Released as a single in December 1983,[5] it became the group's first single to reach the Australian top 10, reaching No. 1 in early 1984;[6] it was the group's only No. 1 hit in Australia. The song also reached No. 20 in Canada and No. 58 in the US.[7][8]
Composition
Pengilly said, "Michael wrote the lyrics and each time I ask him what they mean I get something different. The main theme of it really is — it's almost a hippy song! — it's about everyone joining together, and it's also about people's desires, and waking up the next morning and finding them washed away."[9]
Details
Daryl Hall sings the chorus with Hutchence. During an interview in Australia, Hall said Nile Rodgers called him and asked him to sing on the song.[10] Rodgers had participated in remixing the single "Adult Education" for Hall & Oates the previous year.
Two music videos for the song were filmed in Japan. Riding on motorcycles, the band members accompany a convoy of trucks to a vacant lot, where a fairground is set up and later dismantled around them as they play; at the end, the band then rides away with the trucks.[11] The alternate version (in fact the original one) show an Asian woman appearing at certain moments and has a different ending.[12]
In 2010, INXS rerecorded "Original Sin" with American vocalist Rob Thomas and Cuban female rapper DJ Yalediys as a dance single. It is featured in the 2010 INXS tribute album Original Sin.[13]
Reception
Cash Box said the song "is a politically clever track which dreams of a racially equal and peaceful world, while also working as a tight dance single."[14]
^Molanphy, Chris (19 January 2021). "These Are the Good Times Edition". Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia (Podcast). Slate. Archived from the original on 1 February 2024. Retrieved 3 February 2024.