The Peterborough Examiner

Canadian musicians remember Cranberrie­s singer

- DAVID FRIEND

Canadian music producer Dan Brodbeck had collaborat­ed on dozens of songs with Cranberrie­s singer and part-time Peterborou­gh County resident Dolores O’Riordan and was looking forward to even more in the years ahead.

As recently as a few days ago, the singer was debating whether songs they had worked on together would be better suited for a solo album or a future project with her chart-topping rock band, which had a string of hits in the 1990s including “Dreams,” “Linger” and “Zombie.”

Then Monday, he was stunned by news the beloved singer was found dead in a London hotel. British police say her death is not being treated as suspicious, meaning that they found no evidence of foul play. The case will be passed to a coroner to determine the cause of death.

“Financiall­y she didn’t need to (continue writing),” Brodbeck said Tuesday of O’Riordan’s insatiable appetite for making music.

He figures they worked together on roughly 80 songs since first teaming up on her debut solo album, “Are You Listening?” Brodbeck won a Juno Award for recording engineer of the year for his effort on the songs “Apple of My Eye” and “Be Careful” off her 2009 album.

He’s one of several Canadian musicians and producers that O’Rioran worked with during her extended stays in Canada, a place she often called her second home.

Their partnershi­p began nearly 15 years ago when Brodbeck and his wife were invited to make an hours-long drive into the wilderness of Ontario cottage country to have dinner with O’Riordan at the home on Big Bald Lake, north of Buckhorn, that she shared with her family.

A mutual friend had recommende­d the London, Ont.-based producer to O’Riordan when she was searching for potential collaborat­ors to make what became “Are You Listening?”

This was an audition of sorts, Brodbeck thought, but to his surprise there was hardly any music involved.

“It was 100 per cent based on personalit­ies clicking,” he said.

Over a lobster dinner they discussed life, their musical tastes and their families. Before long the evening had melted away. The singer bid the couple farewell with more lobster to go. She also gave Brodbeck her seal of approval.

About a week later, he was delivered another surprise in the studio when O’Riordan tossed him a few chords and a piano medley before leaving the room to work on another song.

Brodbeck was sitting alone with little guidance, which he now thinks was O’Riordan’s way of seeing what he could come up with.

When she returned a couple of hours later, O’ Riordan was impressed with the results, he said. She picked up a microphone and started to sing lyrics off the top of her head.

“It was always spur-of-themoment, gut reaction stuff,” Brodbeck said.

“She knew how to deliver a lyric, so if she came up with it on the spot, she would easily be able to convey what she wanted.”

He described O’Riordan as a musician who knew what she wanted in a song, even if she couldn’t always recognize until she heard it.

Denny DeMarchi, a Mississaug­a -based musician who played keyboards and guitars for O’Riordan in the early 2000s, said she was a perfection­ist on tour. Occasional­ly during the show she’d turn to her bandmates and nix a particular track in the moment.

“As much as that frustrated everybody in the technical crew because they had to make all kinds of changes ... she was emotionall­y not able to go there,” he said.

“For her, singing wasn’t just something to deliver... it was a real experience.”

DeMarchi and his brother Steve, who played together in late 1980s Canadian rock outfit Alias, known for their chart-topping song “More Than Words Can Say,” both worked with O’Riordan through the years.

Their families were friends with her Canadian ex-husband, the former Duran Duran tour manager Don Burton, and their three children, including Taylor, who graduated from Lakefield College School in 2015.

In December, DeMarchi shot a music video for his song “Christmas Day” at O’Riordan’s Canadian home on Big Bald Lake north of Peterborou­gh. He played her white grand piano in front of a picture window that overlooked the snowy property.

O’Riordan’s glistening piano was a prominent fixture of the home, and she would often use it for improvised demos. Whenever inspiratio­n struck, she would feed cables upstairs from a makeshift recording space in the basement and set up microphone­s.

Richard Chycki, a Toronto producer who handled preliminar­y tracking of O’Riordan’s first solo album, said the singer will be forever remembered for her standout vocals and songwritin­g talent.

“She was on the cusp of doing more work, she had gone through quite a few changes in her life, all of that’s traumatic,” he said.

“It would’ve been really great to see her create more.”

 ?? YOUTUBE VIDEO IMAGE ?? Mississaug­a musician Denny DeMarchi released a video for his song Christmas Day earlier this month that was shot at Cranberrie­s singer Delores O'Riordan's cottage on Big Bald Lake, north of Buckhorn, using her white grand piano.
YOUTUBE VIDEO IMAGE Mississaug­a musician Denny DeMarchi released a video for his song Christmas Day earlier this month that was shot at Cranberrie­s singer Delores O'Riordan's cottage on Big Bald Lake, north of Buckhorn, using her white grand piano.

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