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Cranberries star Dolores O'Riordan dies in London aged 46


The Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan has died suddenly at a hotel aged 46, her publicist has confirmed.

The Irish rock star, who has recently been performing with a band called D.A.R.K, was staying in London while recording.

Her publicist did not comment on how she died, other than it say it was 'sudden' and that her family are 'devastated'.

Met Police told MailOnline that O'Riordan was found in a room of the Hilton London in Park Lane at 9.05am, and that the death was being treated as 'unexplained'.

Ronan Keating was among dozens of celebrities to express their sadness at the news, as he told of his shock at the 'loss of an incredible talent and a lovely soul'.

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This was the rockstar's last tweet, posted on January 4 and stating she was heading to Ireland

The Irish rock star (pictured left in 2012), who has recently been performing with a band called D.A.R.K, was staying in London while recording

The star, pictured with her bandmates in 1999, recently told of trouble times she went through

O'Riordan and her daughter Molly in 2008. She has two other children; a son named Taylor and another daughter called Dakota, as well as a step-son named Donnie

Met Police told MailOnline that O'Riordan was found in a room of the Hilton London in Park Lane (pictured) at 9.05am, and that the death was being treated as 'unexplained'

A statement from her publicist said: 'Irish and international singer Dolores O'Riordan has died suddenly in London today. She was 46 years old.

'The lead singer with the Irish band The Cranberries was in London for a short recording session. No further details are available at this time.

'Family members are devastated to hear the breaking news and have requested privacy at this very difficult time.'

O'Riordan, who was born in Limerick, last posted a picture of herself with her cat on Twitter on January 4 with the caption: 'Bye bye Gio. We're off to Ireland.'

A Met Police spokesperson said: 'Police in Westminster are dealing with a sudden death.

'Officers were called at 9.05am on Monday to a Hotel in Park Lane. A woman in her mid 40s was pronounced dead at the scene.

'At this early stage the death is being treated as unexplained. Enquiries continue.'

Her band had recently played in South America, and she tweeted pictures of fans in Lima, Peru in December.

'She seemed happy and well': Stars pay tribute to singer Dolores O'Riordan after she dies 'unexpectedly' James Corden and Duran Duran are among the stars to pay tribute to The Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan. Comedian and TV star Corden said he met the singer when he was 15. She was kind and lovely,' he wrote on Twitter. 'I got her autograph on my train ticket and it made my day. She had the most amazing voice and presence. So sorry to hear that she's passed away today x.' Duran Duran said they were 'crushed to hear the news. Our thoughts go out to her family at this terrible time,' they added. Dave Davies of The Kinks shared a picture of himself with O'Riordan. He said: 'I'm really shocked that #DoloresORiordan has passed so suddenly - I was talking to her a couple weeks before Christmas she seemed happy and well - we even spoke about maybe writing some songs together - unbelievable God bless her.' US singer Josh Groban tweeted: 'Nooooo!! Have always adored her songs and voice.' Stars including Beverley Knight, Ronan Keating and Brian McFadden expressed their sadness at the sudden death

The parish priest from her home town has confirmed her funeral will take place in Ireland, where she will be buried.

Father James Walton, parish priest at Ballybricken & Bohermore Parish, said: 'I only found out this afternoon. Her family is very devastated and upset.

'The suddenness of her death has been a shock. I met Dolores two or three times when she was home visiting family. She was a lovely lady.

'Her family are still waiting for more details to come from London about her death.

'The plan is for her to be buried here at home. When that will be will depend on when her body is released.'

A spokeswoman for London Hilton, on Park Lane, said: 'It is with deep regret that we can confirm a guest sadly passed away at the hotel on Monday 15th January.

'We offer our sincere condolences to their family at this difficult time.

'Team members acted swiftly to alert the Metropolitan Police and we are cooperating fully with their investigation. All further enquiries should be directed to the police.'

Last year she revealed that she had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2015, having battled with depression during much of her career.

She told Metro: 'There are two ends of the spectrum — you can get extremely depressed and dark and lose interest in the things you love to do, then you can get super manic.

