla Guest: Ann Powers Producers: Isaac Lee and Justin Sayles

When Sinéad Shocked America

Irish popstar Sinéad O’Connor tore up a photo of Pope John Paul II during her performance of Bob Marley’s ‘War’ on NBC’s TV show ‘Saturday Night Live’ on 3rd October, 1992. The unexpected act was meticulously planned by O'Connor; a protest against child abuse within the Catholic Church. The performance left the audience almost silent, and, although she faced significant backlash, O'Connor remained unapologetic, writing in her memoirs that it was one of her proudest achievements.In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain how a Top of the Pops performance by Bob Geldof first inspired the stunt; reveal where precisely O’Connor got the photo of the Pope from; and ask if, when it comes to this divisive moment, SNL have fallen on the right side of history…Further Reading:• ‘The day Sinead O’Connor tore up a photo of the Pope on Saturday Night Live’ (The Independent, 2022): https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/sinead-oconnor-snl-pope-photo-b2191296.html• ‘Sinead O’Connor’s Legacy With Sex Abuse Survivors in Catholic Church’ (Rolling Stone, 2023): https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/sinead-oconnor-catholic-church-abuse-legacy-1234797102/• ‘Sinéad O'Connor rips up picture of Pope John Paul II’ (NBC, 1992): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGFj1WClin4#90s #Religion #Protest #TV #Irish #CatholicCONTENT WARNING: child abuseLove the show? Join 🌴CLUB RETROSPECTORS 🌴 to DITCH THE ADS and get an additional full-length episode every SUNDAY!Plus, get weekly bonus bits, unlock over 70 bits of extra content and support our independent podcast.Join now via Apple Podcasts or Patreon. Thanks!We'll be back tomorrow! Follow us wherever you get your podcasts: podfollow.com/RetrospectorsThe Retrospectors are Olly Mann, Rebecca Messina & Arion McNicoll, with Matt Hill.Theme Music: Pass The Peas. Announcer: Bob Ravelli. Graphic Design: Terry Saunders. Edit Producer: Sophie King.Copyright: Rethink Audio / Olly Mann 2023. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

"Dear Bob": Sinéad O'Connor's Letters to Bob Dylan

In this episode, Laura welcomes back Harry Hew for a conversation about Sinéad O’Connor’s open letters to Bob Dylan.A quick note – after converting to Islam in 2018, she adopted the name Shuhada’ Sadaquat, but since she continued to work under her birth name, we refer to her as Sinéad O’Connor in this episode.Head over here to read all the letters Sinéad O’Connor wrote to Bob Dylan.Thank you to Thérèse Mullan for her voice acting as Sinéad.Theme music and sound design by Robert Chaney.Check out the Creative Arts Psychotherapy YouTube channel Harry mentioned.Also do yourself a favour and watch Harry’s excellent presentation on Bob Dylan’s sense of humour here.You can support Definitely Dylan on Patreon or with a one-off donation at buymeacoffee.com/definitelydylan.