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Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?

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Australiancharts.com – The Cranberries – Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?". Hung Medien. Retrieved 30 December 2021. French album certifications – The Cranberries – Everyone Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We?" (in French). Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique.

a b Sweeney, Eamon (19 October 2018). "The Cranberries: 'Everyone Else is Doing It, So Why Can't We?' – Still spellbinding after all these years". The Irish Times. Archived from the original on 19 October 2018 . Retrieved 28 October 2018. The music and O’Riordan’s lyrics assume a noticeably more sullen tone on the brooding “Pretty,” in which she takes a condescending lover to task, and “I Will Always,” a lovelorn, lullaby-like lament about setting her partner free to explore his independence. Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We? (The Complete Sessions 1991–1993) (booklet). The Cranberries. Island. 2002. {{ cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) ( link)European Top 100 Albums" (PDF). Music & Media. Vol.11, no.12. 19 March 1994. p.18. OCLC 29800226– via World Radio History. Dolores had such a lust for life and for meeting new people. She was never ‘starry’ – if people came up to her and said they liked the show, she’d sit down and gab away for hours — Suede's Matt Osman on Dolores O'Riordan

We were about a month into the European tour and we get a call out of the blue, requesting we come to the States,” Hogan explained to UMusic. “Denny Cordell had been working on [the album’s] first single, Linger, in New York and it had become a hit on college radio, where it had gone to number eight. Suddenly, from thinking we were about to get dropped by Island, we went to play our first American gig in Denver, Colorado, opening for The The. We went onstage and everyone knew the songs and the place just went mental.” Today in Music History: Remembering Dolores O'Riordan". The Current. 15 January 2020. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020 . Retrieved 20 June 2020. I really liked what I heard,” she mused. “I thought they were very nice and tight. It was a lovely potential band but they needed a singer – and direction.”Schatz, Lake (7 March 2018). "The band is prepping a 25th anniversary edition of Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can't We? for later this year". Consequence of Sound. Archived from the original on 21 June 2020 . Retrieved 21 June 2020. Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We? was a slow burn. In the UK it failed to breach the top five in the month of its release – even as another Irish outfit, The Hothouse Flowers, reached number two on March 20th with their LP Songs from the Rain. As a teenager in the mid-90s here in the UK, you'd have struggled to have remained ignorant of the music of The Cranberries. Arguably the biggest band to come out of Ireland since U2, The Cranberries rose to prominence at around the same time that the music press fully embraced BritPop, yet they remained resolutely separate from that rather only cultural juggernaut. Despite early comparisons to The Sundays, The Cranberries simply didn't sound like anyone else in the mid 90s, and like the majority of the BritPop hordes, they managed to make a sizeable impact on the other side of the Atlantic too. The “It” The Cranberries refer to in the title was commercial success: they saw other bands doing well and felt that they, too, deserved to see their name in lights. In one of the great self-fulfilling prophecies in Irish music, The Cranberries would indeed soon conquer the world – thanks to their empathically jangly songs and O’Riordan’s incredible voice.

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