A MASTERPIECE!!! Emotional Reaction to CRANBERRIES - ZOMBIE

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  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • #Cranberries #Zombie #EmpressJoyJean #reaction
    Here's my reaction to the CRANBERRIES - ZOMBIES
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @Bobbyliscious
    @Bobbyliscious Před 2 lety +857

    You cried! Good! -that means you are Human!

    • @BO-rg3gc
      @BO-rg3gc Před 2 lety +1

      Mandatory vaccination ,warp speed by Donald Trump , will produce the zombies Because of its DNA changing Crisper technology in the vaccination, World War III is coming.

    • @Bobbyliscious
      @Bobbyliscious Před 2 lety +3

      @@BO-rg3gc LOL!

    • @XENONEOMORPH1979
      @XENONEOMORPH1979 Před 2 lety +2

      hmmm human wrong human society will always kill each other it does not stop it from the beginning of time no matter what culture you are Man is the very person who is dangerous animal
      there is very few humans a very small percentage who believes we have gone on the wrong path it seems knowledge is dangerous to thoes that want to use it or for political gain
      power is for the one soul and not to be used against another.

    • @adammccabe640
      @adammccabe640 Před 2 lety

      It says let US make man in OUR own image Sir

    • @XENONEOMORPH1979
      @XENONEOMORPH1979 Před 2 lety

      @@adammccabe640 where was that saying from?

  • @LunarisArts
    @LunarisArts Před 2 lety +556

    The sad thing is that this song is still relevant, in every war zone, in every conflict, in every street quarrel, domestic violence.

    • @kaychristensen4394
      @kaychristensen4394 Před 2 lety +16

      Thank you for mentioning domestic violence. Far too many victims of that breed of zombie. I was one. WAS.

    • @johnfurey3593
      @johnfurey3593 Před 2 lety +2

      The little boys what struck the last nerve.

    • @painlord2k
      @painlord2k Před 2 lety +3

      Every time people are divided by hate.

    • @pjdavidson94
      @pjdavidson94 Před 2 lety +3

      A street quarrel or domestic violence!!!!! 3000 lives were lost

    • @johnfurey3593
      @johnfurey3593 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pjdavidson94 yano

  • @ktoyfl
    @ktoyfl Před 2 lety +721

    The way Dolores uses her voice is the traditional Irish mourning expression at funerals. How fitting and great and emotional.

    • @CharCanuck14
      @CharCanuck14 Před 2 lety +57

      It's called keening.

    • @christinerobinson9372
      @christinerobinson9372 Před 2 lety +14

      It is not. She uses the Irish yodel. You are referring to Keening, which is weeping and wailing.

    • @robschroeder5377
      @robschroeder5377 Před 2 lety +24

      @@christinerobinson9372 From wikipedia. O'Riordan is yodeling[48][36] when she does the sharp break[49] from chest register to head register-falsetto in the second syllable of the word Zom-bie.[48] These rapid and repeated changes in pitch in O’Riordan's yodel, paired with the amplified method that she uses to form her vowels and consonants,[48] set her voice in the sean-nós singing style.[50][48][36] A vocal trademark combined with the Gaelic keening,[51] the lilting vocables,[52] and sung in her thick Irish accent.
      So it is a bit of both.

    • @sobbyhasselhoff
      @sobbyhasselhoff Před 2 lety

      So you just made that up.

    • @carolinebarrett4736
      @carolinebarrett4736 Před 2 lety +8

      @@robschroeder5377 she’s from limerick (stab city -everyone over here calls it) they’ve a fairly heavy accent

  • @zrebbesh
    @zrebbesh Před 2 lety +527

    This song broke through the noise and hate. It seemed like the first thing that the people in Northern Ireland and the people in Britain had agreed about in about eighty years. Stopping the fight was finally more important than winning it.

    • @graciep.6984
      @graciep.6984 Před 2 lety +14

      This. Beautifully put.

    • @oasis4life014
      @oasis4life014 Před rokem +4

      40 years of bloodshed

    • @orvoloco8261
      @orvoloco8261 Před rokem +14

      But still Ireland is not whole.

    • @oasis4life014
      @oasis4life014 Před rokem +8

      @@orvoloco8261 this song is not about that…. Alot of NI still want the union

    • @orvoloco8261
      @orvoloco8261 Před rokem +7

      @@oasis4life014 a union with Ireland, yes.

  • @Distant394
    @Distant394 Před 2 lety +556

    Don’t worry virtually everybody who saw this for the first time did exactly the same as you and had tears , it done it’s job , sadly the lead singer Dolores passed away in 2018 but she left behind such a beautiful legacy , great reaction

    • @SakaIsMyDad
      @SakaIsMyDad Před 2 lety +5

      she was so young too💔

    • @shayleeledevre6401
      @shayleeledevre6401 Před 2 lety +9

      Dolores anniversary of transition was January 15th. I miss her so much. She sang about a lot of important matters. Way back when I had a dating profile it said " Must love The Cranberries " . Someone commented she had the voice of an angel. An angry angel but an angel nevertheless. The Irish are a strong people....terrible this happened for so long.

    • @allaboutpyro2549
      @allaboutpyro2549 Před 2 lety +3

      @@SakaIsMyDad Dont do drugs kids!

