Description
“It Must Have Been Love” is a power ballad written by Per Gessle and performed by the Swedish pop duo Roxette. The ballad became the duos 3rd #1 hit in the United States and is one of their best-selling releases, leading the single to be certified gold in a number of countries.
The song, included on the soundtrack to the hugely popular film Pretty Woman, rivals “The Look”, “Joyride” and “Listen to Your Heart” as the song most closely associated with them. In 2005, Per Gessle received an award from BMI after the songs four millionth radio play.
“It must have been Love (Christmas for the Broken Hearted)”, the songs original title, was first released in 1987 after EMI Germany asked Roxette to come up with an intelligent Christmas-single. It went on to become a Top 10 hit in Sweden but EMI Germany decided not to the release the track.
This version of the song was not part of any Roxette album until the 1997 re-release of Pearls of Passion, where it was included as a bonus track. The B-side to “Christmas for the Broken Hearted”, “Turn to Me”, also featured as a bonus track.
Side A: “It must have been Love (Christmas for the Broken Hearted)”
Side B: “Turn to Me”
Pretty Woman movie soundtrack (1990):
During the run of chart-topping singles from Look Sharp! Touchstone Pictures approached Roxettes record label, EMI, and the group about contributing a song to the soundtrack of the upcoming romantic comedy release Pretty Woman, starring Richard Gere and Oscar nominee Julia Roberts. Pretty Woman was released in March 1990 and went on to make more than $460 million worldwide.
Gessle has claimed that “It Must Have Been Love”, by then a two-year-old recording, was chosen because Roxette did not have time to compose and record a new song while touring Australia and New Zealand. Gessle and producer Clarence Öfwerman took the original 1987 recording, had Marie Fredriksson replace a single Christmas-referenced line in the song and added some instrumentation and background vocal overlays to enhance the sound. Gessle claimed the soundtrack producers initially turned down “It Must Have Been Love” but changed their minds after re-editing the film.
Although “It Must Have Been Love” was part of the Pretty Woman soundtrack, the song wasn’t part of a Roxette album until Don’t Bore Us, Get to the Chorus!, their 1995 greatest hits release. The album wasn’t released in the United States until September 26, 2000, with a different track listing.
Chart success:
Though the lyrics refer to a lonely winters day after the break-up of a relationship, “It Must Have Been Love” became an international hit in the summer of 1990. It was not the first single released from the Pretty Woman soundtrack but “It Must Have Been Love” became the most successful, spending its first of two weeks at #1 on the Hot 100 in June and onto sales of 500,000 copies in the U.S. Billboard magazine listed “It Must Have Been Love” as the #2 Hot 100 single of the year behind Wilson Phillips’ “Hold On”. The single was released in the UK in June 1990 and peaked at #3, Roxettes best showing there, and stayed in the UK Singles Chart for 14 weeks. The song was re-released in September 1993 and peaked at #10. It was due to the success of this song that “Listen to Your Heart” and “Dressed for Success” were re-issued in the UK later that year. It later became Roxettes second of three #1 singles in Australia, spending two weeks at the top spot in July 1990, while it also peaked at #1 in Norway, for 12 weeks, and in Switzerland. It also reached the Top 5 in Sweden, Austria and Germany, where the single spent 9 months in the Top 75, while it reached the Top 20 in Italy.
Music video:
The video was shot in a warehouse, with Fredriksson singing and Gessle playing the guitar between various prop changes. It included scenes from the Pretty Woman movie (Marie Fredriksson wearing a white dress in this movie version). There is also an alternate version of the video without the movie scenes, available solely on the VHS The Videos. According to Fredriksson, shooting the video was a surreal experience.
… the video was a weird experience. The director wanted all movements in slow motion so I had to lip sync the vocals in double speed. My first lesson in how to sing an emotional ballad Mickey Mouse style. A strange way to make a living.
Chart (1990) Peak Positions:
Swedish Single Charts 4
UK Top 75Â 3
US Hot 100Â 1
US Hot ACÂ 2
German Single Charts 4
Australian Single Charts 1
Austrian Top 40Â 3
Swiss Single Charts 1
Norwegian Singles Charts 1
Irish Singles Chart 4
UK Top 75 10
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.