Sinead O'Connor On Saturday Night Live
Sinead O'Connor
Twenty years into an unusual but never boring career, the Irish chanteuse remains possessed of an uncommon power and spirit that has not been diminished by the crises, both public and private, that she has endured and sometimes created.
Over the course of a consistent 90-minute show, backed by a four piece band on an unadorned stage, she let her agony, ecstasy, fear, and faith filter through music that went from whisper quiet to storm-force howls.
The sound mix was not her friend at the start - especially the tamped down drums - but the fire of opener "The Emperor's New Clothes" was enough to ignite the audience, as was the wheeling and winding fiddle of its follow-up, "I Am Stretched on Your Grave."
Although O'Connor claimed fear kept her gaze downward, her stage presence did not suffer. She chatted about becoming addicted to television preachers during a brief time living in Atlanta prior to the Celtic-reggae hybrid "Lamb's Book of Life." And she mused about doing interviews with the Christian press for her new album "Theology" and the fact that a small percentage of the interviewers would take issue with her suggestion that "God perhaps doesn't want war."
As a rebuttal she offered up "If You Had a Vineyard," with its direct quotations from Isaiah and lush backing vocals, which pulled the listener along as if caught up in a current.
While "Theology" draws inspiration from scripture, a well O'Connor has tapped since her debut album, "The Lion and the Cobra," it was not the ecclesiastical that produced the night's most rapturous moment.
That occurred when O'Connor stood at the microphone and lifted her voice for "In This Heart." As she was joined in harmony one by one by her bassist, fiddler, and guitarist, the intertwined notes pulled a little bit of heaven onto the stage and easily survived a momentary lapse of lyrical memory.
On recent tours, O'Connor shunned her earlier work, but she has embraced it again wholeheartedly. She reached back to "Lion" for the quietly majestic vocal showcase "Never Get Old" and offered six songs from her best-selling 1990 album "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got," including her hit Prince cover, "Nothing Compares 2 U," and the melancholy yet raucous "The Last Day of Our Acquaintance."
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Sinead O'Connor On Saturday Night Live
Sinead O'Connor On Saturday Night Live
On 3 October 1992, the Irish rock singer Sinead O'Connor was the musical guest on Saturday Night Live.For her first song, Sinead performed the title track from her most recent album, "Am I Not Your Girl?" with a full backing band.
For her second, she went with "War," a song by Bob Marley that had once been banned for its apparent advocacy of violence. In a very risky move, musically speaking, Sinead performed the song a capella. Dressed all in white, surrounded by candles and (as usual) shaven-headed, she was a riveting sight.
With NBC-TV's cameras focused in-tight on her, Sinead ended her "War" by crying for another one to begin. "Fight the real enemy!" she called, and, out of nowhere, produced a copy of a photograph of Pope John Paul II, which she ripped into pieces. There was stunned silence, and then the station went to a commercial.
The NBC switchboard was immediately inundated by complaints (supposedly 4,484 in all) called in by outraged viewers. Denunciations of Sinead's "blasphemy" poured forth from all kinds of religious figures and celebrities, including Frank Sinatra, who was quoted as saying he wanted to "punch" the singer "right in the mouth." NBC was eventually fined $2.5 million dollars by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which had never before fined the network for content aired on Saturday Night Live.
In the meantime, Sinead herself said nothing about what she'd done or why she'd done it. (Simply changing one of Marley's lines so that it referred to "sexual abuse" instead of "racial injustice," as Sinead had done in mid-song, hadn't been sufficient explanation and so the press was filled with lurid denunciations of her.) When she returned to the United States on 16 October 1992 to perform at a birthday concert for Bob Dylan at Madison Square Garden in New York, Sinead was greeted by a weird mixture of cheers and boos. Despite the severely divided response to her presence, she once again sang an a cappella version of "War." Once she was done, she staggered offstage, where she was comforted by Kris Kristofferson. Shortly thereafter, Sinead O'Connor permanently retired from the "pop" entertainment industry.
Eventually, Sinead O'Connor made her peace with the Pope. On 22 September 1997, in an interview with the Italian weekly newspaper Vita, she asked the Holy Father to forgive her. She claimed that her attack on the photo had been "a ridiculous act, the gesture of a girl rebel," which she did "because I was in rebellion against the faith, but I was still within the faith." Quoting St. Augustine, she went on to add, "Anger is the first step towards courage." Another courageous step Sinead took in the late 1990s was to join the congregation of the controversial Irish Bishop Michael Cox, who eventually ordained Sinead as a priest. Lacking a sense of humor, the Vatican has refused to recognize Sinead's membership in the priesthood, which the Pope considers "bizarre." This is a case of the pot calling the kettle black, but the Pope is right: Sinead's story is a bizarre one.
And NBC? In the informative and relatively even-handed biography of the singer that airs on VH1 as part of the cable TV station's on-going "Behind the Music" series, it's said that, "even to this day," NBC refuses to allow the photo-ripping scene to be re-broadcast by anyone. VH1 itself had to settle with a blurry shot of Sinead in mid-rip that was published by one of New York's tabloid newspapers. You can catch a glimpse, but you can't actually see what Sinead did that night in 1992: you can only hear about it, thanks to the Vatican's clout and NBC's cowardice.
This would seem a good point to talk about censorship. But it isn't -- not yet.
The Comedy Channel shows back episodes of Saturday Night Live several times a day. In early August 2001, I happened to see the episode in which Sinead O'Connor is the musical guest. Everything goes as it should -- dressed all in white, Sinead performs "War" a capella as her second number -- until the end of the song. There is no war cry, no identification of "the real enemy." Sinead doesn't hold up a picture of the Pope, but a picture of a cute little black boy, instead. And then the song is over, and Sinead stands, smiling, holding the picture behind her back, as the crowd applauds and cheers.
It took a while for it to sink in that NBC hadn't simply blacked out or removed the photo-ripping scene. Instead, NBC had gone beyond mere censorship and either had replaced the Pope-ripping sequence with another one (the song as it was performed in rehearsal?) or had digitally altered the broadcast so that there was apparently nothing in "the original" to black out or remove in the first place. Why would anyone want to block or cut out Sinead's impassioned plea for the children? In times of war, don't we tend to forget about the children, especially the cute little black ones? Nice bullshit, but it wasn't Sinead's.
Like the authors of textbooks on Soviet history, who had to keep changing the past so that it would conform with Stalin's latest purges, NBC has created its own Sinead O'Connor and is now passing her off as the original.
New Wikipedia
'Sinéad Marie Bernadette OConnor' (, See inogolo: pronunciation of Sinéad OConnor.; born 8 December 1966) is an Irish singer-songwriter. She rose to fame in the late 1980s with her debut album The Lion and the Cobra and achieved worldwide success in 1990 with a cover of the song "Nothing Compares 2 U". Since then she has regularly courted controversy with her views on religion, while still maintaining a singing career.
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Sinead O'Connor Spotlight
So Far...The Best of Sinéad O'Connor
Amazon Price: $10.99 (as of 01/07/2010)![]()
With a distinctive voice and controversial statements, Sinead O'Connor was briefly in the limelight and quickly in the doghouse. But even her opinionated politics can't take away from the beautiful work she's contributed to the post-punk canon. O'Connor's poignant delivery of Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U," is still heart-wrenchingly painful. "Troy" is equally evocative. So Far... The Best of Sinead O'Connor provides a thorough sampling of O'Connor's early years. Emotionally charged
by OnlineMe
Did you watch Sinead O'Connor on SNL in the 1990's?
Her skits burning the picture of the Pope, hosting Jeapardy, and others were hilarious...
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