    • @mwfmtnman
      @mwfmtnman Před 2 lety +15

      Only the first time? Heard/seen this song hundreds of times and it still chokes me up

    • @shayleeledevre6401
      @shayleeledevre6401 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mwfmtnman A lot of reactors are usually reacting to music out of their typical genre. This song is definitely gutting though. As is the loss of Delores who sang about important things.

  • @ruaidriodomhnaill4489
    @ruaidriodomhnaill4489 Před 2 lety +171

    PS- yes it’s the war, but the beauty of her vocals is her keening (Irish ban sí signing). It’s the most emotional act a woman can undertake it our culture

    • @finolaomurchu8217
      @finolaomurchu8217 Před rokem +6

      Yes it's the keening element there. I know exactly what you mean very Irish, and a primordial weeping, keening. A baby could be born to that sound as well, it cuts through it all.

    • @mick1406
      @mick1406 Před rokem +5

      What 'war' was ever declared between the UK and Ireland? The 'Troubles' was not a 'war'! It was a vicious terrorist campaign launched by the IRA to try to force Northern Ireland to rejoin the Republic of Ireland! The IRA failed and over 3,500 people were killed as a result. Zombie is an anti IRA / terrorist protest song. The 'Zombies' are all those mindlessly carrying out senseless terrorist murders, such as the one referenced in the song - the IRA's Warrington bombing. Those 'brave' freedom fighters, the IRA, put a bomb in a shopping centre waste bin which exploded killing two innocent young boys who were walking past the bin!! Stop trying to call the terror campaign a 'war'! It was a terrorist campaign and only the Zombies want to keep it going!

    • @TheHuxleyAgnostic
      @TheHuxleyAgnostic Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@mick1406 What a pile of crap. She, literally, gives you a date, in the song. 1916 isn't the "troubles", it's the Easter Uprising, leading to the Irish War of Independence ... yes, a war. And, the later IRA, during the "troubles", didn't have tanks, ffs. Who had the tanks in Northern Ireland? The British. And a British soldier was finally charged with murder, for killing a boy, during Operation Motorman (which used tanks).

    • @PamelaD963
      @PamelaD963 Před 9 měsíci

      @@mick1406and now those same murderers are running Ireland and selling it to the highest bidder .
      Turns out they never had any principles after all.

  • @alasdairdouglas7485
    @alasdairdouglas7485 Před 2 lety +257

    I'm from Northern Ireland, and this song hit really hard, I could listen to her voice for ever, brilliant

    • @paulbryan3757
      @paulbryan3757 Před 2 lety +14

      And in England. Above the politics and above religion, we are human.

    • @jonahprophet4483
      @jonahprophet4483 Před rokem +7

      And I'm an American of both English and Irish ancestry; the suffering was just unbearable to watch from across the sea... We all know this could break out again at any time. Please in the name of all that is good, resist it and all those who would bring back the horror in every way you can...

    • @d1llon__461
      @d1llon__461 Před rokem +6

      same from republic of ireland

    • @kevinw8276
      @kevinw8276 Před rokem +3

      I was 11 when this came out. I didn't understand the context, but I still loved it. It definitely hits harder when you know what it's about.

    • @WitchyStitches.
      @WitchyStitches. Před rokem +1

      It’s about “The Troubles”. Just look it up. Too much for a comment.

  • @immitable
    @immitable Před rokem +39

    This song came out in the 90's. At that time the civil war in Bosnia was raging and I was a teenager back then growing up in Bosnia, this song made such an impact. The pain in this song is real.

  • @kaychristensen4394
    @kaychristensen4394 Před 2 lety +90

    This shows actual footage of British soldiers in Northern Ireland in the early '90s; the "Troubles" had been ongoing since 1916 as referenced in the song.
    Two young boys had gone to a shop to buy their mum a card for Mother's Day when the shopping area was fire bombed and the two brothers perished. It happened in 1993; The Cranberries recorded "Zombie" the following year.

    • @mac1975
      @mac1975 Před rokem +14

      I was one of those soldiers. Didn’t have a clue why I was there really

    • @interestedbystander196
      @interestedbystander196 Před rokem +20

      Actually, they weren't brothers. They died in two separate bombings, about a minute apart, in the English town of Warrington, Cheshire. Bombs planted by the IRA.

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 Před rokem +22

      You’ve misunderstood some of the facts. The boys were unrelated and English. The IRA planted 2 bombs in dustbins in the street in Warrington. The boys were both killed (and 50 ish people injured). The IRA murdered many random people - men, women and children. The attacks were so unpredictable across England and NI, and entirely terrorist in action. As a child, I remember many of the news headlines, such as Warrington and Omagh. I remember being in Waterloo station and having to be evacuated because they found a device. Terrifying.
      The British military acted disgustingly too - Derry is a prime example but there are many others. Neither side were noble, just or fair. The whole thing was futile and just fed derision and division in NI, with children conditioned to hate the British or to hate the Protestants/ Catholics in their own communities - hence the purpose and meaning of the song.

  • @Mim_And_theOthers
    @Mim_And_theOthers Před 2 lety +114

    I love that you've said: "What people had to go through just cause we all couldn't love each other." And I absolutley agree with you.

  • @ingobordewick6480
    @ingobordewick6480 Před 2 lety +51

    Fun fact, when Dolores showed the band the song she wrote, she asked the drummer "Can you please hit the drums real hard?".... I think he did a good job on her request.

