The Partridge Family – I Would Have Loved You Anyway
“I Would Have Loved You Anyway” is the Partridge Family at their most quietly grown—love spoken in the past tense, but with a tenderness that refuses to become bitter. In…
“I Would Have Loved You Anyway” is the Partridge Family at their most quietly grown—love spoken in the past tense, but with a tenderness that refuses to become bitter. In…
“Together (Havin’ A Ball)” is pure Partridge-world sunshine—an unreleased-for-decades TV-era gem that finally let listeners take the ride together. There’s a special kind of nostalgia that doesn’t feel like “the…
“I Really Want to Know You” is a softly lit confession—The Partridge Family stepping away from TV sparkle to ask for something rarer: genuine emotional access. In the bright, mass-market…
“Friend and a Lover” is the Partridge Family’s bittersweet middle ground—when devotion wants to be grown-up, but pop still asks it to smile. “Friend and a Lover” arrived at a…
“The Christmas Song” in The Partridge Family universe is less a performance than a warm lamp in the window—Shirley Jones stepping forward to sing comfort itself. In a catalogue built…
“How Long Is Too Long” feels like a quiet question asked at midnight—when you’ve waited so faithfully that patience begins to sound like sorrow. By the time The Partridge Family…
A road song with a backbone—choosing motion over apology, mile after mile. Let’s pin down the ledger before we follow the taillights. “Down the Road I Go” is the title…
A prayer whispered after the sirens—holding on to love when the night won’t give it back. Start with the anchors, so memory has a handrail. “Tell Me I Was Dreaming”…
A steady hand on the wheel—love measured not by talk but by what you’ll carry. Put the anchors down first, so the memory has something to hold. “Strong Enough to…
A suitcase, a warm wind, and the split-second when you decide not to look back. Before the train pulls out, a few anchors for the memory book. “Southbound Train” closes…