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Mandinka Lyrics

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 Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
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 Man-din-ka
I do know Man-din-ka
I do
I do
I do
I say 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
Soon I can give you my heart
3 Meanings

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Cover art for Mandinka lyrics by Sinead O'Connor

Mandinka is a African tribal reference. Raising a glass is a ritual toast of celebration. Doing the dance of the seven veils is a sexual ritual that indicates women are ready for romance/sex. This song is about how she is ready to "give her heart" to someone not just with her body but with her soul. This is a coming of age song for Sinead.

Salome and her seven veils...great song.

Cover art for Mandinka lyrics by Sinead O'Connor

The song really is more about the entrapments of coming of age and the problems that come associated with it. The Mandinka people of western Africa had at one time a nice, prosperous empire there. However, from about the mid 16th century to the abolition of slavery in 1865 in the USA, the Mandinka were herded up and taken as slaves more than any other ethnic group in Africa. In addition, when a Mandinka person comes of age, they are expected to go through a ritual known as kankurang. This ritual involves cutting the genitalia, both on men and women. She doesn't want to do this; that's why She "refused to take part."

My Interpretation
Cover art for Mandinka lyrics by Sinead O'Connor

This is a great, energetic song from her debut album. It's fairly 'cryptic', but not really. I like the imagery she evokes and the vocal style she delivers them with. She's a truly remarkable singer. Her defiance is unique, powerful and unquestionable. Her scarf reference would later be utilised in the spoken version, at the end of the 12" version of Jump in the River. It's rather risqué (or blatantly offensive) but still fitting for the 'artistic' and 'powerful' feeling the song is expressing. But I digress. Mandinka is a great song that just made the top 20 in the UK but still remains an early suggestion and clarion call of the woman who'd soon break the mainstream with her (sentimental) rendition of a Prince cover (we all know which song). Hats off to such an amazingly talented and individual artist.

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Music
Imagery
Vocal Style
Defiance
Artistic Expression
 
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