Dolores O'Riordan from the The Cranberries joining Italian singer Zucchero onstage during a benefit show in 2004

'I was at the hypomanic side of the spectrum on and off for a long period but generally you can only last at that end for around three months before you hit rock bottom and go down into depression.

'When you're manic you don't sleep and get very paranoid. So I'm dealing with it with medication.'

The Cranberries last released an album in early 2017, but a US and European tour was cancelled in July due to health reasons concerning O'Riordan.

In a statement, the band explained that she was suffering from an 'ongoing back problem' and that doctors had advised her to pull out of all her upcoming gigs.

On December 20 O'Riordan tweeted from the band's official account, writing: 'Hi All, Dolores here. Feeling good!

A spokeswoman for London Hilton confirmed the singer was found in one of its rooms and extended its condolences to her family and friends

'I did my first bit of gigging in months at the weekend, performed a few songs at the Billboard annual staff holiday party in New York with the house band.

'Really enjoyed it! Happy Christmas to all our fans!! Xo'

O'Riordan split from her husband of 20 years, the former tour manager of Duran Duran, Don Burton, in 2014.

In February 2016 O'Riordan said she would use 'music, dancing and performing to improve her mental health' after avoiding a criminal conviction for assault at an airport.

She was ordered to pay €6,000 to charity for headbutting, kicking, hitting and spitting on police officers following an alleged air rage incident.

The singer had previously admitted three assaults and obstructing a police officer after being taken off an Aer Lingus flight from New York's JFK to Ireland on November 10, 2014.

Medical reports produced for the trial at Ennis District Court revealed she had been suffering from mania, mental illness and severely impaired judgment at the time of the incident, and that she remembered nothing about it.

O'Riordan was mother to son Taylor and daughters Molly and Dakota.

President of Ireland Michael D Higgins led tributes to the singer, saying: 'It is with great sadness that I have learned of the death of Dolores O'Riordan, musician, singer and songwriter.

'Dolores O'Riordan and The Cranberries had an immense influence on rock and pop music in Ireland and internationally.

'I recall with fondness the late Limerick TD Jim Kemmy's introduction of her and The Cranberries to me, and the pride he and so many others took in their successes.

'To all those who follow and support Irish music, Irish musicians and the performing arts her death will be a big loss.'

Members of The Cranberries hold O'Riordan and pose for a group photo at the 13th Annual MTV Video Music Awards in September 1996

Irish band Kodaline also offered condolences, writing on Twitter: 'Absolutely shocked to hear about the passing of Dolores O'Riordan!

'@The-Cranberries gave us our first big support when we toured with them around France years ago! Thoughts are with her family and friends.'

Formed in Limerick, Ireland, The Cranberries became international stars in the 1990s with hits including Zombie and Linger.

The band split up in 2003 but reunited several years later, last releasing the acoustic album Something Else in 2017.

'At home I'm a house-keeper and a mum. The kids are, like, "What's for dinner? Where are my clothes?". On tour it's, like: "room-service",' she said of the comeback.

O'Riordan, from Friarstown, Kilmallock, Co Limerick, was renowned for her distinctive singing voice.

She became a multi award-winning musician after becoming lead singer of the band when she was just 18 and went on to sell tens of millions of records.

O'Riodan is seen on stage with The Cranberries in Paris in 2010 (left). Shown right, she is seen on her wedding day in 1994 with husband Don Burton (right)

Duran Duran wrote on Twitter: 'We are crushed to hear the news about the passing of Dolores O'Riordan. Our thoughts go out to her family at this terrible time.'

The Cranberries and D.A.R.K front woman had been rehearsing in Limerick venue Dolan’s Warehouse last month, and had been planning a home town gig, staff said.

A book of condolence is expected to open from 10am, Tuesday morning, at Limerick City and County Council’s headquarters at Merchants Quay.

Local singer songwriter Brian O’Connor, who passed on his 'sympathies' to O’Riordan’s family and her band mates, said he was 'in total shock' at news of her death.

