Getting High on My Mortality: Sinéad Lohan

sinead lohan no mermaid I have so many songs tucked away on my iPod, sometimes while I listen to the songs shuffle in the background as I do my work, I hear a song mixed among the old friends that I don’t remember or one I did not connect to earlier and I have a new discovery. Today, I found a song by an artist who chooses to no longer make music. Today’s new discovery is Sinéad Lohan’s “Whatever It Takes.”

The song came up on my iPod as part of a collection of acoustic songs from various artists. But here is the video for the original version, which is from Lohan’s No Mermaid (1998) album. I love the odd little dancing marionnette that you see around the 1:08 mark.

Lohan is from Cork, Ireland, and in the 1990s was a rising star on both sides of the ocean. After her 1995 debut album, Who Do You Think I Am?, did well in Ireland, she made her second album, No Mermaid — which contains “Whatever It Takes” — in New Orleans. The title track of No Mermaid was used in the film Message in A Bottle, and Joan Baez covered it. Another creative person put Lohan’s No Mermaid song to scenes from The Little Mermaid even though the song was not used in that film.

Lohan also created an excellent cover of Bob Dylan’s “To Ramona.”

Despite plans for a third album, after Lohan had her second child in 2001, she decided to devote herself full time to motherhood. Last reported, she was living with her husband John, an accountant, and their two children near Leap in County Cork.  Around 2005, she made a guest appearance with Phil Coulter in the Opera House in Cork.  But that’s it.  She no longer even has a website devoted to her music.

Wikipedia reports that Lohan in 2004 began working on a new album, and another website claims that new album was completed in 2007.  But such an album has yet to be released.

 In 2011, her former manager Pat Egan explained to The Irish Times that while touring around 2000, Lohan “suddenly decided she didn’t want to do it any more. She never really liked the music business, and wasn’t that great doing interviews.”

Although it is a loss to the music world that Lohan no longer releases new music, we cannot complain that Lohan chose family over creating more music.  We know from another Lohan and another Sinead how fame can un-ground a person.

Perhaps the reason the song “Whatever It Takes” resonates so much is its honesty.  In the song, Lohan is perhaps telling us what type of life she would like.  She sings that she will do what she needs to be fulfilled without worrying about legacy or fans.

Whatever it takes you to believe it,
That’s all right with me;
Take this morning in my kitchen,
Or whatever that helps you to believe;
You will find me down by the river,
Getting high on my mortality;
I’ll be holding hands with nameless beauty,
Or whoever wants to stand next to me.

Whether or not the we ever get to hear new music from Lohan, I hope Sinéad Lohan is somewhere singing for her children, high on mortality holding hands with nameless beauty. Thanks for the music.

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