Linger (The Cranberries song)

Christianslg
4 min readJun 19, 2024

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“Linger” is a song by Irish alternative rock band the Cranberries from their debut studio album, Everybody Else Is Doing It, So Why Can’t We? (1993). Composed by band members Dolores O’Riordan and Noel Hogan, and produced by Stephen Street, “Linger” was first released as the second and final single from the album on 15 February 1993 by Island Records. It was later re-released on 31 January 1994.[4]

“Linger”, which has an acoustic arrangement featuring a string section, became the band’s first major hit, peaking at number three in their native Ireland, number eight in the United States,[5] and number 14 in the United Kingdom. The single remained on the US Billboard Hot 100 for 24 weeks and also peaked at number eleven on the Cash Box Top 100.[6] Additionally, “Linger” was voted by Australian Triple J listeners as number three on the Triple J Hottest 100, 1993 chart.[7] The accompanying music video was directed by Melodie McDaniel.

In 1990, “Linger” was released on a demo tape with “Dreams” in Ireland only in the middle of that year under their initial band name, the Cranberry Saw Us.[8] In 2017, an acoustic, stripped-down version of “Linger” was released as the lead single from the band’s seventh studio album, Something Else.[9] “Linger” is written in the key of D major.[10]

Background[edit]

When O’Riordan was auditioned as the lead singer for the band, she wrote the lyrics, turning it into a song of regret based on an experience with a 17-year-old soldier she once fell in love with.[11] Drummer Fergal Lawler recalled the process in an interview, saying:

It was a Sunday afternoon. She arrived with a keyboard under her arm, just set it up and played a few songs. We couldn’t really hear her because she was singing through a guitar amp or something. I gave her a lift up to the bus stop and I was saying, ‘Will we see you next week?’ We gave her a tape of the music for ‘Linger’, which she took with her. The following week she came back, and she had lyrics written out and melodies and she sang along to what we were playing, and it was like, ‘Oh, my God. She’s great’.[12]

In the documentary ’99 Love Life & Rock ’n’ Roll, O’Riordan says that the song is about her first serious kiss.

“Linger” has since become one of the band’s most famous songs, though O’Riordan noted that the band did not expect the song to reach the level of commercial success that it did.[13] In a 2012 interview, O’Riordan commented, “I remember when MTV first put ‘Linger’ in heavy rotation, every time I walked into a diner or a hotel lobby, it was like, ‘Jesus, man, here I am again’. It was trippy, like Jacob’s Ladder. I didn’t even have to take drugs”.[14]

In an interview for NME, guitarist Noel Hogan said of the song:

It’s only really since Dolores passed away that I’ve grown a proper appreciation for songs like ‘Linger’ and ‘Dreams’. They were just songs in the set list for us; everybody else was losing their mind about them. And when I listen to them now I realise how great they are for someone so young, which I never, ever appreciated until a year ago. We must have played it a gazillion times in our lives and it just becomes a part of the set, but it’s different now. We’re so lucky to have left that behind, to have that legacy.[15]

Critical reception[edit]

Jason Elias of AllMusic described “Linger” as “a song of regret, epic in scope and sweeping”, praising the instrumentation and O’Riordan’s vocals: “While this isn’t lyrically novel, the full-on emotionality of lead singer Dolores O’Riordan makes this stand out. Singing in a strong Irish brogue she comes off both needy and detached here. It’s that emotion that powers this track”.[16] David Stubbs from Melody Maker commented, “Fragile, underwhelming acoustic thing with strings in which the girl, in prim, unsullied Irish vowels, pleads for her partner to put her out of her misery and end the relationship he’s no longer interested in. Don’t all rush to Virgin Megastore at once.”[17] Upon the 1994 re-release, the magazine’s Caitlin Moran, concluded, “Good songs never disappear; they just keep getting released and re-released until you capitulate and buy the f***er.”[18] A reviewer from Music & Media wrote, “Currently on tour with the Hothouse Flowers, these fellow Irishmen deserve your attention. Don’t hang round the bar, but move forwards to the stage to check out their alternative pop with shades of folk.”[19]

Martin Aston from Music Week rated it four out of five, adding that it “combines a gorgeous, melting vocal from Dolores with a delicate folky melody.”[20] Another Music Week editor, Alan Jones, deemed it a “delightful single”, noting that “floating in on a breeze, it has a haunting, fragile quality and an almost country feel.”[21] Amanda Petrusich of The New Yorker described the song as “a hazy, sentimental song about realizing that you’re on the bummer end of a lopsided relationship”.[22] Tony Cross from Smash Hits gave it five out of five, naming it Best New Single. He added, “Delores O’Riordan’s voice comes straight from the chill out room and oils the song’s creaky form into fabulous, delicious and delicate motion. Settle back into an old leather sofa for a long, long time and let it linger.”[23] “Linger” was ranked at number 86 on VH1’s 100 Greatest Songs of the ‘90s.[24]

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