Irish singer Sinéad O’Connor died this week at the age of 56.
A trailblazer, feminist and advocate for social change, O’Connor will be remembered for her outstanding contribution to music and her courage in speaking out against the status quo.
A fond friend of The Women’s Podcast, O’Connor last joined podcast presenter Róisín Ingle for an interview in 2021, while promoting her memoir Rememberings.
The interview was recorded in the conservatory of her home in the Wicklow countryside. It explored her life in depth, from her early childhood and her time spent living in a Magdalene laundry, to the struggles she faced after an emergency hysterectomy in 2015.
Famous Galway music venue that hosted Sinéad O’Connor and Coldplay to become nursing home
Fiachna Ó Braonáin of Hothouse Flowers: ‘I was quite disappointed by Bono. I don’t think Sinéad O’Connor would have done it’
Joseph O’Connor: ‘I don’t know what modern Ireland is yet. I’m suspicious about the new sacred cows’
Skinner: ‘A lot of bands are afraid of speaking out about the way they’ve been treated. Some of the carry-on is atrocious’
O’Connor also delved into the ways women are treated in the music industry, her escape from Ireland and how tearing up the photograph of the pope”rerailed” as opposed to “derailed” her career.
To pay tribute to the acclaimed singer, we are republishing that episode today. You can listen back to it in the player above or wherever you get your podcasts. Just search for The Women’s Podcast in your podcast app.