"Jackie's Strength" is a song by Tori Amos, released as the second single from her 1998 album From the Choirgirl Hotel. It reached #54 on the U.S. Hot 100 chart. The remix single, released the following year, reached number one on the Hot Dance Club Play chart in the U.S.[1] The lyrics refer to Jackie Onassis, there is also a brief reference to the Kennedy assassination ("Shots rang out, the police came"), though Amos herself explained that the song also concerns her own personal doubts about marriage.[2] Amos reiterated this in an interview with columnist Steven Daly in Rolling Stone (Issue #789; June 25, 1998).

"Jackie's Strength"
Artwork for 1998 US enhanced CD single
Single by Tori Amos
from the album From the Choirgirl Hotel
B-side"Never Seen Blue" "Beulah Land"
ReleasedSeptember 15, 1998 (US)
February 23, 1999 (Remixes)
Recorded1997
Length4:26
LabelAtlantic
Songwriter(s)Tori Amos
Producer(s)Tori Amos
Tori Amos singles chronology
"Spark"
(1998)
"Jackie's Strength"
(1998)
"Cruel/"Raspberry Swirl"
(1998)

Background

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"Jackie's Strength" is really... I was asked to get married, right? And I was quite nervous because I never thought I'd get married before. It just wasn't something that I was gonna do. Even though I believe in monogamy, just having the church and state condone my union wasn't important to me. And in fact, I really didn't want that. So, when he asked me, it brought up, obviously, a lot of things. And I started going back in my little movie in my head, different moments of my life. And I remember my mother telling me that the day Kennedy died, John F. Kennedy, that she put me down, she had to lay me down because her heart started to slow down and she couldn't breathe. And um, all she thought of was Jackie and the strength that it would take Jackie to lead the nation.. which she did. And I really knew that I was gonna need some kind of strength because I'm made up of like two personalities. There's one side of me that could very easily have ended up at the 7-Eleven sitting outside drinking a Slurpee in my wedding dress and just missing the whole thing. And then there's the other one that did make it to the church. So, this song is about the one that drank the Slurpee. She's still out there somewhere.

Music video

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The music video, which is in black and white, portrays Amos as a bride on her wedding day. She travels in a taxi cab, hiding from her wedding party as the taxi passes by the church where she is to be married. The video includes imagery of realistic situations such as teen pregnancy, pre-marital sex, interracial relationships and use of medication by elderly persons. It was directed by James Brown (the cinematographer, not funk and soul musician).

Track listing

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US Enhanced CD single

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Includes videos of "Jackie's Strength" and "Raspberry Swirl"

  1. "Jackie's Strength" - 4:17
  2. "Never Seen Blue" - 3:41
  3. "Beulah Land" - 2:56

US CD remix single

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  1. "Jackie's Strength (Wedding Cake Edit)" - 4:03
  2. "Father Lucifer (Sylkscreen Remix)" - 4:30
  3. "Jackie's Strength (Wedding Cake Club Mix)" - 8:40
  4. "Jackie's Strength (One Rascal Dub #1)" - 6:24
  5. "Father Lucifer (Sylkscreen Remix Instrumental)" - 4:26
  6. "Jackie's Strength (Wedding Cake Meltdown Mix)" - 8:19
  7. "Jackie's Strength (One Rascal Dub #2)" - 5:02
  8. "Jackie's Strength (Bonus Beats)" - 2:41

Charts

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Year Chart Position
1998 U.S. Hot 100 Airplay 42
1998 U.S. Hot 100 54[3]
1999 U.S. Hot Dance Club Play 1
U.S. Hot Dance Single Sales 5
1999 Canadian Hot 100 12

Year-end charts

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Chart (2001) Position
Canada (Nielsen SoundScan)[4] 169

Reception

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More than 10,000 units of the single have been sold as of October 3, 1998.[3] It also peaked at number 33 in Billboard Hot 100 Singles Sales.[3]

Release history

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Country Date Version Format Label Catalog Ref.
United States September 15, 1998 Original CD Atlantic 2-84163 [5]
Cassette 4-84163
Canada September 22, 1998 CD
United States February 23, 1999 Remixes CD Atlantic 2-84442 [6]
Double 12" 0-84442
Canada March 16, 1999 CD CD 84442

References

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  1. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). Hot Dance/Disco: 1974-2003. Record Research. p. 20.
  2. ^ Quotes from interviews with Tori Amos Archived 2009-03-27 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c "Billboard". 3 October 1998.
  4. ^ "Canada's Top 200 Singles of 2001". Jam!. Archived from the original on July 26, 2002. Retrieved March 28, 2022.
  5. ^ ""from the choirgirl hotel" 2nd Single: Raspberry Swirl & Jackie's Strength". thedent.com. Retrieved December 24, 2023.
  6. ^ ""from the choirgirl hotel" 4th North American Single: Jackie's Strength/Father Lucifer Remixes". thedent.com. Retrieved December 24, 2023.

See also

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