T H E M

NOUS SOMMES TOUS FOUS DES CRANBERRIES !!!!!

DOLORES O'RIORDAN
FERGAL LAWLER
MIKE HOGAN
NOEL HOGAN

T H E I R   S T O R Y
BY THEMSELVES...

OK boys, show us your stuff' - that was how Delores O'Riordan introduced herself to the Cranberries in 1990. At the time, Noel and Mike Hogan(guitar and bass) and Feargal(drums) had been looking around for a lead singer for their band but this small and frail looking girl standing in front of them just didn't look the part. Noel played her a few chords he has been messing around with and Delores went home that night and wrote a set of lyrics for them. She came back the next day with a song called 'Linger'. They gave her the job.

 Delores wrote 'Linger' about her first ever boyfriend, but when she sang it to the band for the first time, they weren't listening to the words, they were just wondering how something so small could sing so strongly - they were mightily impressed. The band were still working under the name 'The Cranberry saw us' (say the last two words quickly) which had been given to them by Niall, their first and very short-lived lead singer. Nobody really took Niall seriously, he used to write comedy songs like 'My Granny drowned in a Fountain in Lourdes' but now that they had Delores on board, they decided to go into a studio in their native Limerick to record three songs. They pressed up 300 cassette copies of the songs, left them in local record shops and waited to see if they would sell. All 300 copies sold out within a matter of days. Boosted by this first reaction to their music, they shortened their name down to The Cranberries, made a demo tape and sent it of to every record company they had  heard of. Delores was thrilled with her new band, all she ever wanted to do was  sing in a rock band. 'one of my earliest memories is being about 5',she says,' i  was at school and the headmistress brought me out of my class and up into the 6th class where the 12 year old girls were. She sat me up on my teachers desk and told me to sing for them. I loved it, singing was something i had that could win people over, but i'm still very shy about singing, even now i'd rather die than sing in a pub.

 As Delores went through school, and kept on singing with her local church choir, a few miles away brothers Noel and Mike Hogan had been playing around with guitars since their early teenage years. Down the road, a young Feargal Lawler had just got a drum-kit and when he heard that the Hogan brothers were interested in forming a band, he went straight down to ask if he could play with them.

 When the band recorded their first demo tape, they had an average age of 19 and actually spelt their name 'The Cranberry's' on the cover of the tape. The demo tape had five songs, including an early version of Linger, Dreams and put me down, and once it had reached the desks of record companies in London, the chase was on to sign The Cranberries.

 The band continues playing around Limerick during this time but what people saw in stage then, is far removed from what you get now, as Delores explains : 'the performance of The Cranberries consisted of four timid little teenagers, with the front person standing sideways like a statue, afraid to budge in case she tripped and fell. We weren't performers at that stage, but i
think it was the potential they saw'. When the record company offers started flying in the door, the band eventually signed to Island Records. Everything was in place for The Cranberries but then things started to go wrong.

 The bands demo tape was released to journalists and it met with an ecstatic reaction. The band were described as 'the future' and expectations were running high for their first ever single, called Uncertain which was re-leased in 1991. After all the hype around the band, the band went for a 'lowkey' single that came nowhere near the quality of the original demo tapes. The single was described in the press as a 'second-grade' song and The Cranberries were beginning to learn about the fickle nature of the music industry. 'That was an awful time for us when the debut single didn't do too well' remembers Delores, 'i still had faith in the band but i had no faith in the music industry and then i lost faith in the world. i was 18 and in home in Limerick and i got really depressed'. To make their problems worse, the band were going through difficult and complex problems with their first manager and just as the band was about to go into the studio to record their first album, they were on the verge of breaking up.

 With all these problems in the background, and frustrated by the bands lack of progress, Delores found herself at a gig in Limerick one night, watching from the audience as some local band went through their paces on  stage. She turned to her friend and said 'everybody else is doing it, so why can't we?'. The fight back began.

 The band found a new manager, Geoff Travis of Rough Trade Records, and finished off their debut album, which was recorded in Dublin in 1992. By the time the album made it into the record shops in March 1993, The Cranberries found that they had to start their career all over again, even at
this early stage they were being described as 'has-beens'.

 The band took to the road on a vengeance in '93. They toured Britain (with Belly), Europe (with Hothouse Flowers) and America (with The The and Suede). 'The strange thing about touring in America' says Delores,'is that we were acting like tourists and having a great time but in the background the album was selling and selling. People would be telling us 'you've just sold an-
other 70000 records this week' and we'd be going 'is that good?'. People used to laugh at us because we had no idea of how well the album was doing'.

 By the end of 93, Everybody Else...  had topped the million mark in America and the band returned home with a hero welcome in Ireland. 'I went away as a nobody and came home to people calling me a 'star'' says Delores on the back of the bands American success, the album started to climb up the  British charts and eventually took the number one spot. The band were thrilled with their success but were wary about being seen as one hit wonders . They went into the studio to record their follow up album, No Need To Argue, in March 94. The recording went well, so well in fact, that the band went of on a skiing holiday after it was finished. Delores, her first time on the slopes, ended up falling badly and did serious damage to her knee. Just as the band was beginning to peak, they were forced to cancel all engagements until Delores could walk again.

 One engagement she never missed was her wedding in Ireland in July 94 to Don Burton. 'I met my husband, who's Canadian, when we were touring with Duran Duran in America, he was their stage manager. 'we're very happy' says Delores. No Need to Argue was released in October 94 and proved to be an instant success, selling 1 million copies in its first three weeks of
release. The first single of the album, Zombie, proved to be one of their most popular songs and although it was never released as a single in the US, it became the most-played song on alternative radio and the highlight of The Cranberries' live set. 'Zombie was written about the same time of the Warrington bombing in Britain(the IRA bomb that killed two young children)'says Delores,'it's not actually about the north of Ireland, it's about a child who died in England because of the situation in the north'.

 The rest of No Need to Argue was written when the band were on tour in the US in '93. 'Everybody body else would be out in the front of the tour bus but i would be in the back, trying to protect my singing voice' says Delores,'I wrote all these songs about my life back in Limerick, and how much i missed my parents, that's what Ode to My Family is about. The only song on the album that reflects my new married life is Dreaming my Dreams'.

 At the end of 1994, The Cranberries looked on as No Need To Argue became a huge worldwide seller. They went on the road in October 94 and will be touring all the way through 95. 'The best thing about all of this is that we've answered our own question, the question that was the title of our first album' says Delores, 'we proved it with the first album and we're now going to prove it even more with the second album'.