Never let it be said that
Michael Bolton is ignorant of his times. He may not always participate in them -- he spent the better part of the new millennium on the sidelines, occasionally singing covers, even indulging in an album-long tribute to
Sinatra -- but he’s aware of them, as
One World One Love, released in the U.K. in 2009 and the U.S. in 2010, illustrates. For his first mainstream pop album since 2002, he immerses himself in cool contemporary trends, trading heavily in Auto-Tune, enlisting
Ne-Yo and a pre-fame
Lady Gaga for some collaborations, dabbling in some reggae rhythms, adapting some coolly synthesized rhythms without ever quite achieving the iciness of
Ryan Tedder. Strangely,
Bolton’s impeccably recorded adult contemporary seems much warmer than most modern AC, something that goes a long way toward making
One World One Love appealing: even though the songs are, as a whole, not as memorable as his earliest hits, there’s a nice easy confidence here -- it’s the sound of an old pro doing what he does best. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine