Song of the Day 4/12: Sinéad O’Connor, “Black Boys on Mopeds”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, National by on April 12, 2021

The continuing plague of police brutality against Black men has kept this song relevant more than 30 years after its release.

Colin Roach was a 21-year-old Black man living in the London borough of Hackney in 1983, when police tried to pull him over, apparently thinking the moped he was driving was stolen. Hackney, a racially diverse area, was infamous for its police brutality, so instead of stopping, Roach drove to a police station. Once there, according to a coroner’s inquest, he then shot himself to death, despite copious evidence that it was a frame-up.

Roach’s death and the ensuing cover-up became a nationwide cause celebre, something like the Mumia Abu-Jamal case in the U.S. It was still in the news when Sinéad O’Connor wrote the song in 1989, released the next year on “I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got,” calling out then-PM Margaret Thatcher’s hypocrisy in condemning the Tiananmen Square massacre.

After police killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., in 2016, Shea Rose, a singer/songwriter/performance artist from Boston, released a riveting cover of the song, which she enhanced last year with this impressive video interpretation.

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