Scorpions – Send Me An Angel

Programming note – for the time being, I will keep with the format of doing a song each week, perhaps one other post, then my weekly “five songs from a year” thing. I am working on some album posts and I will resume those on Mondays when I get some posts together and can actually be working ahead for once.

Today let’s step back in time to 1990. The music world was on the cusp of huge changes, but one institution that was still running strong “as is” was the Scorpions. The German machine found great success in the early and mid-80’s, though they did flag a bit in the latter part of the decade.

They would enter the 1990’s in style, though. The album Crazy World would sell great all over the world, giving the band their only number one record in Germany. It hit silver in the UK, their only album to do so there. In the US it hit 21 on the album chart and went on to double platinum status, a very hot seller and just behind Love At First Sting as the band’s best-selling album.

The Scorpions released four singles from the record – the first two were fairly standard Scorpions rockers, while latter two were both ballads. That third single, Wind Of Change, would become the band’s biggest hit, while the fourth and final single is the reason we are gathered here today.

Send Me An Angel was released as a single in September 1991, nearly a year after the Crazy World album release. The song did modest business on the charts, going to number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100 and 8 on the Mainstream Rock chart. It had several top 10 placements throughout Europe, where Wind Of Change had previously scored at the top of those charts. It’s also worth noting that the single came out in the “ground zero” month of 1991 for the grunge takeover of MTV and radio. The Scorpions were able to keep steady while many other 80’s rockers were consigned to the scrap bin in this very time, and the Scorps were at the tail end of this album cycle.

For one other little bit of trivia, the single’s cover depicts a burning angel along with a band photo. The angel was used again a few years later as the cover for Black Sabbath’s Cross Purposes album. Sadly, the gents in the Scorpions did not also make the Sabbath cover.

Today’s song is the album’s final cut and follows a second side of steady rock and roll tracks. This ballad is a lot different, with a ethereal vibe and very atmospheric setting. It evokes a lonely wanderer in a desert setting, which the song’s video plays into.

Lyrically the verses offer the words of a wise man who provides encouragement, while the chorus is Klaus Meine offering the plea for an angel. I’ve always enjoyed when ballads go for lyrical content beyond the typical ’80’s fare of trying to get a woman’s pants off.

Send Me An Angel is a fantastic entry on the list of Scorpions ballads. While Wind Of Change was the band’s colossal hit, I’d argue that this one is the better song. And even while the Scorpions may have crafted their ultimate ballad with the titanic Still Loving You, this song is a worthy competitor in the ballad battle arena.

6 thoughts on “Scorpions – Send Me An Angel

  1. I concur with the others about this one being the better song. The thing with “Winds of Change,” was that it has been the song which has symbolized the end of the Cold War and the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe.

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