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Published: Friday, 22 November 2024 at 09:17 AM
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No one can resist a good love song. And no musical playlist – be it pop, jazz, folk or classical – is complete without one. Here, in no particular order, are ten of the best love songs in history.
Translating as ‘I love you…me neither’, this naughty little song was originally written by director Serge Gainsbourg for Brigitte Bardot in 1967. But the version we know is the one he recorded, in 1969, with his then-partner: the English-French actress and singer Jane Birkin, who died last month, aged 76.
Birkin, apparently had heard the Bardot version and thought it ‘so hot’. She later admitted that ‘I only sang it because I didn’t want anybody else to sing it’, jealous at the thought of Gainsbourg sharing a recording studio with someone else.
She also ‘got a bit carried away with the heavy breathing – so much so, in fact, that I was told to calm down, which meant that at one point I stopped breathing altogether. If you listen to the record now, you can still hear that little gap.’
Some speculated that they had actually recorded themselves having sex, to which Gainsbourg retorted: ‘Thank goodness it wasn’t, otherwise I hope it would have been a long-playing record.’
This goose-flesh-inducing classic is taken from La bohème, Puccini’s 1895 opera about a group of young bohemians living in Paris. Sung as the closing number of Act One, as a duet between the main lovers – Rodolfo and Mimi – it is one of the most romantic and best love songs in all of opera – a cocktail of ravishing orchestration and gooseflesh-inducing melody.
Written in 1959 by the Belgian singer-songwriter Jacques Brel, this song is considered by some as ‘Brel’s ultimate classic’. Brel wrote it after his mistress ‘Zizou’ (Suzanne Gabriello) threw him out of her life and later said that it was not a love song but ‘a hymn to the cowardice of men’, and the degree to which they were prepared to humiliate themselves.
Still, it sounds quite a lot like a love song, which is why we’re including it in this list anyway.
Technically this aria from The Marriage of Figaro is about lust rather than love, but let’s not quibble over details. It is sung by the randy teenager Cherubino and describes his involuntary physical response to the Countess, on whom he has a puppyish crush.
Mozart’s music is elegantly simple, but beneath the swan-like surface is a tremulousness befitting the song’s subject matter. As an operatic portrayal of nascent adolescent sexuality, this is spot on as one of the best love songs in opera.
That a song of such innocent, heart-felt passion could come from Edith Piaf is striking: hers is not the happiest of stories. Abandoned at birth by her mother, the French crooner spent much of her youth growing up in a brothel. At 17 she had a child out of wedlock and went on to have a string of failed romances, as well as various drug and alcohol dependencies.
She wrote ‘Hymne à l’amour’ in 1949 for the love of her life: the married French boxer, Marcel Cerdan, with whom she had a year-long affair before he was killed in a plane crash en-route to visit her.
You could say there was something eerily prophetic about the song’s last verse: ‘If one day life tears you away from me/If you die and are far from me/It does not matter if you love me.’ It’s certainly one of the most poignant moments in any love song.
First written in 1937 by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, ‘My Funny Valentine’ stands out for being a genuine song about the warts-n’-all reality of human love. Instead of idealising its subject, it lists his faults, before concluding with a declaration of love: ‘Your looks are laughable/Unphotographable/yet you’re my favourite work of art’.
Although originally sung by a woman about a man, the lyrics are neutral enough to allow the song to be sung by either gender; in fact, one of the most famous cover versions was performed by Frank Sinatra. All of which makes this one of the most moving, identifiable love songs in the Great American Songbook.
Written by Irving Berlin for in 1934 for his new stage musical Top Hat, this is the iconic song that Fred Astaire sings to Ginger Rogers as they dance, which went on to be nominated for the Best Song Oscar for 1936.
In the event, ‘Cheek to Cheek’ lost out on the award to ‘Lullaby of Broadway’. No matter: it is still one of the most popular songs of all time. At least 438 different artists have recorded it. This version, sung by Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong (two of the best jazz singers ever), is one of the most popular of all.
One of the most enduring love songs in popular music history, ‘Unchained Melody’ was originally penned in 1955 by Alex North (music) and Hy Zaret (lyrics). Its original incarnation was as a theme tune for the movie Unchained. Since then, though, ‘Unchained Melody’ has been covered by numerous artists, with the 1965 version by The Righteous Brothers becoming the definitive recording.
Like all of our best love songs in this list, this one beautifully expresses a deep longing and romantic devotion, as encapsulated in its heartfelt lyrics and soaring melody. The Righteous Brothers’ ‘Unchained Melody’ experienced a surge in popularity after it was featured in the 1990 film Ghost, during the famous pottery scene with Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore.
A blend of soulful vocals and orchestral accompaniment, the track builds to a powerful emotional crescendo.
‘The Water of Tyne’ is one of the best-known British folk songs and choirmasters often teach it to students.
Written in a Newcastle dialect, it tells the story of a lover who has been separated from the singer by the River Tyne. Despite being about 500 years old, is still a musical emblem of the North East, with artists from Sting to Sir Thomas Allen putting their stamp on it.
Sometimes called ‘O Waly Waly’, this old Scottish folk song is as famous for its hymn-like melody as it is for the poignant truth of its lyrics: ‘Love is gentle, love is kind, the sweetest flower when first it’s new. But love grows old and waxes cold.’ Even true love ‘can fade like morning dew.’
Over the years, artists ranging from Bob Dylan to the American jazz band Oregon have performed ‘The Water is Wide’. Meanwhile various classical arrangements – not least by Benjamin Britten and John Rutter – have capitalised on the song’s spare beauty.
Recorded in autumn 1958, Buddy Holly apparently wrote this lyrical evocation of domestic bliss as a wedding gift for Maria Elena Holly (now aged 90). It is a pretty powerful little song, whose delicate lyrics and beautiful melody are inspired by the old spiritual ‘I’ll be alright’. They remind us just how much the world lost when Buddy Holly was killed in an airplane crash just four months later – in February 1959 – aged 22.