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Throughout her varied and controversial career, Sinéad O'Connor has returned to singing about her native Ireland, often with provocative and confrontational perspectives, as in Universal Mother's incendiary "Famine." Sean-Nós Nua, however, is an extended love song to O'Connor's roots, a collection of 13 traditional Irish ballads, most set to restrained, acoustic instruments. Although she's enlisted a raft of expert help, both from the old guard -- Planxty's guitarist Donal Lunny and vocalist Christy Moore (who duets with O'Connor on the 12-minute epic "Lord Baker") -- and younger contemporaries like accordionist Sharon Shannon and Waterboys' fiddler Steve Wickham, the focus is on O'Connor's amazing voice. She sings "Peggy Gordon" and "Molly Malone" with prayerful gravity; "Lord Franklin" and "The Moorlough Shore" sound like gentle lullabies; "I'll Tell Me Ma" and "The Parting Glance" are soft jigs. But this is no exercise in musty folk historicism: O'Connor sets two Irish-language tracks -- "Óro, Sé Do Bheatha 'Bhaile" and "Báldin Fheillimí" -- to dub rhythms and subtly adds electronic textures to others without ever losing the sense of tradition that runs deep throughout Sean-Nós Nua. Best of all, O'Connor has never sung better: She's simultaneously intense and tender, powerful and contained, earnest and beautiful. Steve Klinge, Barnes & Noble