Yours
Ray Charles Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

Oh-oh-oh-oh
Oh-oh-oh-oh

Love me with all your heart, that's all I want, dear
Love me with all your heart or not at all
Just promise me this, that you'll give me all your kisses
Every winter, every summer, every fall
When we are far apart, or when you're near me
Love me with all your heart as I love you
Don't give me your love for a moment or an hour
Love me always as you loved me from the start
With every beat of your heart

Oh-oh-oh-oh

When we are far apart or when you're near me (uh-uh-uh)
Love me with all your heart as I love you (uh-uh-uh)
Don't give me your love for a moment or an hour
Love me always as you loved me from the start
With every beat of your heart
With every beat of your heart
With every beat of your heart





Uhh

Overall Meaning

The lyrics to Ray Charles's song "Yours" convey a message of unconditional love and commitment. The song essentially pleads for the listener to love the singer with their whole heart and to be devoted to him or her continuously. The repetition of the phrase "Love me with all your heart" emphasizes the importance of genuine and unwavering love, suggesting that anything less than giving all of one's love is not enough.


The singer expresses their desire for the listener's love not just in the present moment, but throughout all seasons and times of their lives. It signifies a longing for a love that endures through both joyful and difficult times, emphasizing the importance of consistency and dedication in a relationship. The line "Don't give me your love for a moment or an hour" shows that fleeting moments of affection are insufficient; instead, the singer wants a love that is constant and everlasting.


Line by Line Meaning

Love me with all your heart, that's all I want, dear
I desire your complete and unwavering love and devotion


Love me with all your heart or not at all
Either give me your wholehearted love or don't give it to me at all


Just promise me this, that you'll give me all your kisses
Make a commitment to share your affectionate kisses with me


Every winter, every summer, every fall
Throughout all seasons, in times of hot and cold, demonstrate your love


When we are far apart, or when you're near me
Whether we are physically distant or in close proximity


Love me with all your heart as I love you
Express your love for me just as deeply as I do for you


Don't give me your love for a moment or an hour
Do not show me fleeting or temporary love


Love me always as you loved me from the start
Maintain your love for me constantly, just as you did when our love first began


With every beat of your heart
Let your love resonate and be evident in every heartbeat you have


Uhh
Vocalization without a specific meaning




Lyrics © Peermusic Publishing
Written by: Carlos Rigual Rodriguez, Carlos Alberto Martinoli, Mario Rigual Rodriguez, Sunny Skylar

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Comments from YouTube:

MrLive2win

About to buy this wonderful album. It will go from "Yours" to mine.

Kwame Benneh

This is my favourite Ray Charles album. Thanks for that

Donna Marie

Siriusly Sinatra plays this one.  Haunting and beautiful song.

Mario Boulet

THANKS A ZILLION!!!!

Mark Blackburn

Hit the 'back 1 hour' button (the novelty will never wear off!) and Siriusly Sinatra satellite radio is playing Ray Charles' recording of YOURS – an obscure tune with a Spanish lyric from 1911 that the Jimmy Dorsey orchestra turned into a hit exactly 80 years ago – with a then- new English lyric. [Like another obscure song which Ray rescued from oblivion (“Ruby”) – YOURS gets Sirius airplay perhaps once or twice a year.]

Like Sinatra, Ray Charles drew public attention to such gems that might otherwise simply disappear from public awareness: Ray's straight-up modest delivery of YOURS is quite unlike his well-known R&B hits – where Charles' unique vocal athleticism is at its best.
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[re “Hit versions” Wiki says:]

"Yours" became popular due to the recordings by the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra, and Vera Lynn . . . The recording by Jimmy Dorsey featured vocals by Bob Eberly and Helen O'Connell[19] and reached the Billboard Best Seller chart on May 23, 1941, and lasted 13 weeks on the chart, peaking at #2. The recording by Vera Lynn  reached the Billboard Best Seller chart on October 17, 1952, and lasted 8 weeks on the chart, peaking at #8.

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Since the last time we checked Ray Charles' Wiki entry there is some newly-entered, erudite analysis of what made Ray's vocal stylings so 'uniquely great':

Ray Charles possessed one of the most recognizable voices in American music. In the words of musicologist Henry Pleasants:

Sinatra, and Bing Crosby before him, had been masters of words. Ray Charles is a master of sounds. His records disclose an extraordinary assortment of slurs, glides, turns, shrieks, wails, breaks, shouts, screams and hollers, all wonderfully controlled, disciplined by inspired musicianship, and harnessed to ingenious subtleties of harmony, dynamics and rhythm... It is either the singing of a man whose vocabulary is inadequate to express what is in his heart and mind or of one whose feelings are too intense for satisfactory verbal or conventionally melodic articulation. He can't tell it to you. He can't even sing it to you. He has to cry out to you, or shout to you, in tones eloquent of despair—or exaltation. The voice alone, with little assistance from the text or the notated music, conveys the message.


Pleasants continues: "Ray Charles is usually described as a baritone, and his speaking voice would suggest as much, as would the difficulty he experiences in reaching and sustaining the baritone's high E and F in a popular ballad. But the voice undergoes some sort of transfiguration under stress, and in music of gospel or blues character he can and does sing for measures on end in the high tenor range of A, B flat, B, C and even C sharp and D, sometimes in full voice, sometimes in an ecstatic head voice, sometimes in falsetto. In falsetto he continues up to E and F above high C. On one extraordinary record, 'I'm Going Down to the River'...he hits an incredible B flat...giving him an overall range, including the falsetto extension, of at least three octaves."

Thanks kowaladmwz for sharing. Celebrated this night at Sinatra Family - forum - "Siriusly Sinatra" - MY FAVORITE VERSION, YOURS TOO? https://sinatrafamily.com/forum/showthread.php/50225-My-Favorite-Version-%28yours-too-%29?p=1308093#post1308093

mauro dessy

mr. charles ...in love.mauro dessy

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