O’Connor, a close friend of Cranberries guitarist Noel Hogan, described O’Riordan as 'an icon' in the music industry.

Paying tribute, he remembered first meeting O’Riordan in the early 1990s, whilst she attended her debut recording sessions with The Cranberries at Xeric Studios, Limerick, run by the bands former manager Pearse Gilmore.

'I knew Dolores in the early days. I remember her being in the recording studio and she was obsessed with instruments and music. I can't believe it. It's absolutely shocking,” O’Connor said.

'It's just a terrible shock. She was a fantastic talent. In fact, she was a great great iconic figure in Irish music, no doubt about it,” he said.

'She put Limerick on the map. She was a very distinctive singer, more so than anyone else. Just imagine U2 without Bono. I feel for her band mates, but it's worse for her family and her kids.”

O’Connor added: 'She was the most iconic Irish singer ever, I think… You can name them all from John McCormack. When you travel abroad and you hear “Zombie” and “Dreams” and “Linger” — that's Ireland, that's Limerick. Those songs are played everywhere you go in the world.”

O’Riordan grew up in the tranquil rural townland of Ballybricken, 17 kilometres from Limerick city. She she also lived in Patrickswell.

Dolores O'Riordan performs onstage in San Francisco, California, USA in December 1993

The close-knit community of Ballybricken were rallying around O’Riordan’s “devastated” mother Eileen, and her six siblings. O’Riordan’s father Terry passed away after battling illness in 2011.

It's expected the Limerick rock star's remains will be flown home to Ballybricken for burial, however no funeral plans have been formalised.

Brigid Teefy, a family friend, who lives in Ballybricken, and is a local Independent councillor, was in deep shock at hearing of O'Riordan's sudden death.

'Oh my God, it's just unbelievable. It's a huge shock for is all here. Dolores was such a talented lady. We are all very proud of her,' Teefy said.

“Dolores was very close with her mother and family. It's a massive massive shock. She did so well. She was unbelievable.'

Teefy added: 'Dolores would come and go here all the time. She had been home very regularly. She was world famous but she was always very grounded and very attached to her native place. She was allowed to be herself here.'

Formed in Limerick, Ireland, The Cranberries (pictured in 1999) became international stars in the 1990s with hits including Zombie and Linger

Teefy said that, despite O’Riordan’s fame, she never had bodyguards or security with her when she travelled back to Ballybricken: 'She would always be out running and jogging. She could be herself around here. She was simply Dolores to everybody here. She never had any security with her; She was lovely.'

Passing on her 'deepest sympathy to Dolores’ own children, her mother, and her while family', Teefy added. 'It's hard to take it in'.

O'Riordan was also a regular on the jogging trails along the Condell Road in Limerick city, despite being an international music star.

She had rehearsed in Limerick music venue Dolans Warehouse a month ago and was planning to play there soon, staff said.

O’Riordan’s new music project D.A.R.K had to cancel their first ever Limerick gig at Dolans in 2016, citing O’Riordan’s ongoing battle with back pain.

Neil Dolan, son of owner Mick Dolan, said everyone at the venue was 'devastated'.

'She brought Limerick to a global stage, and to the forefront of world music. She was an exceptional talent,' he said.She was rehearsing here a month ago. It's very very sad. She seemed a very nice lady.'

'She wanted to do a home town gig, but it didn't materialise because of her back problems. She was meant to do a gig here with D.A.R.K, but couldn't, because of back problems so they had to cancel.”

'Apparently she had a serious back injury. A lot of her European tour dates were cancelled at the time. The last two years of her life, I'd imagine, she was living in a lot of (back) pain.”

Dolan added: 'She's been a superstar since she was a kid. She was quite a private person.”

Dolores O'Riordan poses with her European Border Breakers Award in 2008, following the release of her solo album Are You Listening?

Limerick Metropolitan Mayor, Sean Lynch, a former detective who helped put behind bars some of Limerick’s most motorists hardened criminals, said he was so shaken by O'Riordan's death could not bring himself to attend a meeting on the future of policing in the region being held this evening at Thomond Park, the home of Munster rugby.

