Mandinka

Album: The Lion and the Cobra (1987)
Charted: 17
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  • I'm dancing the seven veils
    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 Mandinka
    I do know Mandinka
    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 Mandinka
    I do know Mandinka
    I do
    I do
    I do
    I said 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 Writer/s: Sinead O'connor
    Publisher: Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 7

  • Lauren Johnson from AustraliaIt is apparent that Sinead found her soul at a very young age and through her convictions she enlightened the world, That strength of character battered by the mainstream and so bravely upheld in all its earthly forms via her talents is for me what is so incredible about this woman, we have lost a champion of modern humanity. One that lit a flame of compassion, justice and understanding That can never be forgotten or denied. RIP Angel
  • Rory from BelfastSinéad O'Connor dragged Ireland, kicking and screaming, out of the clutches of the Roman Catholic Church and those who oppressed anyone with anything to say against State or Church. She made Ireland a place where people could be themselves without fear of being blanked. She was a beacon to all who believed in life for life's sake, to be lived openly and unashamed. "I feel no pain/I feel no shame" summed up her free spirit that was held back and overshadowed by abuse, both physical and mental, hurled down from those who were supposed to love and protect her.
    She, and she alone, saved Ireland from itself.
    While being no saint of any proportion, she still held a mirror up to those who would criticise and derogate, showing them that they had no place to hide. Even the pope had no safe place, facing her righteous indignation at the religious failings of "the church" in its supposed obligation of protection of the vulnerable. She shone a light on child abuse by priests a long time before any of us knew anything of it.
    She certainly had many personal issues throughout her life, mainly mental issues that surfaced in cries for help when she attempted suicide, when she lost her son, Shane, when she became a priest of the Tridentine Church, theologically opposed to the Roman Catholic Church, and, while nit a mental issue, she finally converted to Islam.
    Sinéad O'Connor was a body, searching for a soul her whole life, and she found that soul, eventually, when she passed.
    We have lost a loud and proud voice, but heaven has found a new angel.
  • Niamh from Concrete'... while she didn't have hair, she did have a baby.' Is this non sequitur an indictment of failure to self-sexualize for extrinsic validation by her rapists, her molesters, and millions of strangers? that rejecting the male gaze belies mental defect? or simply lazy writing? Sinéad first cut her hair to curtail her abusive mother's denigration of her sister. Sinead's light shown upon hypocrisy, exploitation, and Othering before she defeated Big Music's attempts to make her pretty for profit. The reductive moniker of "protest singer" overlooks the sociopolitical sophistication of herself, Woodie Guthrie, Billy Bragg, U2, NWA, and myriad others.
  • Roj from IrelandSleep well, Sinéad :(
  • Biff from Cincinnati, OhI saw her perform this song on LN with David Letterman in 1987; from that I went out to get it on tape (it was the 80s) for a roadtrip. Turns out that was her first national tv appearance in the US.
  • Mike from Santa Barbara, CaThis single was O'Connor's breakout hit.
  • Anne from New Brunswick, NjOne of my favorite songs of all time.
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