Black Boys On Mopeds

Album: I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got (1990)
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Songfacts®:

  • Sinéad O'Connor makes her thoughts on England clear in this song, where she sings:

    England's not the mythical land of Madame George and roses
    It's the home of police who kill black boys on mopeds


    Growing up in Ireland, she felt that England often acted as oppressor, both to Irish citizens and their own citizens of the lower classes, particularly Jamaican immigrants. Still, she ended up living in London as her music career took off, and that's when she wrote this song. In her memoir Rememberings, she told the story:

    "'Black Boys On Mopeds' is based on a true story involving two young teenagers near where I lived in London. They had taken a cousin's moped without asking permission; the cops were called and gave chase; the boys got frightened, crashed, and died. This was at a time when there was a terrible scandal in London about Black men going missing in police stations. It was a time in London also when if a burglar was apprehended, he was reported as a 'Black burglar' (or, alternatively, an 'Irish burglar'). There was a lot of tension created between Londoners on the one hand and the Jamaicans and the Irish on the other."
  • This song is part of O'Connor's second album, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got. It's the only overtly political song on the album, which covers a range of styles and subjects. One song, "I Am Stretched On Your Grave," is a centuries-old poem set to a funky beat. The album was highly rated and sold very well around the world, impelled by the hit "Nothing Compares 2 U," written by Prince.
  • The song opens with the lines:

    Margareth Thatcher on TV
    Shocked by the deaths that took place in Beijing


    This is a reference to the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, when hundreds (perhaps thousands) of protesters were killed.
  • Karl Wallinger of World Party and The Waterboys worked on the song's arrangement with O'Connor, who played acoustic guitar on the track.

Comments: 1

  • Powell from London"The Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989, when hundreds (perhaps thousands) of protesters were killed." There was no massacre on the Square. Eyewitnesses say not one single person died there. Reporters like John Simpson have also recanted. Members of the press like John Simpson admitted so years later after the damage had been done, and couldn’t be undone. But hundreds died on the streets around the Square. Why did the blaring media reports get the location wrong? Because it was an attempted color revolution on the streets surrounding, which needed to be distracted away from. This is one of the good sources: https://bit.ly/49EuvmY
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