#34: There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart) by Eurythmics
City: Montreal, PQ
Radio Station: CKOI
Peak Month: November 1985
Peak Position in Montreal ~ #2
Peak position in Vancouver ~ #11
Peak Position on Billboard Hot 100 ~ #22
Peak Position on Finland Singles chart ~ #1
Peak Position on Ireland Singles chart ~ #1
Peak Position on Norway Singles chart ~ #1
Peak Position on UK Singles chart ~ #1
Peak Position on Spain Singles chart ~ #2
Peak Position on Sweden Singles chart ~ #2
YouTube: “There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart)”
Lyrics: “There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart)”
The Eurythmics were the duo of Annie Lennox and David Stewart. They were part of the New Wave music with a heavy reliance on a synth-pop sound. They were especially successful in the UK with hits that included “Love is a Stranger”, “Sweet Dreams Are Made of This”, “Who’s That Girl?” and “Here Comes the Rain Again”. They had a successful duet with Aretha Franklin in 1985 titled “Sisters Are Doing It For Themselves”.
Annie Lennox was born in Aberdeen, Scotland in 1954. She took to music and an interest in records from an early age. Lennox recalls, “When I was very young, we had a salmon pink Dansette record player. Someone gave me birthday money and the first record I think I bought was Mary Poppins followed by Procul Harum’s “Whiter Shade of Pale“. Both records are magical and transporting. I used to visit my grandparents in the countryside and would always go into the recesses of a cupboard to pull out a box full of old 78 rpm records which I’d play over and over again, especially the Vilja song from The Merry Widow, which I was obsessed with. My dad blew my mind when I was six years old because he built his own Gramophone. He had the albums for every Rodgers & Hammerstein musical and he switched his homebuilt record player on and you heard this crackling sound and then ‘Boom!’ I remember walking to school singing “I Enjoy Being A Girl”. To buy a vinyl album, you had to record player and you have to have speakers, and this is a great thing because that means people are going to listen to your music not on a cell phone, but they’re going to listen to it out of a sound system, which is what we all did when we were growing up. The important thing about vinyl releases is that people buy them and actually put them on the turntable and listen to a side, because we chose the tracks to be played in a particular order, and that was really important.”
David Stewart was born in Sunderland, England, in 1952. By the time he was 15 he was dropping acid and hanging out with rock stars and playing in bands. At the age of 18, his band, Longdancer, got signed with Elton John’s Rocket Records. In 1975, he met a “hippie woman” at a vegetarian restaurant named Annie Lennox. She served him a plate of cabbage. When she wasn’t working as a waitress, Lennox was studying flute at the Royal Academy of Music. They soon got involved in a romance and formed a band called The Catch. Awhile, later they renamed their band The Tourists. The Tourists had a Top Ten hit in the UK with a remake of the Dusty Springfield song, “I Only Want To Be With You”.
Eventually, the duo broke off their relationship. Stewart recalls, “Our idea of a breakup was Annie living upstairs and me downstairs. We were still meeting for tea.” After The Tourists disbanded, Stewart became the guitarist for The Eurythmics. The band had an international Top Ten hit in 1983 with “Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This)” which went to #1 in Canada and the USA. In 1984, “Here Comes The Rain Again” put the group back in the Top Ten in many countries. And “Sex Crime (Nineteen Eighty-Four)” was a Top Ten hit throughout Europe, but stalled at #81 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the USA. In 1985, “Would I Lie To You?” went to #1 in Australia. The duo also released “There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart)” from the Be Yourself Tonight album.
Lennox and Stewart wrote the song. Many Eurythmics songs were fraught with dynamic tension, reflecting the unsettled romantic and professional relationship between lead signer Annie Lennox and instrumentalist Dave Stewart. This song though is pure joy, with Lennox singing about being so happy in love, it feels like angels are playing with her heart. Lennox and Stewart had moved on in their personal lives, and in 1984 Lennox married a man named Radha Raman. The couple got divorced a short time later, and Lennox wrote the incisive “Would I Lie to You?” (also on the Be Yourself Tonight album) about him. No matter her romantic travails, Lennox looked to capture different emotions in her songs, so this one recalls the happier times. Be Yourself Tonight topped the pop album chart in Australia, and cracked the Top Five on album charts in another ten nations.
