Who´s this Iso(a)bel(la) everyone sings about?

Lately I´ve been listening to some Miranda Sex Garden music and they have a song called Isabella; before that I knew Isobella by Enya and another Isobel by Bjork.

MSG song is in Italian so I still don´t grasp the lyrics quite well, Enya´s in Irish Gaelic and only Bjork had the good decency of singing it in English… I suppose they have something in common though, MSG says something about Isabella dancing around in a praire (I think) on a world of her own; Bjork sings about her living by herself on a forest. Don´t ask me about what Enya says though!.

I tried to search some reference about this character but I´ve came empty handed.

There’s an opera named Isabeau (related name) and a popular French Canadian tune as well. Here’s the story of “Isabeau s’y promene” in English.

The Iguanas also have a song about Isabel. (“Oyo Isabel,” or that may just be the start of the refrain.)

Moved to Cafe Society.

Gfactor, General Questions Moderator

Jimi Hendrix sang about the oddly spelled “Izabella.”

(Of course, Jimi was oddly spelled himself, come to think of it…)

I spent a little time stumbling around in Yahoo, looking for Isabella folklore and Saint Isabella. Queen Isabella, who bankrolled Christopher Columbus, also was instrumental in starting the Spanish Inquisition. She may or may not be the same gal as Saint Isabella. I ran out of patience at that point.

Isabella and Isabel are fairly common names in Spanish speaking places. The songs about Isabella could be about individual women with that name. It is a lovely name, and the iambic lope of it is easy to plug into lyrics.

My son, now in fifth grade, has no less than three girls named Isabel in his class. I guess it had an uptick in popularity a decade ago.

I´m still not convinced about that, at least both the songs by Miranda Sex Garden and Bjork talk about a woman living on her own, so this salior lusting gall doesn´t seem to fit.

Definitely NOT. There’s currently some weirdos trying to get Isabel de Castilla beatified, and good luck on that one. If it was going to happen, it would have happened several centuries ago.

The most common St. Elizabeths are two queens, but of Hungary and Portugal.

Ale, my WAG is that it’s simply a name that sounds “exotic” to non-Hispanic writers. Sort of an upper-class Delores (typo included) or Lupita.

All I can think of is the Michelle Pfeiffer character in Ladyhawke.

That’s just how you string a right-handed Isabella for a left-handed player.

Who is this Ysabella who sings?