    • @marianmoyna5237
      @marianmoyna5237 Před 2 lety +3

      I am sending this video to the drummers wife who is very close to me

    • @graciep.6984
      @graciep.6984 Před 2 lety

      Here’s another wonderful reaction video, very different but his reaction is so real, so honest. Perhaps he would enjoy this too.
      A MASTERPIECE!! | Mumble Rap Fan Listens To | The Cranberries - Zombie (REACTION!!)
      m.czcams.com/video/Zh62zyq2vqU/video.html

  • @esc0bert
    @esc0bert Před 2 lety +91

    I think one of the more chilling and moving parts of this video is the fact the shots of the soldiers, the murals, blown up buildings ect it's all real. the director went and walked around filming before the band got there.

    • @glennmcmurray
      @glennmcmurray Před 10 měsíci +2

      Those areas are/were very real. Growing up in North Belfast before we had computer gaming, etc and only about 2 hours of kid's tv after school we played outside a lot.
      Every time I watch this video I can remember my friends and me playing around in the derelict houses.

  • @kellyfoster1377
    @kellyfoster1377 Před 2 lety +166

    The line 'it's not me, it's not my family' was her saying that even though she was from Ireland, the killings and bombings were not in her name nor represented all those who were Irish.

    • @1227air500
      @1227air500 Před 2 lety +16

      So true. The vast majority of people in the world are good, and just want to live peacefully. That very small percentage of the most fanatical, and the most greedy, bring suffering to everyone.

    • @dullahan7677
      @dullahan7677 Před 2 lety +34

      I don't know, I kinda interpreted it a bit different. I thought it was referring to the fractured mentality of humanity, in that as long as something isn't happening to us or those we care about, we really don't don't care to go any further.

    • @dewey_meister95m20
      @dewey_meister95m20 Před rokem +4

      i see it as more of just a call to cease fire on both ends. both the IRA and the english did completely awful things. theres no right or wrong side. its all based on perspective

    • @saundyuk
      @saundyuk Před rokem +10

      @@dullahan7677 For context - the Cranberries released this just after the IRA bombed Warrington in the north of England in 1993, injuring 56 people and killing 2 young children. The visuals in the video represent perceived injustices on both sides of the sectarian divide - but the catalyst for the song and the video was the deaths of those tow children in Warrington and the desire to disavow it ("It's not me, it's not my family").

    • @engjds
      @engjds Před rokem

      @@dullahan7677 That was my understand as well.

  • @fcukwelshy
    @fcukwelshy Před rokem +24

    For a song to bring you to tears you realise the power of music & that you have just witnessed a classic.
    R.I.P Dolores we miss you but your brilliance lives on forever.

  • @levpoplow7354
    @levpoplow7354 Před 2 lety +204

    It's okay to let it out. I was crying right along with you. This is an incredibly powerful song sung by the incredibly powerful voice of Delores O'Riordan as a response to the death of 2 children who had been killed in an IRA bombing. Peace to the 400 year conflict between the Irish and British was finally brokered in the 1990s.

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz Před 2 lety +25

      dont call it a british and irish conflict, it was 800 years of oppression. The late actions of paramilitaries doesn't make it anything else.

    • @pauldryburgh6346
      @pauldryburgh6346 Před 2 lety +3

      @@WookieWarriorz are you saying that oppression over centuries was the cause of death for the children which led to this video and not the paramilitaries who actually committed the act?
      Really?

    • @levpoplow7354
      @levpoplow7354 Před 2 lety +12

      @@WookieWarriorz I stand corrected and should have been more accurate in my description. I didn't mean to minimize the lived experience in any way. I'm sorry

    • @thatsthat2612
      @thatsthat2612 Před 2 lety +7

      My 2 cousins were killed by an IRA bomb aged 2 and 4 and my aunty and uncle, I didn't know them, it was before I was born. Apparently the IRA thought it was just soldiers on the coach, not women and kids. Yeah, fantastic excuse tho

    • @cahilla54
      @cahilla54 Před 2 lety +4

      800 years bro

  • @Lindeman08
    @Lindeman08 Před 2 lety +41

    I refuse to ignore the background noise. I realize that for you it might be a disturbance but for me it is amazing to hear such a foreign sound while you speak about your emotions relating to this song. For me it makes it even more poignant that even though we live different lives we can still relate to eachother on a very basic human level.

    • @EMPRESSJOYJEAN
      @EMPRESSJOYJEAN  Před 2 lety +10

      Aww! Thank you for your sweet comment. You’re a good person 🤗

  • @qdllc
    @qdllc Před 2 lety +29

    Ironically, I never felt moved by this song until I understood what it was about. The lyrics had a completely different impact once I understood what the song was about. I just thought it was a good song with a good beat.

  • @jonathonkeane3598
    @jonathonkeane3598 Před 2 lety +16

    28 years after this song was released and it still brings tears to my eyes

    • @DanSolo871
      @DanSolo871 Před 10 měsíci

      After Dolores passed I get a tear in my eye whenever I listen to any of her songs.

  • @willripper3713
    @willripper3713 Před 20 dny

    I’ve heard this song 1000 times and every time this video makes me damn near ball. You wouldn’t guess by looking at me lol. Delores has such a beautiful soul. She will never truly die.

  • @mr-Skeptik4467
    @mr-Skeptik4467 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Listening to this song and seeing the people of Gaza and the little children suffering really broke me down.......i am now crying......feeling the pain of all the misery they are going through right now.

  • @ClassicHarleyQuinn
    @ClassicHarleyQuinn Před 2 lety +12

    Legitimately one of the greatest tracks ever made.

