Global Times

Cranberrie­s to release album despite Dolores O’Riordan death

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Irish rockers The Cranberrie­s said on Wednesday they would go ahead with a new album despite the sudden death of singer Dolores O’Riordan in January.

The surviving three members of The Cranberrie­s said that O’Riordan had already recorded vocals for a new album, which the band now hopes to finish and release in early 2019.

The Cranberrie­s said that they also would move forward with a 25th anniversar­y reissue this year of their debut album, Everyone Else is Doing it, So Why Can’t We?, after putting work on hold following O’Riordan’s death.

“After much considerat­ion we have decided to finish what we started,” the band posted in a message on Facebook.

“We thought about it and decided that as this is something that we started as a band, with Dolores, we should push ahead and finish it.”

The 1993 album proved to be an internatio­nal success led by “Linger,” a wistful song about a first kiss.

The reissued edition will be remastered and feature previously unreleased material from the era, the band said.

O’Riordan was found dead in a London hotel on January 15 at age 46. A full inquest into her death is set for April 3, although authoritie­s are not treating her death as suspicious.

With a voice that merged florid traditiona­l Celtic singing with the ferocity of punk rock, O’Riordan defined the sound of The Cranberrie­s.

The Cranberrie­s last released an album of new material, Roses, in 2012 after a gap of more than a decade.

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