Sweet Little Mystery

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"Sweet Little Mystery"
Sweet Little Mystery.jpg
Single by Wet Wet Wet
from the album Popped In Souled Out
B-side "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight"
ReleasedJuly 1987
Recorded1986
Genre
Length3:45
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
  • Willie Mitchell
  • Michael Baker
Wet Wet Wet singles chronology
"Wishing I Was Lucky"
(1987)
"Sweet Little Mystery"
(1987)
"Angel Eyes"
(1987)

"Sweet Little Mystery" is a song by Scottish soft rock band Wet Wet Wet. It is the fifth single from the band's debut album Popped In Souled Out (1987), released on Phonogram Inc. Records. The success of the song drove it to number five on the weekly UK Singles Chart the same year as its release. The following year, the song became an international hit, entering the top 20 in Belgium, France, Ireland, Netherlands and New Zealand. Its peak positioning in numerous weekly charts around the globe marked its contributions to the soft-rock genre which dominated the era. [1]

Contents

"Sweet Little Mystery" is Wet Wet Wet's second biggest hit globally, with their cover of the Troggs' "Love Is All Around" being their most known song. The song endured widespread criticism and the group was later sued for copyright infringement by Van Morrison. [2] The group received further criticism for using the same song title as John Martyn's "Sweet Little Mystery" (1987). Both John Martyn and Van Morrison received co-writers' credits for the song.

Five years after the band's split in 1997, Marti Pellow recorded the song solo in his 2002 album Marti Pellow Sings the Hits of Wet Wet Wet & Smile.

Recording

The song was originally recorded as a soul piece by the band in the mid-1980s, but Phonogram Inc. said it was not "commercial enough for the 80s". [3] The band eventually re-recorded the single in Memphis in 1986, along with the remaining songs from the album, and transformed its composition to fit the pop-rock genre.[ citation needed ]

Composition

"Sweet Little Mystery" is a soft rock, pop song with a medium tempo. It contains bass, drums, guitar, keyboard and voice and was recorded in the key of C major. The vocal range of G4-G5 categorises the song in the range of the alto voice. [4] To fit into the pop-rock genre, the song was re-recorded to have an accumulative beginning, with the riff being gradual and rhythmically active. Spicer (2004) explains this as the "technique of building up a groove". [5] Marti Pellow stated in an interview that changes were made to the song's composition because producers and record labels were "trying to make Wet Wet Wet particularly radio-friendly". [6]

Graeme Clark, bass player of the band, shared the band's experience experimenting with different versions of "Sweet Little Mystery" in an interview with Paul Sinclair. "We did a Stock Aitken Waterman version of 'Sweet Little Mystery' and we never put that on there because it did … we had internal arguments about that, because I thought it should be on there, right, but the argument and the band line was it’s too much like Stock Aitken Waterman with a Marti vocal. And I don’t know if I agree with that…” [7] On the five-disc Popped in Souled Out super deluxe edition, "Sweet Little Mystery" is featured on disc three as a "Mista E remix". [8]

Music video

Mike Brady directed the video for "Sweet Little Mystery", and Phonogram Inc, a subsidiary of PolyGram, produced it. Brady had also directed their single "Angel Eyes". The filming of the video took place in The Gambia in West Africa. The video opens with a young Gambian boy saying "Hello and welcome to Gambia" as the band arrives by plane into the country. The video first depicts Radio Syd broadcasting the band's fresh new single in Gambia. It contains montages, transitioning from their performing at a beach bar to dancing with the local community, displaying the many landscapes of the country.

The video released in 1987, when home video was becoming increasingly popular. Julian Petley states that, in 1979, 230 000 people in the UK owned home video, compared to 13.8 million people in 1989. [9] For the production of the "Sweet Little Mystery" video, Fowler (2017) stated he needed to adopt "the notion of performance in its fullest sense" to fit into the emerging "world of film and pop". [10] This influenced the decision in performing to a local community in Gambia.

Live performances

"Sweet Little Mystery" was first performed on the Wets' Popped In Souled Out tour on 10 October 1987 at the Edinburgh Playhouse. [11] This tour took place throughout the UK. There are performances of "Sweet Little Mystery" featured on the five-disc Popped in Souled Out super deluxe edition. The DVD features the song being performed for the BBC's television program Top of The Pops on 13 August 1987 and 27 August 1987. [12] A live version of the song is also featured on Wet Wet Wet's Spotify as "Sweet Little Mystery – Live at Capital Radio". To celebrate the album's 30th anniversary, the band performed the song on a tour in 2017. [13] Soon after this tour, lead singer Marti Pellow left the band to work on a solo career.

Controversy

In the years following the song's release, the Wets endured widespread criticism, acquiring the reputation of being "the Scottish pop robbers", for using lyrics from Van Morrison's "A Sense of Wonder". [14] Morrison sued the band for copyright infringement and claimed a co-writer's credit on the song. [15] Whilst Morrison sued the band, lead singer Marti Pellow stated they used two lines from "A Sense of Wonder" "to pay homage to him – Van the Man was a big influence on us". [16] The band also shares co-writing credit for "Sweet Little Mystery" with British singer John Martyn, as their choruses share similarities. [17]

Track listings

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for "Sweet Little Misery"
RegionCertification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI) [38] Silver200,000Double-dagger-14-plain.png

Double-dagger-14-plain.png Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

"Sweet Little Mystery" became the band's first single to reach peak position in the charts, making the band known to be in the high rankings of Scotland's most famous acts. [39] The song was known to have consistent airplay on BBC Radio 1 and Radio Clyde. [40]

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