-2021- Sheena | Easton - The Definitive Singles 1...
However, the paper must note a structural weakness: the omission of B-sides and extended remixes. A truly “definitive” document of the single as a physical artifact would include the 12” mixes that defined club culture (e.g., the Shep Pettibone remix of The Lover in Me ). By focusing only on the 7”/radio edit, the compilation prioritizes the single as a radio commodity rather than a dance floor tool.
Crucially, this phase includes the James Bond theme For Your Eyes Only (1981). In the context of a singles compilation, this track is an anomaly that works brilliantly. It is not a “Sheena Easton” song in the club or working-class narrative sense; rather, it is a Bill Conti composition performed by Easton. Its inclusion demonstrates the power of the single as a placement vehicle. The polished orchestral pop of For Your Eyes Only sits uncomfortably next to the gritty synth of Machinery , yet the compilation forces the listener to acknowledge that Easton’s voice—a flexible, slightly nasal belt—was the unifying element.
The opening tracks of the compilation are defined by a stark duality. The earliest singles, such as Modern Girl (UK #8) and 9 to 5 (Morning Train) (US #1), are products of the post-punk production ethos—clean, compressed, and driven by a rhythmic bass guitar. Notably, the inclusion of 9 to 5 highlights the transatlantic branding confusion that Easton mastered; in the US, the title was changed to avoid confusion with Dolly Parton’s film, a decision that showcases early 80s label pragmatism. -2021- Sheena Easton - The Definitive Singles 1...
In the landscape of pop music historiography, the compilation album serves a dual purpose: it is both a commercial product for the casual listener and an archival statement for the enthusiast. For an artist as stylistically volatile as Sheena Easton, the compilation is not merely a convenience but a necessity. Her career, spanning from the raw energy of the New Wave-inflected 1980s to the sophisticated house music of the early 1990s and the orchestral pop of the new millennium, resists easy categorization.
These singles are noteworthy for their lyrical agency. Where early Easton sang of waiting for a train or a prince to rescue her, these tracks feature a protagonist who initiates sexual relationships ( The Lover in Me ) and demands material commitment ( What Comes Naturally ). The compilation’s sequencing is crucial here; by placing these tracks immediately after the Prince-era material, the listener hears a direct line of descent: Prince liberated Easton’s persona, and the dance producers of the late 80s refined it into a weapon of female empowerment. However, the paper must note a structural weakness:
The strength of this compilation concept lies in its rigorous adherence to . Unlike many compilations that reorder tracks for listening flow, a true definitive singles set risks listener whiplash (moving from the acoustic Almost Over You to the industrial thump of Days Like This ). This is its virtue. It refuses to smooth over the contradictions.
From a scholarly perspective, these singles are vital for understanding gender politics in 1980s pop. Easton, previously marketed as a wholesome, doe-eyed everywoman (the cover of Take My Time ), was reconfigured by Prince as a figure of “violet velocity”—explicit, confident, and unapologetic. Sugar Walls , co-written by Prince under the pseudonym Alexander Nevermind, was infamously targeted by Tipper Gore’s Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC). The inclusion of this single in the compilation elevates it from a pop curio to a historical artifact of the censorship wars. The “Definitive” title here is earned by including the unedited, extended 12” mix, preserving the controversial lyricism that the radio edits neutered. Crucially, this phase includes the James Bond theme
The Definitive Singles 1980–2021 (a hypothetical but structurally logical compilation, following the model of similar “definitive” box sets by artists like Pet Shop Boys or Erasure) serves as the ideal prism through which to examine Easton’s unique trajectory. Unlike a traditional “Greatest Hits” package, which prioritizes chart position, a “Definitive Singles” collection emphasizes chronology, sequencing, and the evolution of a single artist’s production aesthetic. This paper argues that Easton’s singles discography is not a disjointed series of stylistic lurches, but a coherent narrative of an artist who leveraged the single format to navigate shifting technological, commercial, and gendered expectations in the music industry.
Sheena Easton’s The Definitive Singles 1980–2021 is ultimately a study in vocal endurance against stylistic chaos. While contemporaries like Madonna curated their reinventions with clear visual and narrative markers (blonde vs. brunette, cone bras vs. leotards), Easton’s reinventions were purely sonic and often imposed by producers. Her genius was not in authoring her changes, but in surviving them.
The middle third of The Definitive Singles documents the most radical pivot in Easton’s career: her collaboration with Prince. Tracks like Sugar Walls (1984) and U Got the Look (1987, with Prince) represent a sonic rupture. Gone are the clean EMI production values; replaced by the Minneapolis sound’s LinnDrum machines, layered synthesizers, and overtly sexual lyrical content.