'I'm absolutely (shocked)...I couldn't go to the meeting. I can't get over it. I'm totally shocked,' Lynch said.

'She lived in Patrickswell as a young girl. I wanted to give her a mayoral reception before I ended my tenure. I'm sitting in my car and I just can't believe it. It's such a sad sad story. She put Limerick on the world stage. Poor Dolores,' he added.

Paying tribute Lynch said O'Riordan 'never ever forgot her roots'.

'She was Limerick through and through. This is as sad as it gets. She was an icon.'

Lynch said he admired O’Riordan for many reasons, especially for her strong character.

'She was great role model for all women. I'm sure she opened the doors for females to take a lead role in (rock) bands, as well as in business. She was bold and tough in an era when the lead singer of a band was nearly always male.'

'She was class act. She was unique...She had a unique voice. She had a great story in everything she sung; She was magic.'

'My deepest sympathies go to her family. What a loss to Limerick, what a loss to Ireland. We won't see the likes of her again,' Lynch said.

Family friend, Canon Liam McNamara, who was a co-celebrant at Dolores’ 1994 wedding to 80s rock group tour manager Don Burton in Holycross Abbey, Co Tipperary, told the Limerick Leader newspaper: 'My heart goes out to the family. Dolores was their pride and joy. We all loved her very, very much.''She got on well all the way through her life. I was very disappointed to hear today that she has left us so early in life. Her family did so much for her and supported her all the way through,' added Canon McNamara, who also officiated at the funeral Mass of Dolores' father Terry in Ballybricken in 2011.

Fr James Walton, priest in Dolores' home parish of Ballybricken, expressed his deepest sympathies to the family.

'I wish to extend my deepest sympathies to the family. I am just going down to meet the family now,' Fr Walton told the Leader.

The singer rose to fame in the 1990s with the indie band, most famous for their song Zombie

Troubled life of singer who was sexually assaulted as 'a little girl', suffered mid-air meltdown and admitted she was 'an accident waiting to happen'

Born and raised in County Limerick, Dolores O'Riordan was still in her teens when she answered an advert for a female singer for a rock band called The Cranberry Saw Us.

Having written her own songs since she was 12, she tried out for the group by showing off both her lilting vocals and her ability to pen melodies and words for their demos.

Existing members Mike and Noel Hogan and Fergal Lawler snapped her up and together they became The Cranberries, increasingly becoming known for O'Riordan's distinctive wailing voice.

One of the demos she had worked on for her audition was Linger, which gave The Cranberries a number three hit in Ireland in 1993 and proved to be their breakthrough track. More success followed with songs such as Salvation and Zombie, which scooped a coveted Ivor Novello Award.

They unveiled their debut studio album - entitled Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We? - in 1993 and it topped the charts.

The singer, pictured in 2000, had continued to perform with other bands since the Cranberries

Successful follow ups No Need To Argue and To the Faithful Departed came in 1994 and 1996, cementing the band's status as a mainstream international rock band. To date the group has sold over 40 million records.

But by 2003 it was time for a change and the band announced they were taking some time off to pursue other opportunities.

O'Riordan seized the opportunity to pursue a solo career and released the albums Are You Listening? (2007) and No Baggage (2009).

But while her musical ventures thrived, the singer was battling depression and mental health troubles in her personal life.

In an interview in 2013 she said she had been abused as a child which she said later led to an eating disorder and a breakdown.

'I had anorexia, then depression, a breakdown,' she said. 'I knew why I hated myself. I knew why I loathed myself. I knew why I wanted to make myself disappear.'

O'Riordan married Don Burton, the former tour manager of Duran Duran, in 1994 and they had three children.

Her family, she said, were her 'salvation'.

But there was more heartbreak ahead, with the singer losing her beloved father in 2011 and her marriage coming to an end in 2014.

Two years later O'Riordan was ordered to pay 6,000 euro to charity for headbutting, kicking, hitting and spitting on police officers following an alleged air rage incident.

