Mine

Album: Everybody Needs a Hero (2024)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Mine" is a song by Irish singer-songwriter and guitarist Orla Gartland that tells a fragmented story about an experience that deeply affected her relationship with intimacy, and how that unease followed her into relationships afterwards. According to Gartland, it is the most vulnerable song she's ever written, and releasing it felt "a little scary but also hugely important."
  • Now it's not easy to do
    It's taken me twenty-eight years
    To let anyone touch me the way I let you


    Gartland revealed on Instagram that "Mine" stems from "an event in [her] life with a before and after," a moment defined by the long shadow of misused power. It's also, she said, about hope, healing, and gradually reclaiming that power. The experience left scars that took decades to mend.
  • Gartland wrote the lyrics herself and produced the track with her longtime studio allies Tom Stafford and Peter Miles. The production is stripped-back, with a string section - it's the first time she used real strings.

    "I wanted to give the lyrics on this song space to breathe," she explained. "So we kept the production super minimal... live vocal and guitar and a super beautiful, haunting 4-piece string part."
  • "Mine" appears on Gartland's second album, Everybody Needs a Hero, a record that peers closely at a long-term relationship while wrestling with the question of how to take up space in a post-feminist world. Made between her London studio and Middle Farm Studios in Devon, she co-produced it with Stafford and Miles.
  • The album title sprang from Gartland's fascination with the image of women as superheroes, an idea partly drawn from her own family of stoic Irish women who were able to juggle careers, families, home-cooked dinners, and bustling social lives. "They're always spinning all these plates," she told NME. "And I think the pursuit of that is such a female thing... do I want to have a career, but I also want to be at home and be a partner to someone and be really social?"

    Gartland liked the idea of casting herself as a "self-appointed hero," running on fumes, distracted, and trying to save everyone except herself, a recurring theme in her life and, as it turns out, the album.
  • In an interview with Billboard, Gartland said she sequenced the album around the "seasons" of a relationship from the "reluctance and excitement" of spring to the "humbling moments of embracing the darkness" in winter.
  • The song brought Gartland one of the UK's most prestigious honors: Best Song Musically and Lyrically at the 2025 Ivor Novello Awards, proof that sometimes the scariest songs to release are the ones that resonate most.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Angelo Moore of Fishbone

Angelo Moore of FishboneSongwriter Interviews

Fishbone has always enjoyed much more acclaim than popularity - Angelo might know why.

Sugarland

SugarlandSongwriter Interviews

Meet the "sassy basket" with the biggest voice in country music.

Terry Jacks ("Seasons in the Sun")

Terry Jacks ("Seasons in the Sun")Songwriter Interviews

Inspired by his dear friend, "Seasons in the Sun" paid for Terry's boat, which led him away from music and into a battle with Canadian paper mills.

Dwight Twilley

Dwight TwilleySongwriter Interviews

Since his debut single "I'm On Fire" in 1975, Dwight has been providing Spinal-Tap moments and misadventure.

Jimmy Jam

Jimmy JamSongwriter Interviews

The powerhouse producer behind Janet Jackson's hits talks about his Boyz II Men ballads and regrouping The Time.

Spot The Real Red Hot Chili Peppers Song Titles

Spot The Real Red Hot Chili Peppers Song TitlesMusic Quiz

The Red Hot Chili Peppers have some rather unusual song titles - see if you can spot the real ones.