  • @geralddavis8160
    @geralddavis8160 Před 2 lety +11

    The "troubles" in Northern Ireland are as deep, as they are long. God bless and keep the people of Ireland.

  • @richardstorm4603
    @richardstorm4603 Před rokem +1

    Zombie was a visceral response to the death of two children in an IRA bombing in the Cheshire town of Warrington. Three-year-old Johnathan Ball was killed when two bombs hidden in litter bins detonated on a busy shopping street in March 1993. Tim Parry, aged 12, died five days later. After this song was aired, the IRA agreed to put a stop to the violence.

  • @CranDolFans
    @CranDolFans Před 2 lety +61

    Thank you for your beautiful honest reaction. The Cranberries have a large catalog of beautiful music. Dolores always put 100% emotion into every song she sang. She had a way to make you feel what she was singing about that very few other musicians can do. She was not only a great musician, songwriter, and performer. She was also a terrific human being that cared about humanity. She was/is really something special.

    • @finolaomurchu8217
      @finolaomurchu8217 Před rokem +2

      Certain songs can leave you in bits afterwards and this is one of them.☘️

  • @CensorCipher
    @CensorCipher Před 2 lety +56

    Wow, this song hits a lot different now that I’ve seen the footage from Ukraine. It’s hard to believe we keep having to go through this pain and learn these same lessons over and over again. May we find wisdom and kindness. 🙏🏻

    • @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665
      @clivestainlesssteelwomble7665 Před 2 lety

      Yep and the same old secret policemens ball .... Enforcing failed ideologies - political and religious, keep stamping on the hands and face of humanity and the planet .... as per George Orwell's experience, predictions and more.
      Might be time for a Ginger track...?
      Or Dakha Brakha .... Carpathian rap or Damn Yankee.
      I hope they are outside the country ... 🤞🏼

    • @SuLokify
      @SuLokify Před 2 lety +1

      Every war. There are other wars going on too. They're all terrible

    • @DavidHayes56
      @DavidHayes56 Před rokem +1

      ... and we support an effort that is starving kids in Yemen. But that one we don't hear about very much. And the news cycle moves on and Afghanistan's problems are fading from our minds and the same has started happening with Ukraine. It's too awful to hang onto for long and survive.

    • @steve-fc6mc
      @steve-fc6mc Před rokem

      Yes i agree,the Ukrainian governments genocide on the donbass people since 2014.

    • @BuXnAMaN
      @BuXnAMaN Před rokem

      It happens every day since humans exist. Many other battlefields that are current and people are dying all the time. Not just Ukraine.

  • @Nifilheimur
    @Nifilheimur Před 2 lety +8

    Given the war in Ukraine at the moment this song has more revelance now than ever!

  • @edwardpate6128
    @edwardpate6128 Před rokem +4

    RIP Dolores! The world needs you more now than ever!

  • @MrChristbait
    @MrChristbait Před 2 lety +12

    Song makes me cry every time(literally!) Dolores write this for two boys!

  • @missmary8878
    @missmary8878 Před 2 lety +3

    You are a beautiful woman with a good heart. Excellent reaction you are correct life ought to be about love not war, you are a wise woman. Dolores was a fantastic singer her spirit lives on through her music. Best wishes from Ireland.

  • @TheBaardis
    @TheBaardis Před 2 lety +5

    😊 As always a wonderful reaction. Poor Northern Irland . Long war and the wall is still there in Belfast. Hope they will have peace one day.🌷🌷

  • @Richie_
    @Richie_ Před 2 lety +1

    She was a great singer. RIP..

  • @alaninohio2
    @alaninohio2 Před 26 dny

    The group said they wanted you to feel this song!

  • @tallaganda83
    @tallaganda83 Před 2 lety +20

    It’s a masterpiece, very much right up there with smells like teen spirit of the same era.

  • @zapador
    @zapador Před 2 lety +11

    Don't worry about controlling emotions, that was never the intention of this song I believe. I'm a 35 year old guy and I cry whenever I hear this song.

    • @STMYL2525
      @STMYL2525 Před 2 lety +1

      Same dude, same. This world is so senseless.

    • @zapador
      @zapador Před 2 lety

      @@STMYL2525 Good to hear I'm not the only one. And yes it really is, so sad.

  • @domfol5515
    @domfol5515 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m from the Republic of Ireland, 40 years Old , thankfully I’ve never had to experience what was happening in the north of Ireland but it was always constantly on the news and papers etc., it was part of life. Thankfully there is peace there now.

  • @richiegillham42069
    @richiegillham42069 Před rokem

    I'm a huge grown man ( 6' 3" ; 333 lbs ) and I struggle not to cry every time I hear this. I absolutely LOVE your reaction. I also love your accent

  • @5556665012008
    @5556665012008 Před 2 lety +23

    I'm from the UK but this music video also always reminds me of stories from an interview with a survivor of the Rwandan genocide who was a kid then but is now a adult & saw horrific things happen to her brothers, sisters & parents. similar parallels

    • @ansionnachbeagrioga5260
      @ansionnachbeagrioga5260 Před 2 lety +5

      Rwanda was so much crazier though. Horrible atrocities happened in Ireland and Britain during the troubles, but Rwanda was on another level. People hacking up neighbours with machetes.

    • @schattenseele66
      @schattenseele66 Před 2 lety +1

      as a british it should more remind u of the war the british brought zu ireland...

