"Belinda" is a 1981 music recording by the British new wave duo Eurythmics. It was the band's second single, and the second of two singles to be taken from their debut album In the Garden. The song was co-produced by Conny Plank and featured Robert Görl of D.A.F. and members of Can.
Background
The single, which was released only in the UK, was not a commercial success and failed to chart. It received some airplay on BBC Radio 1 and Radio Luxembourg, and spent two weeks as a "breaker" on the Record Business Airplay Guide chart in August 1981.[2][3] No music video was made for the single.
The B-side, "Heartbeat, Heartbeat" was exclusive to this single, though it was later included on the remastered version of In The Garden in 2005.
Critical reception
Tony Jasper of Music Week noted the song's "pleasurable atmosphere" and "rhythmic nature", which was propelled by a "strong drum propulsion".[4] Betty Page of Sounds saw no difference between Lennox and Stewart's previous band, the Tourists, and Eurythmics. She wrote, "They're still yearning to be the new Byrds, the jangles now given a rockier edge, but still those weak, distant, feathery vocals remain. It's travesty that Annie Lennox never uses her lungs properly – she had a great pop voice once."[5]