1997, then. The late ’90s! And we get off to a banging start…
Professional Widow (It’s Got to Be Big), by Tori Amos (her 1st and only #1)
1 week, from 12th – 19th January 1997
‘Professional Widow’ was a track from singer-songwriter Tori Amos’s third studio album, ‘Boys for Pele’, which had made #2 exactly a year before this. It had been released as the album’s third single, making #20. It’s a woozy, rude, barroom stomper of a song, driven by a harpsichord, and Amos’s Kate Bush like vocals. It’s ear-catching, but it does nothing to prepare you for the remix that would eventually top the chart.
The word ‘remix’ doesn’t feel sufficient here. A remix is a song rearranged, extended, or stretched out over a new beat. This is a song completely reimagined, huge chunks chopped off it, with very little of the original remaining. One line is repeated over and over: Honey bring it close to my lips… while the other line – It’s gotta be big – must be somewhere in the original, even if I can’t quite hear it.
It’s amazing how Armand Van Helden, the DJ responsible, could hear the opening harpsichord riff and reimagine it as a modern disco bassline. Some remixes are fairly lazy, with few changes of any note; but not this. It almost samples the original, the riff and the two lines, and creates a completely different song. Van Helden is American, and the track is more house-influenced than our recent dance #1s, but there’s hints of the Prodigy and the Chemical Brothers in the big chunky beats, in the creepy background noises, and the sudden break halfway through.
The ‘Professional Widow’ of the title is apparently a snide reference to Courtney Love, something that Amos has neither confirmed nor outright denied. She had nothing to do with the remix – she was contractually obliged to approve them – but in interviews she has said she enjoys Van Helden’s version. It brought about the biggest hit of her long career, anyway – surpassing the #4 peak of the folksy ‘Cornflake Girl’ from 1994 – and is, to date, Amos’s last visit to the UK Top 10. Armand Van Helden was just getting started, and will go on to be one of the biggest dance producers of all time. He’ll be back at number one, fully credited, fairly soon.
We can’t finish without mentioning the misheard lyric – one of pop’s filthiest mondegreens – where It’s gotta be big becomes… Well, I won’t write it out. Safe to say, once you hear it you can’t unhear it. Misheard or not, it does fit in fairly well with the bawdy original.
You could say that this is a classic January #1 – a fairly random remix sneaking a week at the top in the post-Christmas lull. In fact, January 1997 is one of the best examples the phenomenon, with a run of fun and quirky one-weekers coming up that I’m looking forward to getting into.


Not explaining “mondegreen” is a classy move. Your audience thank you for the vote of confidence.
Ha well I have mentioned them in the past, so was assuming that readers must have been hanging on my every word… 😉 (I only learned the word from another commenter….)
I just listened to the original…I liked it much more…much much more.
I thought you might! It’s a completely different song
Yes it is…it’s dirty as hell also lol…I like it.
Yes, a filthy barroom stomper!
It’s so much better to me…but that is me.
I like both versions, as different as they are. Her voice is an aquired taste, but it works for the song
You were right with the Kate Bush comparison. It’s very wirey…that might be the word I don’t know.
Of all artists to get a dance remix, Tori Amos? Huh? Especially 90s Amos when she was very much a singer-songwriter. What a weird combo. I guess it’s not the weirdest pairing, but it’s like if one of Joni Mitchell’s songs got a disco remix in the late-70s and went to No. 1.
Hah, I guess Jewel – I dunno if you Brits know of her but she was big in North America and Oceania in the mid-90s – was paying attention to this when she released her off-brand dance-pop album in the early 2000s.
Anyway, songs like this make me realise that if it wasn’t for Britpop and some hip hop/rap, I’d have written off the 90s UK Singles Chart. As an Aussie, I have to stay, the 90s might be the only time we’ve had the best songs reach the top of the pops.
I generally like Tori Amos, but this one was never a fave. It’s OK, a tad too repetitive for me but the beats are fine, tho’ I had no idea Armand Van Helden was behind it. He will back at 1 with a monster club classic, way better than this one! Tori had a lovely cover the other year, A Nightingale Sang In Berkely Square, the ancient standard, done justice. I’ll take that one over this one, and it’s not due to age – I still love a bangin’ club track… 🙂