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The More We Try - Kenny Loggins



     
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The More We Try Lyrics


Some lessons are forever
Never need to change
Write and the word is written
Then we turn the pageSome lessons take forever
Time and time again
Caught in a battle that you can't surrender
And can never winYou tried to make me the boy of your dreams
Ones that you never could find
You thought you saw your face in mineThe more we try
The more we just get lonely
Though you've shown me how
The things you say are trueThe lesson learned, is no concern
If you don't even know me
To need love is all
I really learned from youThe more we try
The more we just get lonely
Though you've shown me how
The things you say are trueThe lessons learned, are no concern

'Cause you don't even know me
Sure you've done what you can do
But when all our time is through
To be loved is all I ever needed of you

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Singer, songwriter, and guitarist Kenny Loggins was born in Everett, WA, and moved to Los Angeles in his teens. He got a job as a staff writer and wrote four songs used on a Nitty Gritty Dirt Band album in 1970, among them the hit "House at Pooh Corner." This brought him to the attention of former Poco member Jim Messina, now a staff producer at CBS, who intended to produce Loggins' debut album. The two ended up in a duo, however, and Loggins & Messina made a series of successful albums during the '70s.

Loggins & Messina broke up in 1976, and Loggins went on to solo stardom with such million-selling albums as Celebrate Me Home, Nightwatch (which included the hit "Whenever I Call You Friend"), and Keep the Fire, all in the cheerful, sensitive style he had displayed in Loggins & Messina. Loggins also became known as the king of the movie soundtrack song, scoring Top Ten hits with "I'm Alright" (from Caddyshack), "Footloose" (from Footloose), "Danger Zone" (from Top Gun), and "Nobody's Fool" (from Caddyshack II). His own albums sold less well (and came less frequently) throughout the '80s, with later efforts like 1991's Leap of Faith, 1997's The Unimaginable Life and 1998's December finding favor primarily in adult contemporary circles; in 1994, he also issued a children's album, Return to Pooh Corner, and released its sequel More Songs from Pooh Corner in early 2000.

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Kenny Loggins