The singer had previously admitted three assaults and obstructing a garda after being taken off an Aer Lingus flight from New York's JFK to Ireland in November 2014.

O'Riordan's publicist did not comment on how she died, other than it say it was 'sudden' and that her family are 'devastated'

Medical reports produced for the trial at Ennis District Court revealed she had been suffering from mania, mental illness and severely impaired judgement at the time of the incident, and that she remembered nothing about it.

Last year she revealed she had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2015.

She told Metro: 'There are two ends of the spectrum - you can get extremely depressed and dark and lose interest in the things you love to do, then you can get super manic.

'I was at the hypomanic side of the spectrum on and off for a long period but generally you can only last at that end for around three months before you hit rock bottom and go down into depression. When you're manic you don't sleep and get very paranoid.'

The star said she was dealing with it with medication.

In another revealing interview O'Riordan told the Irish News that depression 'whatever the cause, is one of the worst things to go through', but that her family had given her happiness.

'I've also had a lot of joy in my life, especially with my children," she said. 'You get ups as well as downs. Sure isn't that what life's all about?'


Music Cranberries singer Dolores O'Riordan dies aged 46 Death of Irish singer, whose band sold more than 40m records, is being treated as ‘unexplained’ Dolores O’Riordan, who has died aged 46. Photograph: David Fisher / Rex Features

Dolores O’Riordan, the lead singer with the multi-platinum band the Cranberries, has died aged 46.

The news was confirmed by her publicist in a statement, but no cause of death has yet been announced. O’Riordan, who had to cancel a tour with a reunited Cranberries in 2017 because of a back problem, had been in London for a recording session.

The statement described the death as sudden, and added: “Family members are devastated to hear the breaking news and have requested privacy at this very difficult time.”

A Metropolitan police statement also confirmed the news, and that O’Riordan’s body was found at a Park Lane hotel. “At this early stage the death is being treated as unexplained,” the statement read.

A spokeswoman for the London Hilton on Park Lane said: “It is with deep regret that we can confirm a guest sadly passed away at the hotel on Monday 15 January. We offer our sincere condolences to their family at this difficult time.”

Irish president Michael D Higgins said he learned of the news with “great sadness”, adding: “To all those who follow and support Irish music, Irish musicians and the performing arts, her death will be a big loss.”

Musicians have started to pay tribute, including Irish songwriter Hozier, who said he was “shocked and saddened”, and that O’Riordan’s voice “threw into question what a voice could sound like in that context of rock. I’d never heard somebody use their instrument in that way.”

Hozier (@Hozier) My first time hearing Dolores O'Riordan's voice was unforgettable. It threw into question what a voice could sound like in that context of Rock. I'd never heard somebody use their instrument in that way. Shocked and saddened to hear of her passing, thoughts are with her family.

Irish rockers Kodaline said they were “absolutely shocked” by the news, and pop singer Maggie Rogers said: “Dolores O’Riordan’s voice helped me understand my place in the world.” Jim Corr of Irish pop group the Corrs passed his “deepest sympathies” to O’Riordan’s family.

Duran Duran, whose tour manager Don Burton was married to O’Riordan for more than 20 years before their divorce in 2014, said they were “crushed” by the news. O’Riordan and Burton had three children together: Taylor Baxter, Molly Leigh and Dakota Rain.

The Cranberries: how we made Linger Read more

O’Riordan, born in Limerick in 1971, joined the Cranberries – then called the Cranberry Saw Us – in 1990, and performed with them until 2003 when they took a hiatus. Driven by O’Riordan’s heartfelt vocals and her unmistakeable west Irish accent, they became hugely successful on both sides of the Atlantic.

Their hits began with the lilting, keeningly romantic Linger, which reached the Top 10 in the US and Ireland, and No 14 in the UK. It was described by O’Riordan in the Guardian last year as being inspired by “being dumped, publicly, at the disco. Everything’s so dramatic when you’re 17, so I poured it into the song.”

