Larry Flick from
Billboard magazine wrote that the song is a "soft and soulful lullaby that should keep momentum building at top 40. Once again,
Rosie Gaines' vocal support is a true delight." Clark and DeVaney from
Cashbox said it's "actually a soulful
R&B ballad-gone-mad with der-Prince's guitar work and production." They noted that Gaines is "sounding quite like she needs her own record, something she will no doubt get from her close-knit pals at
Paisley." Rufer and Fell from the
Gavin Report stated that Gaines "absolutely nails her part." George Caplan from
Melody Maker praised it as "a cluster of gems, a sacred, monumental ballad to counterweigh the delicious profanity elsewhere." Pan-European magazine
Music & Media commented, "The melody of this mellow ballad and title track of his new album rings a bell for
soul fanatics. It recalls
Bobby Goldsboro's famous tune '
Summer (The First Time)', as recorded by
Millie Jackson on her classic
Caught Up album." Gavin Martin from
NME named it a "pure pop schlock, a lushly layered but shallow ballad". A reviewer from
People Magazine called it a "mushy mess". Tom Doyle from
Smash Hits viewed it as "smaltzy over-the-top-balladeering".
Retrospective response In a 2016 retrospective review, Patrick Corcoran from Albumism stated that the song's "fairy tale fanfares, sizeable doses of pomp and the delicious interplay between
Gaines' and
Prince's voices serve up an undeniably touching
ballad that delicately and deftly walks the line between sweet and saccharine."
Stephen Thomas Erlewine from
AllMusic called it a "drippy mainstream ballad" and a "terrific" pop single. Mike Diver for the
BBC in 2010 described it as a "brilliant ballad" in his 2010 review. In 2016, Jeff Weiss from
Pitchfork said it's a "twinkling locket-pop ballad", and "one of those songs they'll play at weddings until we stop using diamond engagement rings and the ocean runs out of
pearls." He added, "It's Prince at his best". In
Rolling Stones ranking of "25 Essential Prince Songs" in 2020, an editor described it as a "sultry ballad", that "intricately wedded the singer's love of glitz and glamour with a distinct, ever-evolving pop-R&B sensibility." ==Chart performance==