A
music video was made for the song in 1987. The music video depicts the band rehearsing in Mendiola's Ballroom at
Huntington Park, California, surrounded by crew members. All of the band members' girlfriends at the time were shown in the clip: Rose's girlfriend Erin Everly; McKagan's girlfriend Mandy Brix, from the all-female rock band the Lame Flames; Stradlin's girlfriend Angela Nicoletti; Adler's girlfriend Cheryl Swiderski; and Slash's girlfriend Sally McLaughlin. Stradlin's dog was also shown. The video was successful on
MTV, and helped launch the song to mainstream success. To make "Sweet Child o' Mine" more marketable to MTV and radio stations, the song was edited down from 5:56 to 4:58, for the radio edit/remix, with much of Slash's guitar solo removed. This drew the ire of the band, including Rose, who commented on it in a 1989 interview with
Rolling Stone: "I hate the edit of 'Sweet Child o' Mine.' Radio stations said, 'Well, your vocals aren't cut.' My favorite part of the song is Slash's slow solo; it's the heaviest part for me. There's no reason for it to be missing except to create more space for commercials, so the radio-station owners can get more advertising dollars. When you get the chopped version of '
Paradise City' or half of 'Sweet Child' and '
Patience' cut, you're getting screwed." A 7-inch vinyl format and cassette single were released. The album version of the song was included on the US single release, while the UK single was the "edit/remix" version. The 12-inch vinyl format also contained the longer LP version. The B-side to the single is a non-album, live version of "It's So Easy." On an interview on
Eddie Trunk's New York radio show in May 2006, Rose stated that his original concept for the video focused on the theme of
drug trafficking. According to Rose, the video was to depict an Asian woman carrying a baby into a foreign land, only to discover at the end that the child was dead and filled with
heroin. This concept was rejected by
Geffen Records. This song was used for a teaser trailer premiere of
Thor: Love and Thunder, which released on April 18, 2022, and the film itself, including the end credits. As of June 2025, the music video currently has over 1.7 billion views on
YouTube. == Reception ==