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"You Are the One" is a song written by Pat Patterson, performed by Carl Smith (with the Tunesmiths), and released by Columbia Records (catalog No. 21522). [1] In June 1956, it entered Billboard magazine's country charts, peaked at No. 4 on the disc jockey chart (No. 5 juke box), and remained on the chart for 23 weeks.
"You're the One" is a song by Petula Clark with lyrics by Tony Hatch, recorded in 1965. It was later also included on the 1965 album I Know a Place . "You're the One" was a Top 30 hit on the UK Singles Chart for Clark, but was more successful as a top ten US single release by The Vogues .
"You Are the One" is a song by Norwegian band A-ha, released as the fourth single from their third studio album, Stay on These Roads (1988). It was remixed by Justin Strauss for single release. It was remixed by Justin Strauss for single release.
Glen Campbell originally recorded the song on his 1973 album I Knew Jesus (Before He Was a Star), which influenced the Oak Ridge Boys' rendition.The song was adapted twice—once by Hovie Lister and the Statesmen Quartet in 1974 with gospel-themed verses, and by the American Broadcasting Company in 1978 into their "We're The One" advertising campaign with a more 70's pop style, frequently ...
Musically, journalist described the song as a "rock ballad" and "more laid back" than much of the band's material released at the time.[1] [9] Jake Kiszka described the song as being inspired by the 1960s folk music revival, taking inspiration from artists such as Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell and Joan Baez. [10]
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"You Are the One," written by D. Gaskins and K. Lowery, was a single from the soundtrack to the 1989 film Lean on Me. The following year, it was included on their second album Louder Than Love . Track listing
B. David Zarley from The Line of Best Fit praised the song, describing it as "goth pop combines pop song craft and approachability with a drenching layer of dark luxuriousness", and said it "shifts from clipped vocals and pallbearer shuffling verses to a lofting, romantic hook; the entire thing is a microcosm of the microgenre, vivisected and labelled and easily consumable."