The 1970s were an amazing decade for music, culture, art, and more. And if you were a young thing back in the 70s, you can probably recall more than a few love songs you listened to on repeat while pining for the love of another. The following love songs from the 1970s, specifically, might ring a nostalgic bell. Letโs take a look! A couple of these tunes may have been puppy love anthems from your younger years that you totally forgot about.
โHow Deep Is Your Loveโ by Bee Gees
This song is still so good today. Itโs a classic soft rock gem and one of The Bee Geesโ most signature tunes. This little ballad was recorded and released in 1977. It became an almost instant hit, in part due to its inclusion in the film Saturday Night Fever. โHow Deep Is Your Loveโ by The Bee Gees was a chart-topper across the board. The track reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and charts in France, Canada, Brazil, and elsewhere.
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โI Honestly Love Youโ by Olivia Newton-John
Olivia Newton-John enjoyed more than a few hits in the 1970s, but โI Honestly Love Youโ is on the underrated deep cut side of those hits nowadays. Though, it was far from underrated at the time. This gorgeous soft rock tune with a country-pop vibe was released in 1974 and is a standout single from the album Long Live Love (and If You Love Me, Let Me Know in the US). The love song was a chart-topper upon its release and Newton-Johnโs very first No. 1 hit in the US and Canada. And it scored two Grammy Awards the following year.
โIโm Not In Loveโ by 10cc
This is one of my personal favorite โloveโ songs from the 1970s. Though, some wouldnโt call it a love song at all, considering our narrator opts to repeat that heโs โnot in loveโ over and over again. But anyone who has been truly in love knows that sometimes, some denial gets in the way. The prog-pop soft rock tune โIโm Not In Loveโ by 10cc is a masterpiece in its use of tape looping harmonies, but on the surface, itโs also a catchy love song. This release made it all the way to No. 2 on the Hot 100 chart after it was released in 1975.
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(Original Caption) Charlie Daniels (3rd from left), the entertainer who dedicated his last album to "gun-rotting whiskey and hellatious fights" says he will not play gentle music just to please "damn Yankees drinking martinis" 1/20 at Jimmy Carter's inaugural reception. Daniels said he plans to play the same brand of foot-stomping Southern music he and his band have always produced. They are (from left), Charlie Hayward, Tom Crain, Daniels, Joel Digregorio, Don Murray and Fred Edwards.







