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Length: 3:43
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Want you to pick up my scarf
See how the black moon fades
Soon I can give you my heart
I don't know no shame
I feel no pain
I can't see the flame
But I do know Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
I do
They're throwing it all this way
Dragging it back to the start
And they say, "See how the glass is raised?"
I have refused to take part
I told them "drink something new"
Please let me pull something through
I don't know no shame
I feel no pain
I can't
I don't know no shame
I feel no pain
I can't see the flame
But I do know Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
I do
I do
I do
I say I do
Soon I can give you my heart
I swear I do
Soon I can give you my heart
I do
Mandinka
Soon I can give you my heart
Soon I can give you my heart
Soon I can give you my heart
RIP.
rating this one down to reflect how much I hate it.
Well, isn't that special.
Thank you so much for sharing that touching insight.
play Troy some time. she's a a class act whenever her feet touch this planet.
Troy is an amazing song! Yes! Please add if not on any of the clocks.
That album cover is priceless! The caption should be "is that your Mandinka?"
A white Irish woman making the sign of the kick ass male Black Panther!
I know zero about gaelic mouth music or what terz signifies, but I do know that the artwork makes Sinead look kinda hot. And the song is kind of happening too.
https://www.discogs.com/Variou...
Lower....
Sinead O'Connor
Van Morrison
Bono (U2)
Shane MacGowan (The Pogues)
All deeply flawed in some way or another. I wonder is it something in the water over here or is it a genetic disposition for angst and self analysis/destruction?
Answers on a postcard please...
yeah me too, I think it's a first
— Wikipedia: Mandinka (song)
That album cover is priceless! The caption should be "is that your Mandinka?"
This first record was really really good. I still clearly remember standing in a record store and they put on Never Grow Old and I thought "OMG! It's a female Peter Gabriel! This is smart, interesting, and well produced."
Had high hopes for her. This is a record worth owning, for sure.
(8?» wrote:
Sinead O'Connor - The Lion And The Cobra
To quote her fellow Irishman, poet William Butler Yeats, when Sinead O'Connor's debut, The Lion and the Cobra, was released, a terrible beauty was born. O'Connor has a haunting voice as dark as the Irish bogs, and her unwavering delivery simultaneously inflames and chills. She sings in two ranges: her soprano ("Never Get Old," "Jackie") is a nearly monastic chant that's angular and breathy like a pan flute or a tin whistle, while her alto, reigning in "I Want Your (Hands on Me)" and "Mandinka," is a suspended, forceful spoken-word tone that never quite yells. By switching back and forth between these two vocal modes, she yanks the listener into her turmoil, giving you no choice but to empathize. She was only 20 years old during this recording, and her difficult relationships with lovers, motherhood, her parents, and the Catholic Church were traumatic and fresh. But rather than mellow with maturity, she gained notoriety with publicly unfavorable political antics that would accompany and often overshadow her equally astounding follow-up, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got
wow just 20 she was awesome alright, still special to this day
Hannio wrote:
A little bit. Well, maybe more than just a little, but that is one reason I like it.
I'm gonna kiss your PINEAPPLE!
yep, all true
A head which resembles a shin? Hmmm........
A little bit. Well, maybe more than just a little, but that is one reason I like it.
(8?» wrote:
Sinead O'Connor - The Lion And The Cobra
To quote her fellow Irishman, poet William Butler Yeats, when Sinead O'Connor's debut, The Lion and the Cobra, was released, a terrible beauty was born. O'Connor has a haunting voice as dark as the Irish bogs, and her unwavering delivery simultaneously inflames and chills. She sings in two ranges: her soprano ("Never Get Old," "Jackie") is a nearly monastic chant that's angular and breathy like a pan flute or a tin whistle, while her alto, reigning in "I Want Your (Hands on Me)" and "Mandinka," is a suspended, forceful spoken-word tone that never quite yells. By switching back and forth between these two vocal modes, she yanks the listener into her turmoil, giving you no choice but to empathize. She was only 20 years old during this recording, and her difficult relationships with lovers, motherhood, her parents, and the Catholic Church were traumatic and fresh. But rather than mellow with maturity, she gained notoriety with publicly unfavorable political antics that would accompany and often overshadow her equally astounding follow-up, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got
I remember that skit—"Sinatra" got into a fight with Billy Idol, who wouldn't stop sticking out his lower lip and glaring.
He did a great skit as Reagan—slightly doddering and stiff in public, but a raging tiger of genius plotting and skullduggery behind closed doors with his cabinet. His Clinton imitation wasn't quite as good as Darryl Hammond's but it was pretty funny.
She Who Dwells in the Secret Place of the Most High Shall Abide Under the Shadow of the Almighty (2003)
"Oro Se Do Bheatha 'Bhaile is a traditional song, that came to be known as an Irish rebel song in the early 20th century.Originally a Jacobean ballad for Bonnie Prince Charlie, the song was rewritten by Padraig Pearse, the leader of the 1916 Irish Rebellion, in homage to Grainne Mhaol (Grace O'Malley) the famous 16th century Irish pirate queen."
"Never heard this sung with more passion." halwro
"tak,naprawdÄ wspaniaÅa interpretacja tej pieÅni dokonana przez Sinéad:) Rewolucja bÄdzie trwaÅa dopóki choÄ jeden naród nie bÄdzie w peÅni wolny...rewolucja lub ewolucja,jeÅli wiele osób bÄdzie MYÅLEÄ...to co w Årodku-to takÅŒe na zewnÄ trz...pozdr." zephir332
"I've been doing this gig long before you were a gleem in some drunken mick's eye!"
Phil Hartman as Sinatra on SNL
My favorite line was "I got chunks of guys like you in my stool."
He (as Sinatra) also called her "Shinehead" O'Connor.
...but I'll miss him most as Lionel Hutz.
"I've been doing this gig long before you were a gleem in some drunken mick's eye!"
Phil Hartman as Sinatra on SNL
Yes, RIP, Phil Hartman. ;)
P.S. Now you've got me thinking about Joe Piscopo and Eddie Murphy as Sinatra and Stevie Wonder singing Ebony and Ivory. Thank goodness for YouTube :)
He (as Sinatra) also called her "Shinehead" O'Connor.
...but I'll miss him most as Lionel Hutz.
Go on Bill, treat us to Troy... Please.
Yes, RIP, Phil Hartman. ;)
P.S. Now you've got me thinking about Joe Piscopo and Eddie Murphy as Sinatra and Stevie Wonder singing Ebony and Ivory. Thank goodness for YouTube :)
Awesome, awesome.
Like you, up there in Mannytonka.
I do
I do
I do like them Sam I am
As you were.
This Lady-Singer congregates all the predicates and parchments that a singer can have, including your strong personality; for everything and because i like of hearing and appreciate your work, Tankyou Ms. Sinéad Marie Bernadette O' Connor. God Bless You! -
** 9 **
When this came out I was travelling west from the Canadian prairies to Vancouver... I picked up a copy in Calgary before heading out into the darkness to make the trip overnight... This was in winter... the darkness cut by the snowbanks, the faint winding lines and blowing snow on the road melded this song into a permanent sensory packed memory. Etched like lines on stainless steel...
This is beautiful. I love when a special experience becomes fused in your memory with the music you were listening to at the time.