Luxe Beat Magazine APRIL 2015 | Page 155

History is here to stay...in time, the Rockies may tumble, Gibraltar may crumble, they’re only made of clay, but our love is here to stay.” From “Who Cares”: “Who cares if banks fail in Yonkers, long as you’ve got a kiss that conquers...life is one long jubilee, so long as I care for you and you care for me.” Larry Hart, from “There’s a Small Hotel”: “There’s a small hotel, with a wishing well, I wish that we were there, together...we’ll thank that small hotel, we’ll creep into our little shell, and we will thank that small hotel, together.” From “Manhattan”: “We’ll have Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island too...we’ll turn Manhattan into an isle of joy.” Oscar Hammerstein II, from “People Will Say We’re in Love”, with slightly iff r nt yri or ma an ma versions: “Don’t throw bouquets at me, don’t please my folks too much, don’t laugh at my jokes too much... they’ll see, it’s all right with me, people will say we’re in love.” Cole Porter. Image courtesy of publicbroadcasting.net ABOVE George Gershwin. Image courtesy of mtv.com From “Some Enchanted Evening”, suitable for either male or female: “Some enchanted evening, you may see a stranger, across the crowded room o y to h r hi i an ma h r him yo r o n or a through your life, you may dream all alone.” Irving Berlin, from “Always”: “I’ll be loving you, always, with a love that’s true, always...not for just a year, but always.” From “It’s A Lovely Day”: “Just as you were going, leaving me all at sea, the clouds broke, they broke, and oh, what a break for me...it really doesn’t matter if the sky turns grey, long as I can be with you, it’s a lovely day.” Cole Porter, From “Begin the Beguine”: “Oh, yes, let them begin the beguine... let the stars that were there before return above you...and we’ll suddenly know what heaven we’re in, when they begin the beguine.” From “It’s DeLovely”: “And if you want to go waltzing, dear, it’s delightful, it’s delicious, it’s delovely...you can hear dear mother nature murmuring low, let yourself go...it’s deluxe, it’s delovely.” Of course, many romantic lyrics were created to be sung by a male to a female or vice versa. Examples of songs written for female singers include: Oscar Hammerstein II, from “I’m in Love With A Wonderful Guy”: “I’m as corny as Kansas in August, I’m as normal as blueberry pie...If you’ll excuse this expression I use, I’m in love, I’m in love...with a wonderful guy.” Robert Mellin, from “My One and ny o o my a r h art with such desire, every kiss you i t my o on r i myself in sweet surrender, my one and only love.” Arthur Freed, from “This Heart of Mine”: This heart of mine was doing very well...and then, quite suddenly I saw you and I dreamed of gay amours...as long as life endures, it’s yours, this heart of mine.” Ira Gershwin, from “Someone to Watch Over Me”: “I’d like to add his initials to my monogram, tell me, where is the shepherd for this lost lamb...although he may not be the man some girls think of as handsome, to my heart, 155