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Sinead O'Connor: Friend Of Late Singer Says She Was Working On Blues Album Before Her Death

By Dalton MacNamee
20/07/2025
Est. Reading: 3 minutes

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A close friend of Sinead O'Connor has claimed that the late singer was working on a new Blues album prior to her sudden death.

O'Connor passed away, after being found dead in her London home in 2023 aged 56, is featured on a new single, 'Cinderella' from the Irish blues legend Baker, which has just been released. It was later confirmed that O'Connor died from "natural causes". More on this here.

In a new interview, Baker has clamed that Sinead O'Connor had been learning to play a guitar, and working on this new Blues album prior to her death.

“One day in the car with Sinead I put on a CD of stuff I was working on and that was one of them. I had called it Kings", Don Baker said.

He continued: “She said, ‘I’d f**kin’ love to record that.’ I obviously told her I’d love her to record it. So we later recorded it for the album, My Songs My Friends". 

“She kept calling the song Cinderella because there’s a line in it that goes, ‘Cinderella was a junkie and full of pain, ain’t that the truth we’re all the same.’

“She thought the line was brilliant. So we just changed the name to Cinderella because that’s what everybody seemed to be calling it, ‘Oh I love that song, Cinderella", he added. “Cinderella is about something that is never spoken about, which is love and sex addiction and co-dependency".

“We talk about heroin addiction, alcoholism, gambling addiction, but you rarely see a discussion about sex addiction and love addiction and co-dependency. It’s a huge problem for society and she saw that". 

Baker on his friendship with O'Connor

Elsewhere in this interview, Don Baker revealed that he and O'Connor had a brief falling out, before later mending fences.

“Not long before she passed she was going to take the blues road, singing the blues, and she asked me to produce the album,” Baker stated. “I put a band together for her, we went in to the studio and I think we had about five tracks recorded…and then she went AWOL".

“I couldn’t get in touch with her. She had gone to Europe without telling me. I’m sorry to say we had a bit of a falling out over that. “But eventually the hatchet was buried and we were ok, I’m glad to say. I wouldn’t like that on my conscience after she passed.

“That was the only hiccup I had with her and a lot of that was my impatience as well. I bear 50 per cent of the responsibility for that", he added. “I was always into her. She was a great woman. She did more for emancipation than anyone I know. She had a John Lennon type of thing in her. She always spoke the truth".

“We remember her ripping up the photograph of the pope because of all the abuse of the Catholic Church in Ireland. ‘That’s the real enemy,’ she pointed out".

“I do think she wasn’t far off the mark there. I wouldn’t have had the guts to do it, but she did. So she stood up for injustice anywhere she could and I really liked that about her. I had huge respect for her.

“She didn’t pick the songs I wrote for commercial reasons, she took songs I wrote because of the meaning, because of the lyrics", he added. "The first song of mine that she recorded was one called Woe To The Holy Vow, which hits out at the Catholic Church because of all the abuse".

“I got to know her quite well. I used to call out to her house because I was teaching her guitar in recent years. We had a laugh together as well".

“I saw the dark side to her too and, God love her, she suffered with bipolar and it’s a horrible thing. If that wasn’t in Sinead’s way she would have been an even bigger force to be reckoned with". 

Written by Dalton MacNamee

Dalton Mac Namee is a content writer for Classichits.ie and a freelance GAA reporter from Louth, Ireland.

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