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"No Man's Woman" is a song recorded by Irish singer Sinéad O'Connor for her fifth studio album Faith and Courage (2000). It was released as the album's lead single on 21 April 2000, by Atlantic Records .
The extended play Gospel Oak (1997) and live album Live at the Sugar Club (2008) were also issued, and O'Connor's compilations consist of five sets—So Far... The Best Of (1997), Sinéad O'Connor: Best Of (2000), She Who Dwells in the Secret Place of the Most High Shall Abide Under the Shadow of the Almighty (2003), Collaborations (2005) and ...
The accompanying music video of the song was directed by Irish director Jim Sheridan, who also directed In the Name of the Father. It was nominated in the category for Best Video from a Film at the 1994 MTV Music Awards. In the video, O'Connor is imprisoned. She is brought into a cell with a grid. A light bulb hangs from the ceiling.
"Mandinka" is a song by Irish singer-songwriter Sinéad O'Connor, released as the second single from her debut album, The Lion and the Cobra (1987). [7] The song peaked at number 17 on the UK singles chart and number six in Ireland. O'Connor performed it on Late Night with David Letterman, which was her first TV appearance in the US.
Written by O'Connor, the lyric is based on the poem No Second Troy by William Butler Yeats. [citation needed] In 2002, a dance version of the song was released as "Troy (The Phoenix from the Flame)", becoming a top-ten hit on several international dance charts, including the US Dance Club Songs chart.
Sinéad O’Connor, the Irish singer/songwriter of enormous talent and integrity who rose to fame in the late ‘80s, died in London on Wednesday at the age of 56. O’Connor’s second album ...
O'Connor's music burns so brightly in its intensity that the playfulness of "I Want Your (Hands on Me)" remains startling. Setting the song to a bright, bustling drum loop, O'Connor sings over a ...
The first song on the album, "Feel So Different", starts with The Serenity Prayer by Reinhold Niebuhr. The album also includes O'Connor's rendition of "I Am Stretched on Your Grave", an anonymous 17th-century poem that was written in Irish, translated into English by Frank O'Connor, and composed by musician Philip King in 1979.