The Lion and the Cobra

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
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. --Beth Bessmer

Music Review:

  1. The Man Who Sold the World [Enhanced]
  2. The Perfect Drug [CD-single] [EP]
  3. The Smiths
  4. The Stooges
  5. This Business of Art
  6. This Year's Model (With Bonus Disc) [Original recording remastered]
  7. Tiny Music...Songs From The Vatican Gift Shop
  8. Trans-Europe Express [Import] [Original recording remastered]
  9. Transformer [Original recording remastered]
  10. Ultimate Collection

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Dog in the Sand

Gerber: Works for Piano

Finnish Orchestral Classics

Music: Deli Gibi [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]

Goldie.Co.UK: a Drum N Bass DJ Mix

In the Name of the Mother the Daughter and the Holy Will

Colecao Luar Do Sertao [Import]

From the Hood to the Nation [Explicit Lyrics]

La Mia Canzone [Import]

Franz Schreker: Chamber Symphony for 23 Solo Instruments / Prelude to a Drama / Valse Lente for Orchestra / Night Interlude

Enfin!

Introducing Jonathan Butler

Going Steady

Circle of Moons

November