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One Headlight

"One Headlight"
One Headlight.jpg
Single by The Wallflowers
from the album Bringing Down the Horse
B-side "6th Avenue Heartache" (Acoustic)
"Angel on My Bike"
(Live)
Released November 1996
Format CD, 7" vinyl
Recorded 1994
Genre
Length 5:13 (Album Version)
4:38 (Single Version)
Label Interscope
Writer(s) Jakob Dylan
Producer(s) T-Bone Burnett
The Wallflowers singles chronology
"6th Avenue Heartache"
(1996)
"One Headlight"
(1996)
"The Difference"
(1997)

"One Headlight" is a song by American band The Wallflowers. The song was written by lead singer Jakob Dylan, and produced by T-Bone Burnett. It was released in November 1996 as the second single from the band's 1996 album, Bringing Down the Horse. In 2000, the song was listed at #58 on Rolling Stone and MTVs list of "100 Greatest Pop Songs of All Time".

According to some, the lyrics tell a fragmentary story about a former friend and her death, and the singer's emotions in the aftermath. The use of strong words and images and the incomplete story have resulted in many different interpretations of the song, which include suicide, drug abuse, death of a lover, death of one's mother, having breast cancer and/or depression.

However, Jakob Dylan has said that the song is about "the death of ideas." Dylan explained that he and the band had very little support when they were putting together the record, hence the shout-out, "C'mon, try a little". The last two lines of the chorus "we can drive it home/ with one headlight" are a reference to how the band were able to get through with their ideas despite being hindered (i.e. with one headlight) by the lack of support.

The song won Grammy Awards in 1998, 2 years after its release in the categories Best Rock Song and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group. It was named "Best Video" for 1996 in a VH1 poll. The song was performed live on the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards with Bruce Springsteen, where the music video was nominated four times, including for "Viewer's Choice". The song would reach number 58 in MTV and Rolling Stone's 2000 list "The 100 Greatest Pop Songs Since the Beatles" and was The Village Voice Pazz & Jop poll's 36th best song of the year.


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