768. ‘I Wanna Be the Only One’, Eternal ft. BeBe Winans

Ooh Lordy. Hallelujah! When I listened to this gospel-pop classic for the first time in absolute yonks, I was dragged off on a wave of nostalgia. I struggled to make any notes. It was the biggest Proustian rush I’ve experienced yet, as we delve further into the chart-toppers of my childhood.

I Wanna Be the Only One, by Eternal ft. BeBe Winans (their 1st and only #1s)

1 week, from 25th May – 1st June 1997

But for a nostalgic moment like this to really hit home, the memory needs to be a good one. Proust loved his madeleines, and I realised how much I enjoy this record, one of 1997’s best #1s. It’s a perfect blending of soul, R&B, and gospel, with enough sass and enough honesty, enough fun and enough seriousness… I may be waffling slightly, but the point stands.

In fact, this song survived the moment that I found out that it had religious connotations (well, I mean, it is a gospel song). Aged eleven, I was beginning to question why I had to tag along with my mother to church every Sunday. It wasn’t so much that I was questioning the theology as much as I just wanted a lie-in but my mum, to her credit, let me make my own decision. By twelve I had stopped going. If any of the hymns we sang had had the heft of this tune, however, I’d have been in the front pew every week, hands to the sky.

The key changes at the end, for example, could convert the most atheist of hearts. In my mind I remembered at least five as the song soars to a conclusion, but there’s actually only two. The one complaint you could make about this tune is that it’s not exactly subtle, that it sledgehammers its point home. But honestly, that’s what a song like this needs. The start of the second verse, for example: Now you deserve a mansion… My Lord, you too… is a bizarre line – clunky almost – a ridiculous call and response moment; but also the best bit of the song.

Eternal were probably the biggest British girl group in the first half of the 1990s. The only British girl group of the time, really, until the Spice Girls came along and opened the floodgates for the final years of the decade. They were a sort of British answer to En Vogue, two sisters and two others. Louise Nurding had left in 1995 to start a middling solo career, and to become one of the original WAGs by marrying Liverpool midfielder Jamie Redknapp. This was their 11th Top 10 hit since 1993, and they would only have one more before splitting in 1999. Fair to say, although they had some good pop singles, they peaked with this – a fitting record to become their only chart-topper.

Helping in that regard was BeBe Winans, an American soul and gospel singer, who had written and produced two of Eternal’s earlier hits. He provides the perfect counterpoint to the girls’ harmonies, giving the lyrics much more meaning than if they had been sung by just female voices. I’m not sure I’ve ever heard another song by him, but he left his mark.

‘I Wanna Be the Only One’ was the 2nd most played song on British radio for the year, meaning that plenty of people surely got sick of it. One of my key memories of the record is hearing it in a car park while eating an ice-cream, presumably sometime in May or June 1997, just at the moment I was getting interested in the charts (I believe that this was Track 1 on ‘Now 37’). Soon after that I would start faithfully writing the Top 40 down every week, trying to keep up with the live radio countdown in those pre-internet days. It’s not an exaggeration to say that if it hadn’t been for songs like this grabbing my attention at that formative age, I might not be writing this blog now.

10 thoughts on “768. ‘I Wanna Be the Only One’, Eternal ft. BeBe Winans

  1. I’ve always thought the lyric was “now you deserve a mention“. Thanks to this blog, I now know my mistake!

  2. I liked this a lot, but ‘Just a Step From Heaven’ blew this one out of the water. Eternal, En Vogue and TLC were far better singers than the Spice Girls stable of acts.

  3. At first I didn’t recognise the song by the name, but within the first 10 seconds, I immediately realised I knew this song. Fantastic song. I have a huge soft spot for R&B/gospel/pop fusion so this is right up my alley. Shame it didn’t chart in the US, though down under, it did make it all the way to #10.

  4. Oops I’m afraid I’m not a fan of Eternal. I liked Louise’s mildly inoffensive pop spin-off career but Eternal’s wailing just made me wince when they tried to step it up a gear. Not Mariah and not Whitney, please don’t try and compete! A couple of their early singles were pretty decent but they got more and more on my nerves as they went on and peaked with this one, which I turn off as soon as it comes on the radio, can’t stand it – you’re right about the radio overplay at the time (and since). Not in the same class as En Vogue and TLC and many lesser US girl groups of the 90’s. Bebe Winans is fine, though. Sorry to rain on your nostalgia parade there, but it is admittedly still popular so put it down to just me OD’ing on it 🙂

    • What…. Well, I’m surprised. I thought this would have been something you enjoyed. Even though it has been done to death, I’d still belt along with them if (when) it comes on Smooth FM… If I ever found myself listening to Smooth FM, that is.

      • I did like it for a while, and you’re right I’m generally very much into Gospel-based music from Oh Happy Day onwards, maybe if I was free from hearing it for a decade or 2 I’d be more nostalgic about it. It’s happened before – Amazing Grace was on my pet hates for quite a while (any version) and then I underwent a conversion back and bigger in Star Trek: Wrath Of Khan, Spock’s funeral 🙂

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