These 20 songs about forbidden love and illicit affairs from the 50s, 60s, and 70s are sung from the point of view of those doing the cheating. 25 Songs About Falling in Love 1. Counting Crows – Accidentally … Here are several songs about falling in love. The soft-rock wave of the 1970s was starting to pick up on the concept by this time, leading to a decade's worth of oversharing on the part of some achingly sensitive people. Something’s Gotta Hold On Me – Etta James If you’ve waited a long time for love, it can feel overwhelming when it finally does arrive. Maintaining such relationships can be quite taxing. If you are, then this is the perfect playlist for you. The sadly underrated Covay was adept at blues, soul, and something he called "country funk," and this rare top 40 hit of his contains elements of all those styles. Then again, "lovers" rhyming with "discovers" is also pretty impressive. By using LiveAbout, you accept our, "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right" by Luther Ingram, 19 Classic Rock Love Songs for Valentine's Day. The way he wails on the line "What would I give?" A clarion call for a newfound era of sexual permissiveness, the big solo hit for this member of Buffalo Springfield and Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young made quite an impression. While there are lots of songs about unfaithful lovers and spouses, only a few in rock history deal with what life is like for those on the inside—the actual Other Women and Other Men who find themselves entangled in love triangles they didn't see coming. Secret Love Song by Little Mix and Featuring Jason Derulo This song by Little Mix and Jason Derulo is all about a set of lovers who happen to be in relationships with other people. Whitney Houston – Saving All My Love For You, 14. It's unclear who's cheating on who here, but Peter Cetera does specifically drop the word "affair" before urging, "Walk away if you see me coming.". Maybe it's the undeniable sexy thump of the famous Hi Rhythm Section egging her on, but the lady behind "I Can't Stand the Rain" practically explodes in frustration. That this song is one of the biggest hits on this list has a lot to do with its expert atmosphere: seductive yet romantic, shamed yet determined, sad and noble. With lines like "I wish you were my lover / But you act so undercover," delivered as only Chaka can, it set the standard for modern R&B over the next two decades. Stills got the title phrase from a remark made by musician Billy Preston. For decades, these types of scandalous tunes existed entirely the domain of blues and country music, since those genres tend to deal with life at its most basic level. If you are in a secret love affair here is a list of songs you can relate to: 1. A big, soaring power ballad about being in love with a married man. That is, except for the unlucky guy she's already seeing, who gets a pretty cavalier sendoff: "When you change your heart / save yourself and forget all the rest. One may end up hanging on until things go south. The demands of family, career, and relationships can make holding down multiple relationships very difficult indeed—and even more so when one of those relationships covers up a lie about the other. Country and Western music obviously broached the subject of cheating well before the pop mainstream dared to look at it, but Van Dyke's 1961 smash was still pretty direct for its day, leading to a whole strain of honky-tonk classics about cheatin' and lyin'. And yes, Eric Clapton's ode to his best friend George Harrison's wife, Patti Boyd, cuts so deep as to be almost painful to hear. It is all about wanting someone else while in a relationship and having to hide that love … Are you in the midst of falling for someone you never thought you’d fall in love with? The song was later covered by a legion of artists who seemed to agree that living for the moment, despite your commitments, could be exhilarating. The scandal arose partly from the fact that it was sung by the future Queen of New Orleans Soul when she was just 19 years old—and already on her second husband! Bell is most famous for the aching regret of "You Don't Miss Your Water," which can be played as the sequel to this proto-disco classic. A sort of companion piece to Johnnie Taylor's "Who's Making Love," it shows in painful detail how cheating on someone else can backfire on the cheater, trapping them in a double bind of awful secrets.