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Big Blue Ball
: :Big Blue Ball is the long-awaited, much-anticipated collection of stand-out tracks culled from the all-star, pan-global collaborations that took place over three years of Peter Gabriel s legendary Recording Week gatherings at his state-of-the-art Real World Studios in the English countryside. Produced by Peter Gabriel, Karl Wallinger (of World Party, Waterboys) and Stephen Hague (Pet Shop Boys, OMD), it s a nonstop stream of poignant, sterling performances by a truly stellar lineup of artists-- including Gabriel, Wallinger, Sinead O Connor, Natacha Atlas, Iarla O Lionaird and James McNally (both of ...
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I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got
: :Before Sinead O'Connor became conservative America's most reviled musician when she ripped up a picture of the Pope on TV and refused to perform live at a New Jersey venue following 'The Star Spangled Banner,' she vocally supported the IRA at home in Ireland and generally roused the rabble. Indeed, she's one female pop star who's truly earned her army boots. Though her once meteoric musical career has suffered due to her outspokenness, the powerful voice and presence found on her second album is beyond reproach. Best known as the source ...
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So Far...The Best of Sinéad O'Connor
:Album Description:Import version features a different tracklisting to the US pressing. EMI. :With a distinctive voice and controversial statements, Sinead O'Connor was briefly in the limelight and quickly in the doghouse. But even her opinionated politics can't take away from the beautiful work she's contributed to the post-punk canon. O'Connor's poignant delivery of Prince's 'Nothing Compares 2 U,' is still heart-wrenchingly painful. 'Troy' is equally evocative. So Far... The Best of Sinead O'Connor provides a thorough sampling of O'Connor's early years. Emotionally charged rockers like 'Emperor's New Clothes' and 'Mandinka' are ...
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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 ...
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Universal Mother
: :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 ...
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Faith and Courage
: 's Best of 2000:As a controversial artist who's confounded and even repelled fans, Sinead O'Connor returns with a pop triumph. Demonstrating an ability to move fluidly from raucous rock to ethereal reggae, O'Connor's pop sensibilities sparkle without sacrificing her hard-won wisdom and spiritual enlightenment. Faith and Courage shows us both. --Kevin Cole Amazon.com:Throughout much of her career, Sinéad O'Connor's personal torments and passions have been played out in public, frequently overshadowing the poetry of her music. The tabloid-fueling antics that led up to Faith and Courage created the perception of a ...
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Sean-Nos Nua
: :Sinéad O'Connor's first studio record since 2000's Faith and Courage takes her far into her Irish heritage with 13 traditional songs dusted off and set to new arrangements. Accompanied by stellar Irish and English-based musicians such as Donal Lunny (guitar, bouzouki, keyboard, bodhran, bodhran bass) and vocalist Christy Moore, O'Connor, who also coproduced, casts a hypnotic spell, making the old songs resonate with pulsing rhythms and sounds. Such contemporary treatment takes nothing away from the austere splendor of the material--in fact, this often seems a mystical recording just recovered from some ...
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Throw Down Your Arms
: : Much has been made in Sinead O'Connor fan circles and the pop music press about the controversy-courting singer's decision to revive her self-shelved career with a disc of reggae covers. After the critical breakthrough that was 2002's Sean-Nos Nua, an album of traditional Irish tunes artfully reimagined, a jaunt through Jamaica carried the whiff of a stunt--there she goes banging the drum of defiance again, went the popular gripe, just when the world had widely concurred it liked her riffling through the dustbins of her own musical roots. On closer ...
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Collaborations
:Album Description:An outstanding lineup of collaborators makes this Sin‚ad O'Connor release an essential purchase for an incredibly broad range of contemporary music buyers, The appeal of huge names such as U2, Terry Hall and Moby is tempered by an eminently cohesive and listenable collection of music. Standout tracks - Massive Attack 'Special Cases', Jah Wobble's Invaders of the Heart 'Visions of You', The The - 'Kingdom of Rain', Peter Gabriel 'Blood of Eden'. EMI. 2005.
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Theology
: :The uncompromising Irish artist, spiritualist, and provocateur gives a twist to the critical truism that double albums would generally be stronger if edited into a single disc. With what she terms her 'attempt to create a place of peace in a time of war,' Sinéad O'Connor consciously risks charges of not merely padding but redundancy, as the two discs feature practically the same set of material recorded in different settings. The 'Dublin Sessions' are more minimal and acoustic, and the 'London Sessions' incorporate full-band arrangements including harp, strings, horns, and percussion. ...
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