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ogab | 2 years ago

Saw her live in NYC back in 2005 when she was doing roots reggae.

Sly & Robbie was the rhythm section, with Burning Spear on vocals and percussion. Maybe Mikey Chung on guitar?

I was totally surprised at the combination — this Crazy Baldhead amongst Dreads — but one of the best live shows I've been to. Surrounded by reggae icons, she was a boss on that stage.

Big up Sinéad! An incredible musician.

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zeruch|2 years ago

That was likely due to her collaborations with both Adrian Sherwood/On-U Sound initially, but she was a long time admirer of roots and dubwise. The caribbean influence in UK/Irish pop culture is much stronger than in the US (other than hip hop).

ogab|2 years ago

As a fan of Dub Syndicate, I didn't know they collaborated, thanks for this info.

Before seeing her live, I hadn't know a lot about her besides "Nothing Compares 2 U" and of course the SNL controversy... realizing much later she had sung Bob Marley's "War" while wearing red, gold, and green.

Just now thinking about her performance of "Vampire" that night is giving me goosebumps. She was a real one.

TYPE_FASTER|2 years ago

Wow, I had no idea that lineup existed. Just started going down the YouTube rabbit hole. Thank you.

cushychicken|2 years ago

That's a whole shitload of moxie for an Irish lady. Very cool.

bluepod4|2 years ago

Excuse me?

Isn’t the stereotype (and possibly reality) that Irish women are full of moxie and maybe or maybe not respected for it depending on who cares?

Like she experienced IRA bombings and you’re saying she’s supposed to be intimidated by reggae artists who smoke weed and practice non-violence and/or intimidated by their fans who do so?

manuu80|2 years ago

check "Throw Down Your Arms" album. Not sure why, but it can only be found in YT.