You Can't Steal My Love

You Can't Steal My Love is a song from the Swedish rock band Mando Diao. It was written by the lead singer, Gustaf Norén, in 2005 for his then-girlfriend, and current wife, Pernilla. The song describes how the couple met in a library. It appeared on Mando Diao's 2005 album Hurricane Bar, and was also released as a single the same year.

Mando Diao
  • Mats Björke
  • Björn Dixgård
  • Carl-Johan Fogelklou
  • Gustaf Norén
Studio albums
  • Bring 'Em In
  • Hurricane Bar
  • Ode to Ochrasy
  • Never Seen the Light of Day
  • Give Me Fire
  • Infruset
Live albums
  • Above and Beyond – MTV Unplugged
Compilations
  • The Malevolence of Mando Diao: 2002-2007
  • Ghosts&Phantoms
  • Greatest Hits Volume 1
EPs
  • Motown Blood EP
  • Paralyzed EP
  • Mean Street EP
Singles
  • "Mr. Moon"
  • "The Band"
  • "Sheepdog"
  • "Clean Town"
  • "Down in the Past"
  • "You Can't Steal My Love"
  • "God Knows"
  • "Long Before Rock 'n' Roll"
  • "Good Morning, Herr Horst"
  • "TV & Me"
  • "The Wildfire (If It Was True)"
  • "Ochrasy"
  • "If I Don't Live Today, Then I Might Be Here Tomorrow"
  • "Never Seen the Light of Day"
  • "Train on Fire"
  • "Dance with Somebody"
  • "Gloria"
  • "The Quarry"
  • "Nothing Without You"
  • "Down In The Past (MTV unplugged)"
  • "Strövtåg i hembygden"
  • "I ungdomen"
  • "En sångarsaga"
Related articles
  • Discography
  • Caligola

Famous quotes containing the words steal and/or love:

    Duns at his lordship’s gate began to meet;
    And brickdust Moll had screamed through half the street.
    The turnkey now his flock returning sees,
    Duly let out a-nights to steal for fees:
    The watchful bailiffs take their silent stands,
    And schoolboys lag with satchels in their hands.
    Jonathan Swift (1667–1745)

    However strongly they resist it, our kids have to learn that as adults we need the companionship and love of other adults. The more direct we are about our needs, the easier it may be for our children to accept those needs. Their jealousy may come from a fear that if we adults love each other we might not have any left for them. We have to let them know that it’s a different kind of love.
    —Ruth Davidson Bell. Ourselves and Our Children, by Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, ch. 3 (1978)