Nummer

Zombie

Nummer van The Cranberries
Origineel op album No Need to Argue (1994)

Lead vocals: Vrouw

Taal: Engels

Wikipedia (Nederlands)
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Laatst geladen: 14/02/2025 13:07:27

Zombie is een nummer van de Ierse band The Cranberries, uitgebracht in 1994 als single en op hun album No Need to Argue. Het is een protestlied waarin The Troubles in Noord-Ierland worden aangekaart, en dan met name de dood van twee kinderen (Jonathan Ball en Tim Parry) bij de bomaanslagen in Warrington.

Het nummer bevat een sterke gitaarriff, wat afwijkt van de muziek die de band doorgaans maakt. De single werd in meerdere landen een succes.

Wikipedia (Engels)
Inhoud van Wikipedia met licentie Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0
Laatst geladen: 14/02/2025 13:07:27

"Zombie" is a protest song by Irish alternative rock band the Cranberries. It was written by the lead singer, Dolores O'Riordan, about the young victims of a bombing in Warrington, England, during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The song was released on 19 September 1994 by Island Records as the lead single from the Cranberries' second studio album, No Need to Argue (1994). Critics have described "Zombie" as "a masterpiece of alternative rock", with grunge-style distorted guitar and shouted vocals uncharacteristic of the band's other work.

While Island feared releasing a politically charged song as a single, "Zombie" reached No. 1 on the charts of Australia, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, and Iceland. The song did not chart on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, but it reached No. 1 on the US Billboard Alternative Airplay chart. Listeners of the Australian radio station Triple J voted it No. 1 on the 1994 Triple J Hottest 100 chart, and it won the Best Song Award at the 1995 MTV Europe Music Awards. The music video was directed by Samuel Bayer, and featured O'Riordan singing while painted gold, and footage of war-torn Belfast. In April 2020, it became the first song by an Irish group to surpass one billion views on YouTube.

The Cranberries noted that "Zombie" drew strong responses from audiences. After O'Riordan's death in 2018, it became an Irish stadium anthem, first for the teams from the Cranberries' hometown of Limerick, and later for the Ireland national rugby union team starting in the 2023 Rugby World Cup. The band recorded acoustic, stripped-down versions on MTV Unplugged and the 2017 album Something Else. "Zombie" has been covered by numerous artists; O'Riordan had planned to contribute vocals to a version by the American band Bad Wolves, which was released days after her death.