They built on its success, and that of their album Everybody Else is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?, with their next album, 1994’s No Need to Argue. The lead single Zombie showed a new side to the band and to O’Riordan’s voice – a heavy, tortured, anthemic song filled with the violence of the Troubles, it was written in the wake of a 1993 IRA bombing in Warrington that killed three-year-old Jonathan Ball and 12-year-old Tim Parry.

No Need to Argue sold 17m copies, including 7m in the US, and cemented them as one of the biggest alternative acts of the 1990s – their overall album sales topped 40m. The Cranberries released three more albums before taking a break in 2003, allowing O’Riordan to record two solo albums. The band reformed in 2009, initially just to perform live, but new material was eventually released on two subsequent albums, including 2017’s Something Else.

The band’s 2017 European tour was curtailed due to O’Riordan suffering from a back problem; their US dates were then also cancelled on the advice of O’Riordan’s doctors. In a statement after the cancellations the band said they were “very disappointed” and added: “The outpouring of support the Cranberries have received from fans and followers during the past several months is greatly appreciated.”


Four of the group’s albums reached the Top 20 on the Billboard 200 chart: “Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We?,” “No Need to Argue,” “To the Faithful Departed” and “Bury the Hatchet.”

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Female rock singers like Sinead O’Connor and Harriet Wheeler of the Sundays had recently preceded the Cranberries on the pop charts, and the band also drew deeply on the musical example of the Smiths, the 1980s band that propelled warm, rounded guitars and confessional lyrics with post-punk drumming. The Cranberries’s 1993 debut album, “Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We,” which included the career-making hits “Linger” and “Dreams,” and the 1994 album “No Need to Argue,” with “Zombie,” were both produced by the Smiths’s producer, Stephen Street.

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After “Zombie,” the Cranberries’ late-1990s albums grew harsher and more concerned with sociopolitical messages than with love songs, losing much of their pop audience. The Cranberries disbanded in 2003; Ms. O’Riordan’s 2007 solo debut album was called “Are You Listening?”

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In an interview published in The Guardian last year, Ms. O’Riordan described how the band wrote “Linger,” its first song together. “I wrote about being rejected,” she said. “I never imagined that that it would become a big song.”

In 1996, Neil Strauss, a pop music critic for The New York Times, described Ms. O’Riordan as a performer who can “sing almost anything and make it seem musical.”

Ms. O’Riordan’s death was also announced on the group’s Twitter account, where fans shared messages of mourning and of the impact that the group’s music had on their lives.

“She was part of my DNA, the soundtrack to my life,” wrote one, Michael Traboulsi.

Ms. O’Riordan grew up in the Ballybricken area of County Limerick, Ireland. In 1994, she married Don Burton, a former tour manager for Duran Duran; the couple divorced in 2014. She is survived by her three children Taylor, Molly and Dakota, and her mother, Eileen O’Riordan.

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Six years after the Cranberries’ split, the group reunited and began touring again. But last year, the band canceled dates on its European and North America tours due to Ms. O’Riordan’s ongoing back problems.

“There have been some comments suggesting that Dolores could perform if she sat while singing. Unfortunately it is not as simple as that,” a statement on the group’s Facebook page said then.

The Cranberries released the acoustic album “Something Else” in 2017 and had plans to perform shows in Europe and North America. But the tours were cut short or canceled because the band said that singing put pressure on the parts of her spine that were giving her so much pain.


Dolores O'Riordan, frontwoman of the iconic Irish grunge band The Cranberries, has died at the age of 46.

"Irish and international singer Dolores O’Riordan has died suddenly in London today," a spokesperson for the singer told The Limerick Leader.

"She was 46 years old. The lead singer with the Irish band The Cranberries was in London for a short recording session. No further details are available at this time."

The cause of death has not been revealed.

O'Riordan joined The Cranberries, made up of brothers Noel Hogan and Mike Hogan after reading an advertisement in a local paper in 1989

They went on to sell over 40 million records around the world, O'Riordan later releasing the solo records Are You Listening? in 2007 and No Baggage in 2009.

Family and friends have requested privacy at this time.

Follow the international reaction here.

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