    • @roryfleming2320
      @roryfleming2320 Před rokem +1

      @@ansionnachbeagrioga5260 the Rwandan genocide was one of the worst things done by the British in modern times. But you can look at the Black and Tans and in India.

    • @sebethspilseth9957
      @sebethspilseth9957 Před 11 měsíci

      @@roryfleming2320done by the British? The whole thing was orchestrated by a Rwandan billionaire that had an axe to grind. (Well, machete in this case). What am I missing?

    • @roryfleming2320
      @roryfleming2320 Před 11 měsíci

      @@sebethspilseth9957 I made a mistake the Rwandan genocide was caused by Belgium and their colonies

  • @Beehindblueyes
    @Beehindblueyes Před 2 lety +6

    The story of what inspired this song it's even more impacting. For mothers day two boys went out and bought their mother a card which they decided to mail as a surprise as they did the mailbox exploded from a mail bomb killing the boys. Delores being a mother wrote this song hoping no mother would have to experience this again. It was so impacting that a cease fire was agreed to days after the songs release.

    • @bigal3055
      @bigal3055 Před 11 měsíci +2

      The bombs were planted in metal rubbish bins, not mail boxes. The first one was set to go off at lunchtime in a bin right outside the front door to Boots the chemists, which sold perfumes, face creams and all that other crap mums like and was absolutely rammed with kids buying Mother's Day presents that day. Across the street was McDonald's too, which was always busy with kids at the weekend, but was especially busy that day. The second bomb was set to go off shortly after the first to catch the fleeing crowds in its blast.
      I'd come out of Boots myself no more than a minute before the bomb planted outside went off, had my back to it and was almost at the top of Bridge Street, so I didn't see that one go off. I did see the crowds of people running down Bridge Street run straight into the path of the second one though. Given the time, day and the location, there is no way on Earth that I'll ever believe kids weren't deliberately targeted that day. You wouldn't have found a higher concentration of kids anywhere in Warrington than you would on Bridge Street when those bombs went off.

  • @1Nida
    @1Nida Před 2 lety +1

    No one's voice carries as much emotion as Delores.

  • @maxw2974
    @maxw2974 Před rokem +1

    Masterpiece! Nothing else to say. ❤
    Their Video shows one thing! Humans never learn!

  • @thesoundship
    @thesoundship Před 2 lety +3

    If you're not touched by this song you are not a human being. I don't know how many times I've seen it over the years and I still have tears in my eyes......and even more tears when I see another human being that is moved by it. Thank you.

  • @FRED76400
    @FRED76400 Před 2 lety +26

    Wow, for the first time with this song, it's really a beautiful reaction, full of humanity. Well done and thank you for having such a big heart 👏👏👏👍🌹💐🌺

  • @shocra2679
    @shocra2679 Před 11 měsíci

    I get chills every time the children scream on the breakdown. Everytime without fail

  • @adamgilligan3688
    @adamgilligan3688 Před 2 lety +1

    Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate, hate leads to suffering.
    War does not show who is right it only show who is left.

    • @amyw6808
      @amyw6808 Před rokem

      You just quoted Yoda from star wars 🙈

  • @ghosty86
    @ghosty86 Před 2 lety +6

    After 25 yrs it still bring me to tears, (metal head from australia) lol.
    Great reaction.. geve validation to people telling me back then i was listening to crap.. pure poetry with a seriouse education, which gave me heads up further in life.. thanks . Keep up the great reactions..

    • @graciep.6984
      @graciep.6984 Před 2 lety +2

      So you had the depth and understanding of music to appreciate more than one genre. Pffft. They missed out. I’m sorry you were hassled for that. It seems like something to be proud of to me. And you clearly have good taste.
      This song seems to appeal to people into specific genres across the board, introducing them to something entirely new. Dolores’ voice has yet to leave anyone unmoved. She delivers the song like no one else, knowing when to pull back, when to let it all out, pulling you in with that voice, those words.

  • @thebluenorthpodcasts4966

    I loved watching you showcase your emotions throughout this video. Your gorgeous face go from anticipation to full realization of the meaning of the song!!! Great reaction!!!!!

  • @matthowes249
    @matthowes249 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The song was written in response to the IRA bombs in Warrington, England that killed two children

  • @jerrideich2757
    @jerrideich2757 Před 2 lety +1

    Your not only gorgeous you have an incredible soul. Thank the lord for people like you gives me hope the planet might be ok someday.

  • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
    @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Před 2 lety +49

    The Northern Irish conflict were daily news in the 70’s and 80’s.
    Religion is a hell of a thing if you take it too seriously.
    The song wakes the same feelings in me as the tv-broadcasts did in my youth.
    Your reactions touched me deeply. Makes me somehow wish I could hug you and comfort you. So genuine.
    Thank you for that. 🙏🏼
    Maybe you should do a reaction to Gerry Rafferty and his masterpiece “Baker Street”? I think that you feel the lyrics there too.
    😘🇩🇰

    • @ingobordewick6480
      @ingobordewick6480 Před 2 lety +7

      Religion is a hell of a thing, no matter how seriously do you take it. The bible/quran are two of the worst books I have ever read.

    • @megarouge61
      @megarouge61 Před 2 lety +1

      Almost nightly on the news when I was a young fella.

