David Cassidy – Romance
“Romance” is the sound of grown-up longing—love stripped of fantasy, spoken softly by someone who already knows how easily dreams can bruise. When David Cassidy released “Romance” in 1985, it…
“Romance” is the sound of grown-up longing—love stripped of fantasy, spoken softly by someone who already knows how easily dreams can bruise. When David Cassidy released “Romance” in 1985, it…
“Can’t Go Home Again” aches like a postcard you never send—proof that the past can still feel like an address, even after it stops being a place. Some songs don’t…
Tomorrow” is a gentle act of faith—romance not as fireworks, but as a quiet decision to believe the next day can still be kinder than this one. By the time…
A soft-focus memory of youth and fleeting freedom, where summer becomes not a season, but a feeling that can never quite be held again. There is a particular kind of…
“Sing Me” is a soft request for rescue—when life feels too sharp, and only a familiar voice can rock the world back into place David Cassidy’s “Sing Me” isn’t the…
“Do You Believe in Magic” is a reminder that music can still unlock the younger heart—without pretending we’re young again There’s a particular kind of joy that doesn’t feel like…
“My First Night Alone Without You” is the sound of an empty room after the door has closed—David Cassidy turning solitude into a slow, aching ballad where the silence feels…
A bright, sweet melody—“Breaking Up Is Hard to Do”—that hides a quiet truth: even the sunniest love songs can carry the ache of goodbye There’s a special kind of heartbreak…
“Cry” is a farewell spoken in a whisper, where dignity replaces drama and memory does the weeping Among the many recordings in David Cassidy’s long and complicated career, “Cry” stands…
“Where Is the Morning” is a small, searching candle of a song—about waiting through a sleepless night and begging daylight to arrive with answers, not just light. On Cherish—the album…