Released: December 11, 2020

Songwriter: Amelia Warner John Patrick Shanley

Producer: Sinéad O’Connor

Climb until your legs are weary
Climb until your heart is numb
Climb because you love me dearly
Up we'll go up past and good and bad

And when you come to my window, laddie
I'll be singing
When you come to my window, laddie
What a joy

Strength to strength I'll go, and you'll go with me
Any length we'll go to as the road leads on
With your old coat and me beside you
Up the steep slope of the mountain we will go

And when you come to my window, laddie
I'll be singing
When you come to my window, laddie
What a joy

With your old coat and your eyes of fire
Up the steep slope of the mountain higher
We will go
We will go

And when you come to my window, laddie
I'll be singing
When you come to my window, laddie
What a joy

With your old coat and your eyes of fire
Up the steep slope of the mountain higher
We will go
We will go

With your old coat and your eyes of fire
Up the steep slope of the mountain higher
We will go
We will go

With your old coat and your eyes of fire
Up the steep slope of the mountain higher
We will go
We will go

Sinéad O’Connor

Sinéad O'Connor (who goes by Shuhada' Sadaqat in her private life) is an Irish singer-songwriter who rose to fame in the late 80s with her album The Lion and the Cobra and achieved worldwide success with her cover of Prince’s “Nothing Compares to You” in 1990.

O'Connor was discovered in 1985 when Nigel Grainge of Ensign Records saw her band Ton Ton Macoute perform. Although he was not fond of the band’s music, he was impressed by O'Connor’s ‘amazing voice’. Grainge had O'Connor record four songs with Karl Wallinger (World Party) and signed her to his label. O'Connor’s first single was the song “Heroine” which she co-wrote with U2’s guitarist The Edge for the film Captive.

Her debut album The Lion and the Cobra was a sensation when it was released in 1987, reaching gold record status and earning a Best Female Rock Vocal Performance Grammy nomination. O'Connor’s debut single “Troy” charted in The Netherlands and Belgium, and “Mandinka”, released in late 1987, cracked the top 20 in the UK and top 30 in three other European countries, helping her album chart well in Europe. Spin Magazine described the album as a “remarkable, still-spine-tingling first record”.