    • @nedskink1
      @nedskink1 Před 2 lety +11

      @@ingobordewick6480 religion is certainly a big factor in this case, but colonialism, class, culture and national identity are also big factors. Things have got better, but there is still much progress to be made! Big love to all

    • @WookieWarriorz
      @WookieWarriorz Před 2 lety +13

      its less to do with religion although the brutal treatment of specially Catholics in ireland was fucked, it was 800 years of English oppression regardless of religion.

    • @igggaming9871
      @igggaming9871 Před 2 lety +15

      The portrayal of the Troubles as a religious conflict is a product of English propaganda regarding the matter, though it is true most Nationalists (pro Union with Ireland) were Catholic and Unionists (pro Union with the UK) were Protestant, this was a war about politics and human rights, religion rarely ever came into it, and there were many Protestant Nationalists and (though fewer) Catholic Unionists.
      Source: Lived through part of it, lol.

  • @katthill7506
    @katthill7506 Před 2 lety +8

    Your reaction is human...I think anyone who hears, sees and understands the song and video is gonna cry. I am so glad you understand the song. Dolores, the singer, unfortunately passed away the day before the re-release of what I believe was her greatest work. Other comments further down will explain the song in greater detail. Thank you for being you ❤

  • @vinniedurrant
    @vinniedurrant Před 10 měsíci +1

    No doubt the conflict was brutal, what gets me crying is the Celtic undertones of her voice, beautiful ~ R.I.P ✌️

  • @WASP75
    @WASP75 Před rokem

    This song is about 2 young boys killed by the I.R.A.. and about the troubles here in Northern Ireland before peace. This song is hard hitting I don't blame you for crying this means you're human you've a heart of gold

  • @annsipes6780
    @annsipes6780 Před 2 lety +3

    Everyone gets emotional when they see this video & hears the song for the first time. It still gets to me after many times of listening & watching it.

  • @NoxAtlas
    @NoxAtlas Před 2 lety +6

    I grew up with this song because my parents love music from the 70s to 90s and this masterpiece was in every Playlist. Even if I wasn't able to remember all the songs I grew up with, this was the one I could never forget. As a child I didn't understand the lyrics because English isn't my native language but I couldn't forget all the emotions it made me feel. Nostalgia, grief, anger... Like a companion that had been there by my side since I was born and stays with me until I pass away.
    Whenever I feel frustrated, sad or helpless and just want to scream but can't, I think of this song and feel comforted. Because someone managed to raise her voice in such a beautiful way.

  • @keeperlit.leterrip7722
    @keeperlit.leterrip7722 Před 2 lety +1

    Born and raised in N. Ireland. This was just life. One of my earliest memories is being in Belfast when 21 bombs that were planted by the IRA exploded, but it was a daily thing all over N. Ireland. 2000 bombs in Belfast in 1972 alone.

  • @READY_OR_NOT
    @READY_OR_NOT Před 11 měsíci

    I don't cry often but I cry almost every time I hear this song. Even after having just heard it.

  • @richardhargrave6082
    @richardhargrave6082 Před 2 lety +11

    This is a powerful song, Dolores O'Riordan's singing is unique and exceptional.
    The message in the song is so powerful that I'm not surprised to see the tears, proving you have a good heart.

  • @gertrudelaronge6864
    @gertrudelaronge6864 Před 2 lety +5

    Feeling speechless after watching this video, is the appropriate response.
    I dread war too.
    And, I appreciate your emotional honesty.
    Thank you.

  • @MuppetAlex1
    @MuppetAlex1 Před rokem

    The song is a reaction to an I.R.A. bomb that killed two children aged 3 and 12, while injuring about 50 others in 1993. It was actually 2 bombs, so when Delores says bombs twice, that is why. Very powerful piece of music.

  • @AM-eu7pq
    @AM-eu7pq Před rokem

    That you can not know about the atrocities that happened in Northern Ireland.. but feel the pain by this song.. is what music is all about!
    God bless you!

  • @84rebz
    @84rebz Před 2 lety +41

    For me this song always felt like it was speaking to my family and community. Irish-Americans, especially in the north, were pretty much universally on the side of the IRA. and it felt like every actual Irish person is singing you don't know what you're talking about. You're not here, you don't see the damage. Which we didnt. We just supported the end goal of a unified Ireland

    • @steveg8102
      @steveg8102 Před 2 lety +10

      Yep my family was ira and fled Ireland to avoid the noose. This song makes me ashamed as an Irish American. .we dragged this fight out , we supported terrorism and we should have left Ireland be. 26+6 is Irelands business, not ours.

    • @keithhealing1115
      @keithhealing1115 Před 2 lety +5

      A unified Ireland that the people in the north didn't want. You supported terrorists.
      I am not saying the British were blameless, but only one side left bombs in shopping centres and slaughtered children in Eniskillen.

    • @cpmc5400
      @cpmc5400 Před 2 lety +1

      @@keithhealing1115 What a completely twisted and dishonest take. Military reaction force literally murdering in unmarked cars in plain clothes, internment, sponsoring unionist terrorist forces, shooting protestors dead on the streets. Don't start your sentence with the suggestion you're being objective when you are very clearly not.

    • @keithhealing1115
      @keithhealing1115 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cpmc5400 never said I was objective. I was, however, being accurate. And I stated, very clearly, that the British were not blameless. However, only one side left bombs that killed families. If you can't accept that then maybe you are not as objective as you wish to be either.

    • @cpmc5400
      @cpmc5400 Před 2 lety +3

      @@keithhealing1115 I don't believe I denied that. But your point is about as useful as saying only one side was Irish. Only one side was a recognised government entity. Entirely pointless.

