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Singer Sinead O’Connor plans to retire

Controversial artist’s final album to be released in 2022

By Michael Ordoña, Los Angeles Times
Published: June 10, 2021, 6:03am

Sinead O’Connor, the iconoclastic singer-songwriter also known as Shuhada Sadaqat and Mother Bernadette Maria, is retiring from touring and recording.

“This is to announce my retirement from touring and from working in the record business,” she wrote in a tweet Friday. “I’ve gotten older and I’m tired. So it’s time for me to hang up my nipple tassels, having truly given my all. NVDA in 2022 will be my last release. And there’ll be no more touring or promo.”

O’Connor’s 11th album, “No Veteran Dies Alone” (the “NVDA” of her tweet), is scheduled for release next year.

“Time for you now pet be good and kind to yourself … but for goodness sake don’t be growing old prematurely or gracefully, you’ve too much sass and just as much class to be an aul Fuddy Duddy. I expect to see you gracing the cover of rolling stone on a Harley xx,” a well-wisher responded on Twitter.

The retirement news comes as O’Connor, 54, has been making headlines recently pegged to her memoir, “Rememberings,” prompting a reappraisal of how she’s been treated over the years.

O’Connor’s deeply personal, unapologetic and inextricably Irish blend of folk and modern musical influences scored her a gold record and Grammy nomination with her 1987 debut album, “The Lion and the Cobra.”

Despite the uncompromising nature of her work, she reached the heights of pop stardom in 1990 with the album “I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got.” Its success was powered by her cover of the Prince-penned “Nothing Compares 2 U,” and the album earned her a handful of Grammy nominations and a win for alternative music performance.

She has also been a lightning rod her entire career, garnering a reputation for shooting from the hip. Speaking out against the sexual abuse scandal roiling the Catholic Church, she tore up a photograph of the pope in 1992 on “Saturday Night Live,” telling the stunned audience: “Fight the real enemy.”

In her new book, she revisits such controversies, including previous claims of a physical altercation with Prince. (For the record, O’Connor also alleged that he was a “hard drug user” and that Arsenio Hall had been his supplier; she later had to apologize for those remarks after Hall sued her.)

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