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The One

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The One album cover
01
Simple Life
6:26
$0.99
02
The One
5:53
$1.29
03
Sweat It Out
6:39
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04
Runaway Train
5:23
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05
Whitewash County
5:30
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06
The North
5:15
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07
When A Woman Doesn't Want You
4:56
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08
Emily
4:58
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09
On Dark Street
4:43
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10
Understanding Women
5:03
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11
The Last Song
3:33
$1.29
12
Suit Of Wolves
5:49
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13
Fat Boys And Ugly Girls
4:14
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 68:22

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

09.24.12
Setting the dusky tone for his '90s output
2001 | Label: ISLAND RECORDS

In 1990, “Sacrifice” from 1989′s Sleeping with the Past somehow became more popular in the UK than any of Elton’s feted ’70s hits. This breakup ballad set a dusky tone for his ’90s output starting with 1992′s The One, his first since undergoing treatment for multiple addictions.

It’s also the first since the breakup of Bernie Taupin’s second marriage, and it was dedicated to Vance Buck, a former lover and lasting friend of Elton’s who died of AIDS a few days after its release. Sung from the perspective of a dying gay man who unexpectedly reconciles with his previously rejecting father, “The Last Song” is this album’s unqualified knockout.

The other songs are considerably longer and slicker to lesser effect, but there’s the sense that everyone involved is now striving for something of substance. There’s less mush, but also fewer hooks: The chorus of “On Dark Street” — a refinement of Sleeping with the Past‘s R&B nostalgia — is the one catchy bit.

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very solid

martuccij

under-appreciated album....

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Elton John once claimed that he could remember The One among his latter-day albums because it was the first he recorded without drugs or alcohol. If true — and there’s no reason to doubt him — that could be the reason why this has more character than most of his albums since the early ’80s, holding together well in its deliberately measured, mature songcraft by Elton and Bernie Taupin. There’s less gloss than on many of his late-’80s records, and John gives a fairly convincing performance throughout this set of pretty good songs. If there’s any real problem, it’s that the album just doesn’t have many memorable songs. Though they’re all reasonably melodic and well-crafted, none of the them have memorable musical or lyrical hooks and, if anything, Chris Thomas’ production is too evenhanded. Still, even if it isn’t memorable, it does represent a meaningful move forward, just because it does sound warmer and more considered than the records that immediately preceded it. [The 2001 German reissue contains two bonus tracks, "Suit of Wolves" and "Fat Boys and Ugly Girls."] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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