Cranberries
singer Dolores O'Riordan dies suddenly at 46
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[January 16, 2018]
By Conor Humphries
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Dolores
O'Riordan, the lead singer of Irish rock group The
Cranberries, died suddenly on Monday at the age of 46
during a recording trip to London, her publicist said.
The cause of death was unclear.
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O'Riordan's distinctive Irish lilt and yodel helped fuel the
Cranberries' rapid rise in the early 1990s with global hits
"Linger", "Dreams" and "Zombie." The band went on to sell over
40 million records to become Ireland's second-best-selling rock
band after U2.
Her three bandmates said in a tweet that they were devastated at
the passing of an "extraordinary talent".
Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar in a statement described her
as the "voice of her generation".
But a naturally reserved singer, O'Riordan often struggled with
fame, leaving her native Ireland for several years to avoid the
spotlight. During her separation from her husband in 2014, she
was arrested for attacking a police officer.
The singer's publicist said she died during a short recording
trip to London, but declined to comment on the cause of death.
"Family members are devastated to hear the breaking news and
have requested privacy at this very difficult time," the
publicist, Lindsey Holmes, said in a statement. O'Riordan is
survived by two daughters and a son.
Police in London said a woman in her 40s was pronounced dead
early on Monday at a hotel on Park Lane in central London.
A spokesman said police were continuing inquiries into the
death, which was being treated as "unexplained". The woman had
yet to be formally identified, he said.
METEORIC RISE
The Cranberries shot to fame with their 1993 debut album
"Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?" after the hit
song "Linger" was picked up by MTV. The band's first three
albums sold a combined 28 million copies.
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But the strain on O'Riordan, who was so shy that she performed with
her back to the audience during some early concerts, was also
becoming clear, with the band cutting short a tour in 1996 citing
exhaustion and disillusionment.
O'Riordan left the Cranberries in 2003 and recorded two solo albums,
before the band reformed in 2009.
O'Riordan pleaded guilty to headbutting and spitting at an Irish
police officer in 2014 following an alleged air rage incident. She
later told an interviewer that she had been diagnosed with bipolar
disorder and was struggling with the breakdown of her marriage.
Last year the Cranberries canceled a number of concerts in North
America and Europe, saying O'Riordan was suffering from back
problems.
British pop band Duran Duran, whose tour manager, Don Burton, was
O'Riordan's husband from 1994 until they separated in 2014 and was
father to her children, said in a Twitter posting that they were
"crushed" by the news.
U2 said they were "floored" by the news in a statement posted on
Twitter.
"Out of the West came this storm of a voice -- she had such strength
of conviction yet she could speak to the fragility in all of us,"
the band said.
(Reporting by Conor Humphries; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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