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:

    I think of no news to tell you. It is a serene summer day here, all above the snow. The hens steal their nests, and I steal their eggs still, as formerly. This is what I do with the hands. Ah, labor,—it is a divine institution, and conversation with many men and hens.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    We [actors] are indeed a strange lot! There are times we doubt that we have any emotions we can honestly call our own. I have approached every dynamic scene change in my life the same way. When I married Charlie MacArthur, I sat down and wondered how I could play the best wife that ever was.... My love for him was the truest thing in my life; but it was still important that I love him with proper effect, that I act loving him with great style, that I achieve the ultimate in wifedom.
    Helen Hayes (1900–1993)