Anita Baker – Sweet Love
The Voice Arista Rejected As Lacking Star Potential
Released on May 27, 1986 as the lead single from Rapture, “Sweet Love” became Anita Baker’s breakthrough hit, peaking at number eight on the Billboard Hot 100, number two on the R&B chart, and number three on the Adult Contemporary chart in the fall of 1986. The song debuted on the Hot 100 on August 16 and climbed steadily through the autumn, spending eleven weeks on the chart and finally cracking the top ten on October 23. What makes this success particularly sweet is that just six years earlier, Arista Records had dropped Baker’s group Chapter 8, with executives convinced that her voice lacked star potential and refusing to promote their album despite three charting singles.
In the UK, the single reached number thirteen on the Singles Chart and spent twelve weeks on the listing, while in Canada it peaked at number twenty-one. The song became the eleventh bestselling single of 1986 in the United States and helped propel Rapture to number eleven on the Billboard 200 and number thirteen on the UK Albums Chart. By October 1987, the album had sold three million copies in the US alone, eventually reaching five-times platinum certification and selling over eight million copies worldwide. Baker was competing against Whitney Houston’s “Greatest Love of All,” Janet Jackson’s “Nasty,” and Sade’s “The Sweetest Taboo” for airplay, yet managed to carve out her own space as a sophisticated alternative to the decade’s more histrionic female vocalists.
Baker co-wrote “Sweet Love” with bassist Louis A. Johnson from the Brothers Johnson and saxophonist Gary Bias, who later joined Earth, Wind and Fire. The collaboration happened organically during the Rapture sessions, with Baker drawing on her personal experiences of romantic devotion to craft lyrics that celebrated love without shame or reservation. She’d been signed to Beverly Glen Music in 1983 after years of working as a law firm receptionist following Chapter 8’s collapse, releasing The Songstress to modest success. When Elektra Records offered a significantly better contract in 1984, Beverly Glen attempted to sue both Baker and Warner Communications to prevent the album’s release, dragging the case through courts for nearly two years before finally losing on March 19, 1986. Rapture was released the very next day, making the triumph even more satisfying.
Recording sessions took place at multiple facilities including Yamaha Research and Development Studios in Glendale, California, United Sound Systems in Detroit, Michigan, and Music Grinder Studios in Hollywood, California during late 1985. Baker reunited with her former Chapter 8 colleague Michael J. Powell as producer, a decision that frustrated Elektra executives who wanted more established names attached to the project. Powell had formed Chapter 8 in 1975 and had worked with Baker since she joined the group the following year. The track featured session musicians Freddie Washington on bass, Greg Moore on guitar, Dean Sir Gant on keyboards, Ricky Lawson on drums, and Paulinho da Costa on percussion, with backing vocals by Jim Gilstrap, Bunny Hull, and Daryl Phinnessee. Engineer Barney Perkins captured Baker’s distinctive contralto vocals spanning from E3 to F5 across the song’s four-minute-twenty-six-second runtime, with the track set in B-flat minor at eighty-nine beats per minute.
“Sweet Love” launched Rapture, Baker’s second studio album released in March 1986 on Elektra Records. The album title reflected both the ecstatic response Baker hoped to inspire and the rapturous quality of the music itself, blending R&B with jazz and soul elements in a style that helped cement the Quiet Storm radio format. Her Elektra contract gave her unprecedented creative control, allowing her to produce her own music after the frustrations with Beverly Glen. The album spawned three more hit singles including “Caught Up in the Rapture,” “No One in the World,” and “Same Ole Love (365 Days a Year),” with NME ranking it number two among Albums of the Year for 1986. The album’s production quality remained so impressive that modern listeners still appreciate the craftsmanship, with its use of live instruments adding an organic warmth that set it apart from the synthesizer-heavy production dominating mid-eighties pop.
British jungle musician M-Beat covered the song in 1994 with vocalist Nazlyn, creating an underground bass mix that peaked at number eighteen on the UK Singles Chart and became a drum and bass classic. British R&B trio Fierce recorded their version in 1999 for their debut album Right Here Right Now, releasing it as a single in 2000 with new production by Stargate and titling it “Sweet Love 2K.” Drake sampled Baker’s vocals for his track “Think Good Thoughts” featuring Phonte and Elzhi, prompting Baker to acknowledge in a 2020 interview that a second generation of fans had discovered her through sampling. You got a kid like Drake who decides to rhyme over Sweet Love, she told Essence magazine, noting that while some fans were upset about the sample, the business had been taken care of so she wasn’t mad at him.
At the 29th Annual Grammy Awards in 1987, Baker won both her nominations for the song. “Sweet Love” earned Best R&B Song, giving Baker, Johnson, and Bias a songwriting award, while the Rapture album won Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. The following year she added a third Grammy for Best Gospel Performance with The Winans on their collaboration “Ain’t No Need to Worry,” proving her versatility across genres. Looking back, BBC critic Daryl Easlea praised Baker’s voice as ringing like a bell, calling “Sweet Love” one of the three most memorable tracks on Rapture alongside “Caught Up in the Rapture” and “You Bring Me Joy.” The song stands as vindication for every artist told they lack star potential, proof that sometimes the executives are spectacularly wrong and patience combined with creative control can turn rejection into timeless art that influences generations.




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