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Are You Listening?
It's been a long wait for the solo debut from Irish icon Dolores O'Riordan. After all, the Cranberries issued their swan song in 2001. After their break up, O'Riordan collaborated with Germany's Jam and Spoon, Italy's Zucchero, and David Lynch composer Angelo Badalamenti. She also appeared, as herself, in the 2006 comedy Click. All the while, she toiled away on her first solo effort. Fortunately, good things come to those who wait. Co-produced by Youth (the Verve, U2), Are You Listening? is a throwback to 1980s-era Siouxsie and the Banshees and Sinead O'Connor--sweeping keyboards, forceful drumming, and muscular guitar work. It may seem like a melodramatic move, but the music never overwhelms the slight yet steely figure at the center of the maelstrom, particularly on the lilting "Ordinary Day" and haunting "Black Widow." Cranberries fans expecting something more demure may be taken aback, but O'Riordan's supple voice should win over most skeptics. And lyrically, she compensates with tender words inspired by her husband ("Apple of My Eye"), the death of her mother-in-law ("Black Widow"), and the birth of her youngest child ("Ordinary Day"). --Kathleen C. Fennessy More from Dolores O'Riordan and the Cranberries  Ordinary Day (Single) |  Everybody Else Is Doing It So Why Can't We? (The Complete Sessions) |  No Need to Argue (The Complete Sessions) |  To the Faithful Departed (The Complete Sessions) |  Bury the Hatchet |  Stars: The Best of the Cranberries, 1992-2002 |
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Tracks| 1 | Ordinary Day | | 2 | When We Were Young | | 3 | In The Garden | | 4 | Human Spirit | | 5 | Loser | | 6 | Stay With Me | | 7 | Apple of My Eye | | 8 | Black Widow | | 9 | October | | 10 | Accept Things | | 11 | Angel Fire | | 12 | Ecstasy |
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