- Music
- 08 Jan 25
On this day 35 years ago, Sinéad O'Connor released her iconic rendition of the Prince-penned track 'Nothing Compares 2 U'. The single – taken from Sinéad's second album, I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got, which was released two months later – topped charts around the world, and has since been listed among the greatest songs of all time. To mark its anniversary, we're looking back at some special Hot Press reflections on 'Nothing Compares 2 U'.
Over the years, Prince provided several memorable hits for other artists, including ‘Manic Monday’ for The Bangles and ‘Nasty Girl’ for Vanity 6. Perhaps the most iconic of all however, was ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’, which became a career-defining smash for the extraordinary Sinéad O’Connor.
Originally an obscure soul ballad tucked away on an album by funk group The Family, O’Connor and Bristolian trip-hop pioneer Nellee Hooper gave the track a dramatic new arrangement, topped off by O’Connor’s epic, heart-wrenching vocals.
Niall Stokes on 'Nothing Compares 2 U' – published in Hot Press in July 2023, as part of a tribute to Sinéad O'Connor:
1990. A week into the new year, Chrysalis released the headline single from Sinead’s second album I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got – her version of a Prince song, ’Nothing Compares 2 U’. The accompanying video was a masterstroke. Shot by John Maybury, it consists almost entirely of a close-up of Sinead’s face. As she navigates the song and delivers the lyrics, the emotional shifts are visible in the young singer’s baleful expression.
And then she hits the opening lines of the final verse.
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“All the flowers you planted, Mama,” she sang, “In the back yard / All died when you went away...” Sinead would later say that singing the word ‘Mama’ had reminded her of her own mother – who had died in a car accident early in 1985. That caused a tear to flow down one cheek. The camera didn’t flinch. As the song neared its climax, a second tear flowed, down the other cheek. It was a moment of accidental pop profundity, a marriage of music and video that achieved a riveting impact, on what was, suddenly, the ultimate break-up song.
The video captured the imagination, especially among the emerging generation of young women, catapulting the single to the top of the charts across the world. Sinead O’Connor was the hottest star on the planet. I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got followed, going to No.1 in almost 20 countries and selling over 2 million copies in the US alone.
An extract from the late Bill Graham's review of I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got for Hot Press (1990):
...the magnificent 'Nothing Compares 2 U' will endure long past most pop hits natural radio shelf-life exactly because this song of supplication also so acutely conveys an undercurrent of sulky defiance in its confrontation of love love. I've already heard it sung on the last bus, and that's the ultimate compliment...