I was just talking about Robert Palmer a bit yesterday so I might as well have at it and go over his best-known song. While this song is well known there is still a fair bit of interesting background to go through on it.
Addicted To Love was the second single from Palmer’s late 1985 album Riptide. The album sold well but that isn’t radically important in comparison to the massive success of this song, which was the driving force behind the album sales. This was a US number one hit and would be Palmer’s only actual chart topping single, though he got very close a few other times. It also hit number one in Australia and charted highly in several other countries.
If you think the band was Robert Palmer with a handful of extremely attractive women dressed as mannequins, well, you would be wrong. A bunch of people worked on the album with Palmer, but he would have some assistance from old bandmates in a group called Power Station. From there on this song are Tony Thompson, Bernard Edwards and Andy Taylor, yes that Andy Taylor from Duran Duran.
And this song was originally conceived as something extra – it was supposed to be a duet with Chaka Khan and was recorded as such. Khan’s management demanded that her parts be removed from the song because she had a few big hits around that time and they didn’t want her being overexposed.
It’s true that Khan had a lot going on at the time, she’d lit the charts up with her own songs as well as a guest shot on Steve Winwood’s hit single Higher Love. But I’d say her management dropped the ball here, as I don’t see the problem with having yet another number one hit to your name.
Addicted To Love is pretty simple to figure out, the song’s theme is spelled out in the title. Being hooked on love is a real thing and songs about love are what move a lot of people to listen to music so it all comes together pretty well. “Love as a drug” is something I guess is established by science but I don’t know much about science so I’ll leave it at that. Coupled with the smooth pop rock of the music, this is a winning formula right out of the gate.
The song did fantastically but many remember the music video. Palmer appeared on stage with a group of models who are acting as his backing band. This got everyone’s attention and Palmer would use the “girls in black” for his next few videos. Also, everyone and their mother either spoofed or copied the gimmick for their own videos over the course of the next several years. This remains one of the most iconic videos of the 1980’s and was nominated for the MTV Video of the Year, but it lost out – that was the same year Dire Straits did the Money For Nothing video and there’s no beating that.
This would be the peak of Robert Palmer’s success, though he’d still be lingering toward the top of the singles charts for awhile. His 1988 song Simply Irresistible was another massive tune but was kept out of the number one slot by some song called Sweet Child O’ Mine. Palmer would go on touring, recording and reuniting briefly with his Power Station bandmates until 2003 when he died of a heart attack at 54.
This song was everywhere just as I was growing up and really starting to pay attention to music. Though to be honest one didn’t have to venture far to find this on a radio or TV. This is truly one of the definitive cuts of the ’80’s and a magnificent time capsule of that period.
Palmer could sing a grocery list and make it cool. That Power station album he did as you mentioned is one of my all time fav’s. Such a killer record with some great playing and Palmer of course. The video though Addicted…was good for eyes as I was 18 at the time when it came out. lol
LikeLiked by 1 person
Lol yeah there’s no getting around that video, everyone was paying attention to it.
LikeLike
i did not know that was originally a duet with Chaka, that would’ve changed the dynamics of the song entirely. I would love to hear that, although I don’t think it would top this version. also, hard to believe it was his only chart topping song. he seemed to be everywhere around that time. He had some great years around that time. Hate we lost him so early.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is kind of a shame he didn’t get another number 1, if Simply Irresistable had been a few weeks earlier or later he probably would have had it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
That’s another great track. So many good ones.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This is the song he’ll be remembered most for, the video helps along with that. I agree with the belief he should have had even more success.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It really is his signature track, no doubt about it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Love this song and love the video. Though I’m gay, I’ve always thought the four ladies were hot, hot, hot! I never knew it started out as a duet with Chaka Khan; boy, was her management stupid to have her removed from the song. I don’t see how the added exposure could have possibly hurt her career at the time.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yeah they screwed the pooch with Khan. She had hits in 1985 and then the duet with Winwood was the middle of ’86, so there was plenty of room for her to have that song with Palmer in the beginning of ’86. She has been pretty clear about being upset with her management over that one.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This song was everywhere in Australia to the point that I began to hate it. But the hook was that good that it got us all addicted.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It was all over the place here too, though I preferred it to other pop stuff that was big at the time.
LikeLike