Condition Of The Heart

Album: Around The World In A Day (1985)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • By 1985, Prince had already conquered the planet with Purple Rain, but instead of doubling down on arena-sized guitar heroics, he pivoted left into psychedelia, Beatlesque color, and introspection with the album Around The World In A Day. "Condition Of The Heart," the third track, is the moment the glitter settles and the lights dim.
  • "Condition Of The Heart" is a nearly seven-minute piano ballad that unfolds in three painful vignettes, each a postcard from romantic defeat.

    First, our hero writes an unanswered letter to a girl in Paris. This is not the triumphant wooing of a girl with a "Raspberry Beret." This is a man licking stamps and hoping for mercy.

    Then comes a woman from London who leaves him for a wealthier "real prince from Arabia," which is the sort of plot twist that could only happen to someone actually named Prince.

    By the third verse, we're in the ghetto with a woman who wears the same cologne and has the same giggle as the one he truly loves. Anyone can miss a person; it takes artistry to miss their laugh.
  • The chorus turns heartbreak into diagnosis:

    Every single day is a yellow day
    I'm blinded by the daisies in your yard


    Here, unrequited love is a condition: chronic, recurring, incurable.
  • There was a woman from the ghetto who made funny faces
    Just like Clara Bow


    The song's reference to Clara Bow, the silent-film actress renowned for her wide eyes and playful expressiveness, is one of Prince's more literary touches, smuggling old Hollywood into a modern Minneapolis lament.
  • Although the album is credited to Prince and The Revolution, "Condition of the Heart" is essentially a one-man symphony. The Revolution only appear on three tracks ("America," "Pop Life" and "The Ladder"). On this "Condition Of The Heart," Prince handled everything himself: vocals, piano, guitars, bass, synthesizers, finger cymbals, whistles, kettle drums, and percussion.
  • "Condition Of The Heart" was laid down by Prince and recording engineer Susan Rogers at Sunset Sound one Sunday with the lights dimmed and candles lit. "On Sundays we didn't have band rehearsals, so it was usually just the two of us," Rogers old Mojo magazine. "'Condition Of The Heart' was a Sunday song. He moved from instrument to instrument as quietly as possible and blew my mind with his vocal performance and the beauty of that piece."
  • Rogers noted that Prince often shelved his most vulnerable material; songs like (shelved outtake) "Moonbeam Levels" or "Another Lonely Christmas" (B-side to "I Would Die 4 U") didn't make the final cut. "On 'Condition Of The Heart,' he's really putting it all out there," she said. "I'm glad he didn't yank it."
  • Placed after the title track and "Paisley Park," the song is the album's emotional anchor. While much of Around the World in a Day floats in Technicolor optimism, "Condition Of The Heart" is a confessional ballad where the mask drops entirely. It's what happens after the party from "Let's Go Crazy" ends and everyone has gone home.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

Steely Dan

Steely DanFact or Fiction

Did they really trade their guitarist to The Doobie Brothers? Are they named after something naughty? And what's up with the band name?

David Gray

David GraySongwriter Interviews

David Gray explains the significance of the word "Babylon," and talks about how songs are a form of active imagination, with lyrics that reveal what's inside us.

JJ Burnel of The Stranglers

JJ Burnel of The StranglersSongwriter Interviews

JJ talks about The Stranglers' signature sound - keyboard and bass - which isn't your typical strain of punk rock.

Tim McIlrath of Rise Against

Tim McIlrath of Rise AgainstSongwriter Interviews

Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath explains the meanings behind some of their biggest songs and names the sci-fi books that have influenced him.

George Clinton

George ClintonSongwriter Interviews

When you free your mind, your ass may follow, but you have to make sure someone else doesn't program it while it's wide open.