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Soft spots for Sinead confession

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THANK you, Ann Powers, for the Sinead O’Connor piece [“Nothing Compares,” July 1]. I was in the audience that night and found it to be one of the most moving concert experiences I’ve had.

I was first taken by Sinead when “Lion and the Cobra” came out and felt I’d lost her with the success of “Nothing Compares 2 U.” I didn’t rediscover her until “Universal Mother,” an album of healing that hit me so deeply after the loss of a love and the loss of my father.

Her albums since have touched me as deeply; traditional Irish songs, stunning collaborations, and who would have guessed that one of the best reggae releases in my collection would have been by Sinead. And “Theology” does not disappoint.

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But what it all comes down to is, thank you for Ann Powers’ “confession.” May it allow Sinead O’Connor’s music to touch many others.

JIM NAGLE

Manhattan Beach

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SINCE I arrived in Los Angeles a little over two years ago from Argentina, I’ve been determined to engage in as many cultural endeavors as I could to provide myself with the edification any artist needs.

I rejoice in a well-written article when I run across one, and I believe Ann Powers is among the few who are able to put across an elaborate thought with a choice of words that is both refined and accessible.

“At 23, I thought absolute truth was a viable concept,” she writes. “Since then, I’ve come to believe that ambiguity and change are all you can really count on.”

I am not particularly a fan of O’Connor’s music, but there is much “truth” said -- however volatile or ambiguous -- in Powers’ article.

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PASCUI RIVAS

West Hollywood

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