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The music video for "Zombie" was banned by the BBC because of its "violent images". [92] It was also banned by the RTÉ, Ireland's national broadcaster. Instead, both the BBC and the RTÉ opted to broadcast an edited version focusing on footage of the band in a live performance, a version that the Cranberries essentially disowned.
The music video for the Cranberries' "Zombie," the 1994 political protest song written and sung by the late Dolores O’Riordan, has surpassed 1 billion views on YouTube. “Zombie” is the third ...
By March 1994, the Cranberries won the Top International Act of Music Week (UK). [38] "Zombie" has continued to receive enduring success: on 18 April 2020, the official music video for "Zombie" became the first song by an Irish band to reach over one billion views on YouTube, [39] becoming the third video from the 1990s, [40] and the sixth from ...
No Need to Argue is the second studio album by Irish alternative rock band the Cranberries, released on 3 October 1994 through Island Records. It is the band's best-selling album, and has sold over 17 million copies worldwide as of 2014. [7] It contains one of the band's most well-known songs, "Zombie".
The single's accompanying music video, shot in black-and-white, was directed by Samuel Bayer, who had also directed the band's video for their preceding single, "Zombie". Bayer stated on his Facebook account that the "Ode to My Family" music video was cut by Robert Duffy (video editor), and the "Zombie" video was cut by Eric Zumbrennen .
The Cranberries performing on the Roxy Bar show at Bologna in 1995. Early in 1994, O'Riordan injured her cruciate ligament in a ski accident in the Alps' Val-d'Isère and underwent major surgery. [9] [54] In September 1994, the Cranberries released "Zombie", the lead single of the follow-up album, No Need To Argue. [55]
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Previously, the Cranberries also released an airy and distorted mix of Zombie, called "Camel's Hump Mix", on the "When You're Gone" single and some slightly different mixes of "How" ("Linger" single) and "Pretty" (Prêt-à-Porter soundtrack). De Vries also remixed the band's next single, "Time Is Ticking Out".