One Step Out of Time

"One Step Out of Time", written and composed by Paul Davies, Tony Ryan, and Victor Stratton, was the United Kingdom's entry at the Eurovision Song Contest 1992, performed by Michael Ball.

"One Step Out of Time"
Single by Michael Ball
Released1992
GenrePop
Michael Ball singles chronology
"It's Still You"
(1991)
"One Step Out of Time"
(1992)
"If I Can Dream"
(1992)
Eurovision Song Contest 1992 entry
Country
Artist(s)
Language
Composer(s)
  • Paul Davies
  • Tony Ryan
  • Victor Stratton
Lyricist(s)
  • Paul Davies
  • Tony Ryan
  • Victor Stratton
Conductor
Finals performance
Final result
2nd
Final points
139
Entry chronology
◄ "A Message to Your Heart" (1991)   
"Better the Devil You Know" (1993) ►

The song was included on Ball's 1992 self-titled debut album as well as the album Past and Present which was released on 9 March 2009.[2]

Background

Composition

The song is a mid-tempo ballad, relating the singer's comfort with being "one step out of time" in relation to rejecting the reality around him, instead pining after his former lover. Not accepting that his relationship is over, and spurning the disapproval of his friends, he wishes to put "his love on the line" one more time, imploring his former lover to just let him know what he had done wrong.

Selection process

After the disappointing result Samantha Janus received on behalf of the United Kingdom at Rome in 1991, the UK national final, A Song for Europe, was retooled. Reverting to the selection process which decided the entries from 1964 to 1975, a singer was picked internally by the BBC, and the public would vote on which song would go with them to the Eurovision finals. Ball sang eight songs on A Song for Europe 1992, and "One Step Out of Time," performed seventh, emerged as the winner by an overwhelming margin (over 60,000 telephone votes separated the first and second-place finishers).

At Eurovision

At Malmö, the song was performed sixteenth on the night, after Austria's Tony Wegas with "Zusammen geh'n", and before Ireland's Linda Martin with "Why Me?" At the end of judging that evening, "One Step Out of Time" took the second-place slot with 139 points, it had been the pre-contest favourite. Belgium, Austria, Denmark and Germany awarded the UK their 12 points that evening. Despite losing by 16 points to Ireland's entry "Why Me?",[3] the UK received more 12 point designations than Ireland (four to three). This would be the third of four second-place finishes the UK had placed between 1988 and 1993.

Charts

Before Eurovision, the song débuted and peaked at No. 20 on the UK Singles Chart, and stayed in the chart for 7 weeks .[4]

Chart (1992) Peak
position
UK Singles Official Charts Company[5] 20
gollark: "Fun"
gollark: I've said it repeatedly and it continues to be annoying: measuring neglected experiments' ToD. The low-precision timer makes them harder, via tediousness, not any actual fun mechanics.
gollark: Bad Idea #3783: genetic diseases from inbreeding.
gollark: Bad idea #1959: a breed with dimorphic eggs but monomorphic anything else.
gollark: Especially the AP times.

References

  1. "Ronnie Hazlehurst". independent.co.uk. 3 October 2007. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  2. "MICHAEL'S NEW ALBUM PAST AND PRESENT - THE VERY BEST OF MICHAEL BALL RELEASED 9 MARCH 2009". Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  3. "Eurovision Song Contest 1992". eurovision.tv. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  4. "One Step Out Of Time". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  5. "The UK's highest charting Eurovision stars revealed!". Retrieved 2015-05-10.
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