Today, we have ten studio albums from the legendary vocalist and songwriter, her first being The Lion and the Cobra, released in 1987, of which she sold millions of copies worldwide. In the Irish artist’s memoir, Rememberings, the overwhelming sentiment was that she would never be happy with herself unless she stood proudly for her beliefs. It wasn’t money or fame that attracted her to the music industry. In fact, she didn’t like the “industry” part of it, at all. She only wanted to sing. One day, Sinead told a priest that she liked to sing. He told her, “He who sings, prays twice.” Sinead writes this is why she started to sing. She wanted to repent.
The songstress began making music in a home for girls with behavioral issues, where she’d sneak out at night to record, much to the nuns’ disapproval. It was there that one special nun gave O’Connor a guitar, with which she busked on the streets of Dublin. Sinead was so gifted, that a teacher even helped her sneak out once to record music. The head nun despised this fact, so Sinead would smoke cigarettes directly outside her office, just to piss her off. She was a true punk from the get-go.