  • @shannonwoods2413
    @shannonwoods2413 Před 2 lety +29

    I really wish you watched the concert version of this song!!!... You would've appreciated how great Dolores O' Riordan really was!! And the crowd participation is AMAZING!! RIP Dolores O' Riordan

    • @madzec
      @madzec Před 2 lety +15

      That concert version of Zombie is great version, but for someone who would first time heard this song I think that it is better to see it with music video first because they can then more easily pick up of the song. She would miss loads of meanings of the song with audience singing and basically missing some of most important parts of song.

    • @valrose6083
      @valrose6083 Před rokem

      @@madzec 100% right! Seeing the original video has so much more meaning.

  • @paranuts7693
    @paranuts7693 Před rokem

    The fact that you didn’t interrupt the video but still let us know what you were thinking is almost perfect

  • @Darth69906
    @Darth69906 Před 3 měsíci

    We need more innocent and beautiful souls like you

  • @scanau1
    @scanau1 Před 2 lety +6

    The entire "No Need to Argue" album is fantastic, all the songs are beautiful.
    Listen to "DREAMS" by them as well (different album)

  • @thomassmith2227
    @thomassmith2227 Před 2 lety +19

    It's a powerful song, no doubt. No matter how many times I see the video, it hits hard emotionally every time. There are not many songs that can do that.

  • @cjr2131
    @cjr2131 Před 7 měsíci

    The yodelling she does is a specific type of singing technique from Ireland called keening. It expresses heartache and sorrow in the song and is usually used in mourning. I grew up in Belfast during this time and it was pure destruction. My cousin is the 1st child to be murdered during this oppressive war. Patrick Rooney when he was 9. I can still remember my mum walking me and my brother to school and we had to walk through an area that was against Catholics and my mother basically telling us ever day not to call my name as it's a strong strong Irish name (Cathal) I can still remember the abuse we got still. Tragedies happened on both sides but I can only speak of my own experiences

  • @HT-in-Alabama
    @HT-in-Alabama Před 29 dny

    Let us hope there will be peace one day in Northern Ireland. R.I.P. Dolores.

  • @x3mslayer
    @x3mslayer Před 2 lety +3

    The scene with little boys screaming, is too chilling and so well done to achieve that effect.

  • @Eryc001
    @Eryc001 Před 2 lety +7

    I've seen this music video countless times and it still never fails to give me chills--- so powerful and poignant and hard to watch all at the same time. Truly a masterpiece.Your reaction reminds me of my own the first time I saw this video.

  • @koolhandluke5646
    @koolhandluke5646 Před rokem

    Talk about music at its highest purity, R.I.P Dolores, one of the best music group to ever walk the face of this planet.

  • @Jflonsn
    @Jflonsn Před rokem

    seen some "reactions" of people trying to push tears out, or just "fake crying" to this song. Yours was real, you listend. Don't ever feel bad for showing real emotions, thats one of the best parts of beeing human.

  • @bafumat
    @bafumat Před 2 lety +2

    She was going through it when she wrote this one. Big emotions, well translated into words.

  • @DoberDudeProductions
    @DoberDudeProductions Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for a beautifully genuine reaction and analysis.
    During a period known as 'the Troubles', an ethnonationalist conflict in Northern Ireland from the 1960s until 1998, more than 3,500 people died and tens of thousands were injured in the more than three decades of the complex and often brutal conflict. The IRA, which was devoted both to removing British forces from Northern Ireland and to unifying Ireland, killed almost 2,000 people during this time. During this time, over 10,000 bomb attacks were perpetrated in Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and Great Britain, in an armed conflict fought between the Provisional IRA, the Ulster loyalist paramilitaries, and the British security forces.
    This song was written in response to the death of Johnathan Ball, 3, and Tim Parry, 12, who had been killed in the IRA bombing in Warrington, northwest England, when two devices hidden in litter bins were detonated. Ball died at the scene of the bombing as a result of his shrapnel-inflicted injuries and, five days later, Parry lost his life as a result of head injuries. 56 others were injured, some seriously. Parry died in his father's arms in Liverpool's Walton hospital. The two boys had gone shopping to buy Mother's Day cards on one of the town's busiest shopping streets that day.

  • @ca3015
    @ca3015 Před rokem

    You haven't heard Zombie until now, in 2022? It was a world hit in 1995. Never the less, better late than never & I'm really glad to see that it touched your heart this way ❤

  • @satanlovesme1538
    @satanlovesme1538 Před rokem

    I'm a 52 year old man, I cried right along with you.

  • @jacobmarriott7971
    @jacobmarriott7971 Před 2 lety +3

    Drop dead gorgeous

    • @Birodalom1
      @Birodalom1 Před 2 lety +1

      Dolores or Empress? Why not both? :D

  • @garyrobb5341
    @garyrobb5341 Před 2 lety +7

    Of course, you know that you have to see the Zombie cover by Bad Wolves. It’s a cover because she was scheduled to perform with them on the day she died. They did the tribute to her and gave all profits to her children.

    • @daveshep9400
      @daveshep9400 Před 2 lety +1

      Fair warning they did not take this challenge lightly. Their video is just as deep and meaningful

  • @Spuggky45
    @Spuggky45 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I am not ashamed to admit that this song brings me to tears every single time. But everyone needs to hear it, think about it, and put aside their hate.
    We don't need to hate each other. We don't need to hurt each other. Let it stop.