“There Must Be An Angel (Playing With My Heart)” peaked at #2 in Montreal, #9 in Seattle, #10 in Boston and Phoenix, #11 in Vancouver (BC) and Toronto, and #12 in Buffalo and Ottawa. Internationally, the song climbed to #1 in Finland, Norway, the UK and Ireland, #2 in Spain and Sweden, #3 in Australia and the Netherlands, #4 in West Germany, #5 in New Zealand, #6 in South Africa, #7 in Belgium, #8 in France, #9 in Austria, and #12 in Canada. In the USA the song stalled at #22.
In 1985 Dave Stewart produced the debut album by Feargal Sharkey, “A Good Heart”. In 1986, The Eurythmics had another Top Ten hit with “Thorn In My Side“. It sold especially well in Sweden, New Zealand, Ireland and the UK. By the later half of the 80’s their sound shifted more toward rock n’ roll with “Missionary Man” and “I Need a Man“.
Between 1983 and 1989 and again in 1999, The Eurythmics charted six albums in the Top Ten Canadian album charts. These were Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This), Touch, Revenge, Savage, Revival and Peace. A seventh album, We Too Are One, peaked at #12 on the Canadian RPM album charts in 1989. The duos final album, Peace, resulted in a 1999 tour where the proceeds were to Greenpeace and Amnesty International.
In 1987, “Beethoven (I Love To Listen to)” made the Top Ten in Sweden and New Zealand. And in 1989, “Revival” made the Top Ten in Sweden and Switzerland.
After the duo split in 1990 Stewart formed the Spiritual Cowboys and moved to France. He had two gold record albums in that country. Stewart worked with other artists in either a role as writer or producer for recordings by Nina Hagen, Bryan Ferry, Ringo Starr and Stevie Nicks. In 2002 Stewart worked with Nelson Mandela, Bono and Paul McCartney and Edge to offer a series of concerts to combat the HIV/AIDS crisis in South Africa. In 2012, Mick Jagger tagged Stewart to be part of the supergroup, Super Heavy. He also worked on two musicals: Barbarella and Ghost the Musical.
After the Eurythmics split, Annie Lennox had a successful solo career. She has received eight Brit Awards, a UK equivalent to the Grammy Awards in the USA. Her Brit Awards include her 1992 debut solo album Diva, Bare (2003), and Songs of Mass Destruction (2007). She had considerable success as a solo act including two #1 singles in Canada: “Walking on Broken Glass” and “No More I Love You’s”. Another single was “Money Can’t Buy It“.
In 2003, Lennox met Nelson Mandela. She credits him for inspiring her to be an advocate for those in need. Charlotte Crips, writing for The Independent in 2017, reports, “after meeting Mandela, in 2004, she (Annie Lennox) became a passionate advocate for women and children, particularly those effected by HIV/Aids in Africa. ” In 2010 Lennox was named the UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador for AIDS. On January 27, 2014, Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart appeared at the Los Angeles Convention Center. At an event billed as “The Night That Changed America: A Grammy Salute to The Beatles, they performed “The Fool On The Hill”.
The last song Annie Lennox wrote was in 2010. In 2017, Lennox told The Independent, she has no future plans to make any more music. Lennox states, “I don’t know if I’m done with music, but I have evolved into a person who needs to talk about things, more than sing about things.”
June 2, 2025
Ray McGinnis
References:
Annie Lennox biography, Annie Lennox.com
Charlotte Crips, “Annie Lennox, Interview: the Singer Reflects on Eurythmics, Nelson Mandela and Global Feminism,” Independent, November 9, 2017
Roisin O’Connor,” ‘How Did We Do All that?’: Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart Discuss Eurythmics Legacy in New Interview,” Independent, April 11, 2018.
Jim Faber, “Dave Stewart: ‘What Annie Lennox and I Went Through was Insane’,” Guardian, February 13, 2016
David Stewart, Sweet Dreams Are Made Of This, (New American Library, 2016).
CKOI 96.9 FM Montreal (PQ) Top Ten | November 8, 1985
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