DUBLIN - Mourners and fans gathered Tuesday in the Irish town once home to singer Sinead O'Connor to pay their last respects ahead of her burial.
READ: 'Iconoclast': Remembrances pour in for Sinead O'Connor
The musician's funeral cortege will pass along the seafront in the town of Bray, 20 kilometres south of Dublin, where she lived for 15 years.
The Grammy award-winning singer, best known for her cover of "Nothing Compares 2 U", died last month after being found unresponsive at her London home. She was 56.
The musician, who rose to international fame in the 1990s, will be mourned at a funeral attended by family and friends before a private burial.
Her family offered the public the chance to pay their final respects by organising the cortege through Bray, saying she loved the town and its residents.
"With this procession her family would like to acknowledge the outpouring of love for her from the people of (County) Wicklow and beyond since she left last week to go to another place," O'Connor's family added in a weekend statement.
Dozens of people, some bearing flowers, were already in place hours before the funeral -- due to begin at 10:30 am (0930 GMT) -- and subsequent procession.
Some left tributes outside O'Connor's former home, named "Montebello", which the cortege is set to pass by.
One message left on the gatepost read: "Sinead, thank you for hearing us and responding... sorry for breaking your heart."
Others pinned the Irish flag and pictures.
On a coastal hilltop overlooking Bray, a World War II navigational sign for pilots spelling Ireland in Irish -- "Eire" -- was decorated with a heart and "Sinead" in tribute to the singer.
- Tributes -
O'Connor's death prompted a surge of public sympathy around the world and in Ireland, where her willingness to criticise the Catholic Church, in particular, saw her vilified by some and praised as a trailblazer by others.
During her career she revealed she had been abused by her mother as a child and in 1992 protested the abuse of children by the church, tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II while performing on US television programme "Saturday Night Live".
Tributes streamed in from political leaders, pop stars and others following the news of her death, lauding her powerful voice and willingness to court controversy.
Ireland's President Michael Higgins, Bob Geldof, Alison Moyet, Annie Lennox and Russell Crowe were among those to have offered their condolences.
Her agents have said at the time of her death, O'Connor was completing a new album and planning a tour as well as a movie based on her autobiography "Rememberings".
Gatherings in Dublin, Belfast and elsewhere in Ireland have been held in remembrance of the singer, often featuring spontaneous renditions of "Nothing Compares 2 U", which she released in 1990.
The Irish Times reported last week that an autopsy had been carried out to determine the cause of the singer's death, which London police have said they were not treating as suspicious.