  • @finbarerskine9031
    @finbarerskine9031 Před 2 měsíci

    Empress joy I lived through these time my da was a Protestant from the north of Ireland an my mother was a catholic just over the border in the Republic of Ireland 🇮🇪 I love your emotions so beautiful xxx

  • @jopa9703
    @jopa9703 Před 11 měsíci

    Since 1994, I almost always get tears when I hear the song - I know the background of the song. You are wonderfully emphatic ❤

  • @dogememer4780
    @dogememer4780 Před 8 měsíci

    I am Irish and i have to say i have seen so many reaction videos to this song. Nearly all of them have been from black people and the reactions have been so powerful and emotional . This is purely just an observation but they have definitely got the emotion and message of this song. Seeing the poster come to tear actually brought me to tears.
    I felt this ladies reaction was so genuine

  • @johne.christensen7147

    I met Dolores in 1992 I’m very sweet loving woman with tragic bringing, the taking of her life broke my heart.

  • @bobbyoscroft9341
    @bobbyoscroft9341 Před 2 lety +1

    i grew up in Belfast, born there in the 70s, still here, know this song well, things maybe arnt as bad as they were in the past, the paramilitaries' no longer kill people from the other communities, instead they have turned the guns on their own communities to keep themselves in control of the streets , the peace walls separating the communities have been made higher while the paramilitaries have grown more powerful with thousands of members, this song has never made me emotional [maybe desensitized] but for some reason your reaction pulled my heart strings. i know we are living in a tinder box and that it would only take a spark to reignite the troubles, i wish more people could see what this song is saying, thank you Dolores O Riordan, may you rest in peace x

  • @mistertindfoting5222
    @mistertindfoting5222 Před rokem

    I was lucky enough to be part of the roadcrew for Cranberries in 97-99. Can't really describe Dolores with words. She was a strong voice against IRA, but was the kindest soul I've met. To know I'll never hear or meet her again... it's still so sad

  • @englishmaninmedellin7294
    @englishmaninmedellin7294 Před 11 měsíci

    For context, this song is a protest to "the troubles" in Northern Ireland, where a violent paramilitary insurgency took place between those supporting union with Britain and those who wanted the Northern part of the island to re-join the republic and become a united Ireland. The conflict took many lives, but the artist hear has chosen to highlight the particularly saddening bombing of two children, both killed, in England. Those are the falling/screaming children you see. It gives me chills to this day. I grew up when this was happening. There was always an underlying fear... that it could be you next, however unlikely.

  • @Jeff_11B
    @Jeff_11B Před 2 lety

    If you listen to this song, TRULY LISTEN....and DON'T cry, then you have no soul.

  • @danchristopher7957
    @danchristopher7957 Před 11 měsíci

    My Irish roots... I'm a tough old man... Tears every single time I see this video

  • @Dragoriax3
    @Dragoriax3 Před rokem

    I was ugly crying the first time I watched this. The scene with the boys holding hands and silently screaming destroyed me. The anguish on their faces are just so guttural and real. It really hit it home hard.😢😢😢

  • @thomasvieth6063
    @thomasvieth6063 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a video for people who have a hard time crying

  • @MTNwanderings
    @MTNwanderings Před rokem

    The song was made after a bombing and they in England, they felt it being there as an Irish band and children where the casualties. So it hit them hard and the song came from that.

  • @MikeytheGeek7711
    @MikeytheGeek7711 Před 4 měsíci

    Once again, I'm impressed by your ability to not only understand what the song is about, but to also FEEL what the song is about on your first listening. I subscribed to your channel because you stand out among all of the CZcams reactors.

  • @DSGreen
    @DSGreen Před 2 lety

    Am a grown ass man, still weeping here, seeing someone new react to it.

  • @ScouserGirl89
    @ScouserGirl89 Před 10 měsíci

    this song was written by the band 1994 (i think) as a protest about the bombing that happened in Warrington 1993, north west England that was by the IRA. I was the same age as the youngest victim in 1993 and I vaguely remember my family being upset as it was just down the motorway from us and that we knew people in that area. as i grew up, i remember my mum teaching me about this and every year, i light a candle in their memories.
    this song will always touch my heart as you can feel the pain in her voice. rest in peace to the two victims and rest in peace to Dolores.

  • @geraldinemitchell1324
    @geraldinemitchell1324 Před 10 měsíci

    Dolores had a real haunting voice ☘️☘️☘️

  • @tss9886
    @tss9886 Před 2 lety

    Most people don't realize that this song is about war and hate killing children. Respect to you for recognizing it.

  • @jc8453
    @jc8453 Před 2 lety +1

    The death of The Cranberries singer Dolores O’Riordan aged 46 shocked the world. The Irish singer was in London for a recording session when she passed away suddenly at a hotel in the capital’s Park Lane on 15 January 2018.

  • @pjdavidson94
    @pjdavidson94 Před 2 lety +1

    Zombie is about the conflict in the North of Ireland. We have peace walls separating Catholics and Protestants. I live in North Belfast. The hatred between both communities won't end anytime soon.

  • @Jjjbbbsss451
    @Jjjbbbsss451 Před rokem

    This song had been played at a few protests I’ve attended recently. Resonates deeply w me💔

  • @GT.Bugger
    @GT.Bugger Před rokem

    One of the most impactful songs I've ever heard.