English
synth-pop duo
Soft Cell became aware of "Tainted Love" through its status as a UK "Northern soul" hit. In 2010, DJ Ian "Frank" Dewhirst claimed he was the first person to play the song for
Marc Almond, the vocalist for Soft Cell. Some time after, Soft Cell began performing the song in their live setlist, choosing it instead of
Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons' "
The Night" (a song they would go on to record in 2003). Eventually, a
Phonogram Records A&R manager Roger Ames opted the band to record the single at a London-based
Advision Studios, with producer
Mike Thorne. There, Soft Cell's version was recorded in a day and a half with Almond's first vocal take being used on the record. Thorne commented that he was surprised by the choice as he had not been impressed by Jones's 1976 version on hearing it, but was impressed by the new arrangement and Almond's sinister vocal: "You could smell the coke on that second, Northern Soul version, it was really so over-ramped and so frantic. It was good for the dance floor, but I didn't like the record...when Soft Cell performed the song I heard a very novel sound and a very nice voice, so off we went." Notably, Almond has stated in interviews that Soft Cell's version was inspired more by the 1975 version by English singer
Ruth Swann (later known as Jill Saward) than that of Gloria Jones. Phonogram Records chose to release "Tainted Love" in 1981 as Soft Cell's second single (their first was "Memorabilia", which did not chart). Following a performance on the
BBC's
Top of the Pops chart show, "Tainted Love" reached number one on the
UK Singles Chart, and was known as the best-selling single of 1981 in the UK, until the Official Charts Company recalculated the data in 2021 (giving the title to "
Don't You Want Me" by
The Human League). In 2023, it was listed as the 59th best-selling single of all time in the UK. Buoyed by the then-dominant
new wave sound of the time and released on their album
Non-Stop Erotic Cabaret, "Tainted Love" became a major hit in the US during the
Second British Invasion, with the song spending a then-record breaking 43 weeks on the US
Billboard Hot 100. In 1996, director
Spike Jonze used Soft Cell's version of the song in a television commercial for
Levi's jeans, titled "Doctors", syncing the song to the sound of a
heart rate monitor in a hospital. The television commercial was nominated for an
Emmy Award for Outstanding Commercial at the
49th Primetime Emmy Awards the following year. In 2013, Soft Cell's version of "Tainted Love" ranked number five on
VH1's
100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 1980s. It was also heavily sampled on
Rihanna's 2006 single "
SOS" from her album
A Girl Like Me and
the Veronicas' 2007 single "
Hook Me Up" from their album
Hook Me Up. In 2015, the song was voted by the British public as the nation's fourth favourite
1980s number one in a poll for
ITV. In 2022,
Rolling Stone ranked "Tainted Love" number 170 with "
Where Did Our Love Go" in their list of the "200 Greatest Dance Songs of All Time".
Tainted Love '91 A re-recorded version, titled "Tainted Love '91", was issued in 1991, seven years after Soft Cell's dissolution in 1984, as a tie-in to the compilation album
Memorabilia – The Singles (which reached number eight in the
UK Albums Chart in June 1991). "Tainted Love '91" was a follow-up to "
Say Hello, Wave Goodbye '91", which was another re-recorded/remixed version of an earlier single from the Soft Cell/Marc Almond compilation. "Tainted Love '91" became another top-40 hit from the collection and peaked at number five in the UK charts, making it Soft Cell's sixth top-10 hit (as records with re-recorded vocals were seen as a new hit by the chart compilers of the time) The video for this version, directed by
Peter Christopherson, features a man pacing at night and dancing with starry apparitions, while Almond sings amongst the stars. Christopherson's band
Coil had covered "
Tainted Love" in 1985, with a music video that included a cameo appearance by Almond.
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications ==Marilyn Manson version== American
rock band
Marilyn Manson covered "Tainted Love" with an arrangement based on Soft Cell's version. It was released in November 2001 as a single from the
Not Another Teen Movie soundtrack. The accompanying music video featured cast members
Chyler Leigh,
Mia Kirshner,
Chris Evans and
Jaime Pressly. It was later included as a bonus track on international editions of the band's following album,
The Golden Age of Grotesque in 2003. Manson said that he was not "really thinking about '80s nostalgia" during the recording, while recognizing it as a main concept behind the soundtrack. "Tainted Love" topped the charts in Portugal and peaked within the top ten of the charts in the United Kingdom. and won the
Kerrang! Award for Best Video. It was also nominated for Best Video at the 2002
Q Awards.
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications Release history ==References==