I Feel Love

Album: I Remember Yesterday (1977)
Charted: 1 6
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  • Ooh it's so good, it's so good
    It's so good, it's so good
    It's so good

    Ooh I'm in love, I'm in love,
    I'm in love, I'm in love
    I'm in love

    Ooh I feel love, I feel love
    I feel love, I feel love
    I feel love

    I feel love
    I feel love

    Ooh fall and free, fall and free
    Fall and free, fall and free
    Fall and free

    Ooh you and me, you and me
    You and me, you and me
    You and me

    Ooh I feel love, I feel love
    I feel love, I feel love
    I feel love

    I feel love
    I feel love
    I feel love
    I feel love Writer/s: GALE ROBINSON, GUIDO KAREL JOZEF MAES, JIMMY ROBERTSON
    Publisher: BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 11

  • Melinda from AustraliaPeople wouldn’t be shocked today. But this song shocked a lot of people when it came out. Because of its overt sexual theme and all her moaning. Like she’s having an orgasm
    People were outraged. I loved it.

    I’m surprised Donna Summer got away with it. No one had done that kind of obvious moaning on music since the French 1960’s song Je t’aime moi non plus. Which was banned immediately by the BBC in England.
    But the 1970’s were different.
    And Disco was at its height when this came out. The sexual revolution had pretty much been completed.
    When I hear this song I think of that famous New York Disco of the era, Studio 54. You always saw pics of in magazines. Where Mick jagger , jerry Hall, Bianca Jagger and all the famous 70’s people danced, snorted cocaine. And allegedly had sex openly at Studio 54. Yuk.

    It appeared irresistibly glamorous. But we’ve since learned Studio 54 had a very seedy aspect.
    Donna Summer definitely visited Studio 54. I to dance. I wonder if her and Giorgio Maroda developed the equally as sexy song Love To Love You Baby after a night there.
    Donna Summer was without doubt, the undisputed Queen Of Disco. And Maroda the musical magician of the era.
  • Barry from Sauquoit, NyOn July 31st 1977, "I Feel Love" by Donna Summer entered Billboard's Hot Top 100 chart at position #86; and on November 6th, 1977 it peaked at #6 {for 1 week} and spent almost a half-year on the Top 100 {23 weeks}...It reached #1 in the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand...Between 1975 and 1999 she had thirty-two Top 100 records; fourteen made the Top 10 with four reaching #1, "MacArthur Park" {for 3 weeks in 1978}, "Hot Stuff" {for 3 weeks in 1979}, "Bad Girls" {for 5 weeks in 1979}, and "No More Tears (Enough Is Enough}" a duet with Barbra Streisand {for 2 weeks in 1979}...She just missed having six #1s when "Love to Love You Baby" and "Dim All the Lights" both peaked at #2 on the Top 100...May Ms. Summer, LaDonna Adrian Gaines, R.I.P. {1948 - 2012}.
  • Esskayess from Dallas, TxMoroder basically recycled and expanded upon the synch backup for his 'Midnight Express' soundtrack.
  • Carmelo from Genova, ItalyA masterpiece for all ages! I remember I first heard it in a disco on the Ligurian Riviera back in summer 1977 and it was BANG!!! - just love at first sight. The music seemed to come out from the walls and reach out and shake your body you could really FEEL it! It was a hot July night , just a few days before my 14th birthday and when my aunt later asked me what I would like her to get me as a present I answered straight away: "Donna Summer's latest single!" I still have it in my vinyl record collection!
  • Camille from Toronto, OhMay 23 2012: This is one of 25 songs inducted into the National Recording Registry as sounds of cultural significance. Though Summer died just the week before of cancer, her hit single was selected for the sound registry weeks ago, said Matt Barton, the library's curator of recorded sound. Summer had many hits, but "I Feel Love" rose to the top because it was a breakthrough that would change club music for years to come, according to the library's citation. "From the first time you heard it, it was just, 'Wow, this is very different,'" Barton said. "We hadn't heard this before. It was enormously influential."
  • Jay from S. Padre, TxI feel Love also. I feel love for the song, the genre, "The Donna", the era, the disco, the moaning, the dancing, the sound, and the look. I felt it most for my girlfriend at the time whom I later married. Bonding over this and other songs of the time was easy even on AM radio. The synthesizer and The Donna's sensual voice could consistently melt your coco butter.
  • Alan from Sault Ste. Marie, OnOne of the most sensual songs ever recorded. Ranks right up there with "Kiss You All Over" by Exile and "I'm Alive" by Love and Rockets.
  • John from Nashville, TnDavid Bowie played this record to Brian Eno while excitingly telling him that this was the future of music.
  • Daniel from Sydney, AustraliaI remember when this song first came out, it was actually the B side to a ballad called Can't We Just Sit Down (and talk it over) which, I think, actually charted in the US very briefly before I Feel Love hit really big.

    Dan, Sydney, AU
  • Reuben from Amsterdam, NetherlandsMoroder said in an interview that they were always looking for some new way to make catchy tunes. Apparently he made this song quite fast - no deeper meanings beneath this groundbreaking song. This song has been an inspiration for the synth dance music ever since.
  • Mervin from Austin, TxOne of the most unique songs ever made, Donna Summer's "I Feel Love" forwent the usual orchestral background on disco tracks in favor of synthesizer. Out of this world! As usual, Summer, Giorgio Moroder and Peter Bellotte were on point!
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