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One Moment in Time

"One Moment in Time"
Whitney Houston One Moment in Time USA vinyl.jpg
Cover art for North American and UK editions
Single by Whitney Houston
from the album 1988 Summer Olympics Album: One Moment in Time
B-side "Love Is a Contact Sport"
Released August 27, 1988
Format CD single, Cassette single, 7" single
Recorded July 1988
Genre R&B, soul, gospel
Length 4:44
Label Arista
Writer(s) Albert Hammond, John Bettis
Producer(s) Narada Michael Walden
Whitney Houston singles chronology
"I Know Him So Well"
(1988)
"One Moment in Time"
(1988)
"It Isn't, It Wasn't, It Ain't Never Gonna Be"
(1989)
Music video
"One Moment in Time" on YouTube

"One Moment in Time" is a worldwide hit and an Emmy Award winning song written by Albert Hammond and John Bettis, produced by Narada Michael Walden and recorded by American singer Whitney Houston for the 1988 Summer Olympics and the 1988 Summer Paralympics held in Seoul, South Korea. The song was Houston's third number one in the UK Singles Chart, and reached number five on the US Billboard Hot 100.

The song's melody was inspired by the timeless figure of Elvis Presley, with Hammond imagining it as being sung by Presley at the opening of the Olympics. It appeared on the album 1988 Summer Olympics Album: One Moment in Time, produced in conjunction with NBC Sports' coverage of the Seoul games and which, in addition to Whitney Houston who sang it live at the main ceremony, also featured artists such as: The Four Tops, The Bee Gees, Eric Carmen, Taylor Dayne and the film composer John Williams. The track is an anthem for believing in yourself against all odds as Houston asks for "One moment in time/when I'm racing with destiny/Then, in that one moment of time, I will feel eternity."

The video for the song does not show Houston performing the song but is a basic collage of clips from previous Olympic ceremonies. It opens with footage of Olympic games from 1924 and 1964 until the lighting of the cauldron from the 1988 games is shown which fades from black and white to color. As the song plays throughout, footage from the games in 1988 and 1984 are shown. When the chorus is sung for the last time, midway through it, scenes of the awarding from 1984 and 1988 are shown. The song video ends with the 1988 Olympic Cauldron blazing.


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