Album Results

One Love 

Blue

One Love

Genre: ROCK/POP
Label: Virgin Records Limited
Release date: 2002

Album Reviews

Blue returned to the charts with their second release, One Love, and this time it didn't take six months to reach number one but topped the chart the week after its release. The album had been preceded by yet another up-tempo R&B song, the title track, and before that was cold their third number one single had arrived in the shape of "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word." Yet that song, to which they added a prominent beat and some harmonies to the verses, seemed to lend credence to their version; there was even a guest appearance by the song's originator, Elton John. "Riders" and "Flexin" were mid-tempo urban dance R&B tracks, and "Ain't Got You" was a chugging rhythmic series of urban sounds, complete with occasional "uhs" and other assorted interjections, while "Supersexual" even sampled the piano backing from "Still Dre." The verse of "She Told Me" sounded like a cross between R. Kelly and Craig David, but then the smooth harmony chorus breaks in and it's another Blue track. The same could be said for "U Make Me Wanna," which vocally is not unlike Usher, but again, not the same song. "Right Here Waiting" is not the Richard Marx song but a disco track that wouldn't sound out of place at a club in Ibiza. The lads' priorities are plainly spelled out on the track "Without You" as they state "I couldn't live without my cell phone, my 4X4, my credit card, I couldn't live without you" and like the previous album, it ended with a soulful ballad, "Like a Friend." ~ Sharon Mawer, All Music Guide

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Track Listing


1.  One Love more
2.  Riders more
3.  Flexin' more
4.  Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word Elton John
more
5.  She Told Me more
6.  Right Here Waiting more
7.  U Make Me Wanna more
8.  Ain't Got You more
9.  Supersexual more
10.  Don't Treat Me Like A Fool more
11.  Get Down more
12.  Privacy more
13.  Without You more
14.  Invitation more
15.  Like A Friend more
Featured Review
Up Up
The Saturdays
The second single from The Saturdays is another slice of slickly produced electropop by the numbers, aimed at making an impact in the charts. The five-piece girl band has yet to fulfil the high hopes everybody has placed on them as a future replacement for Girls Aloud or Sugababes. So far, sales are modest and not even getting close to challenge the levels of the two established all-girl megastars. "Up" also lacks of the catchiness their Yazoo-sampling debut had, but is an easy and pleasant to listen track, that even when it doesn't really stand up among the avalanche of similarly plastic pop filling our airwaves, is good enough to maintain their profile until they pick a better follow-up. "Chasing Lights" should contain some better moments to choose from.
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