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I'm the One - Deitrick Haddon



     
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I'm the One Lyrics


Verse 1
I've been watching you and holding you all of your life
Even through wrong and right
But I'll still love you
I hate to see her going through so much pain
It don't have to be this way
Just let me love youBridge
I can be the calm through your storm
I can be the way when your lost
I can be the smile when your down
Just reach out for me im here
I can give you joy so sweet
That it would make your love for me so deep
Just look up and close your eyes
And reach out for me and I'll be hereChorus
I'm the one
That your searching for
But the question is

Do you wanna be loved
I can ease the pain
I can stop the rain
But the question is
Do you wanna be lovedVerse 2
Here's my resume
Take a look imma qualified
It was me who gave you life
So much i love you
You can search all over but you will never find
I'm the way the truth the light
Why dont you choose meBridgeChorusBridge 2
Why don't you just call on me
I'll come running (i'll come running)
I'll meet you at the
I'll meet you at the point of your need
And I will answer (I will answer)
Yes I will
Just realize that im the oneChorus 3x

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Born and raised in the Motor City , Haddon was another gospel child prodigy, both as minister and musician. He gave his first sermon at the church of his father, Bishop Clarence Haddon, at age 11, and was directing the choir by age 13.

Haddon began his recording career in the mid 90s with the Voices of Unity on the small Tyscot label. As the group leader for their three albums, Haddon expressed his forward looking musical view, merging elements of soul, hip-hop and funk in the group's Gospel music. VOU had some mild success on the Gospel charts, but by the late 90s Haddon was ready to move more clearly front and center as a solo artist. His first two solo albums, This is My Story and Chainbreaker continued his artistic development and made some moderate noise on the Gospel charts.

However, I’m not sure that even the devoted fan base he had been accumulating could have anticipated his late 2002 release, Lost and Found, his first on giant Gospel label Verity. A project as ambitious as Tonex’s noted debut, Pronounced Toe-Nay, Lost and Found is an exhaustive, inspired opus by a Gospel artist who, with its release, clearly declared himself a new Gospel star.

The disc begins sounding like a dance Gospel album, leading off with two funky numbers, “D.D.” and “Oh Yeah” (the latter featuring the ubiquitous Fred Hammond). From there it covers broad territory, including bluesy, southern soul (“Ain’t Got Nothing” and the radio hit, “Sinner’s Prayer”), Praise & Worship (“Worship Medley”), Prince-style electric soul (“It’s Me”), big ballads (“Stand Still”) and joyous calypso (“The Praises Go (Up, Up, Up)”). Haddon is literally bursting with musical ideas on the album and, amazingly, virtually all work. Equally impressive is the strong lyrical content of the disc – much of it autobiographical -- focusing principally on the power of redemption and the ability of faith to rescue lost or miscast souls.

It took me almost two months to review Lost and Found, mostly because it took so long to fully absorb such an ambitious project. Now I can clearly say that this stands, with Mary Mary’s “Thankful” and Tonex’s “O2,” as perhaps the definitive modern Gospel album of this decade, and is a must for both Soul and Gospel lovers.


excerpt from The Deitrick Haddon Page at Soul Tracks (www.soultracks.com)
© Copyright 2004-5 by Chris Rizik and Soul Tracks ™



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Deitrick Haddon