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Lyrics I

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I Will Be Home Again

Words & Music by Lou Singer, Benny Benjamin

Go Back

I Will Be Home Again

Words & Music by Lou Singer, Benny Benjamin

Lyrics:

I will be home again
Don't worry dear
I'll be home again
So won't you dry the tear
The promise in your eyes
Will see me through
There'll be brighter skies
When I come back to you

A-a-ah sweetheart
The love you're giving
Thrills my hungry heart
You make my life worth the living
Although we are apart
I will be home again
We'll start anew
Darling until then
Our dreams will have to do

A-a-ah sweetheart
The love you're giving
Thrills my hungry heart
You make my life worth the living
Although we are apart
I will be home again
We'll start anew
Darling until then
Our dreams will have to do

First album:

RCA LSP-2231, 1960, Elvis Is Back

First recorded:

Studio Session for RCA RCA Studio B, Nashville, April 4, 1960

More info:

Elvis recorded I Will Be Home Again on April 4, 1960, at RCA's Nashville studios. It was the first recording on which Charlie Hodge sang duet with Elvis. Bennie Benjamin, Raymond Leveen, and Lou Singer composed the song in 1944.

Lyrics: I will be home again
Don't worry dear
I'll be home again
So won't you dry the tear
The promise in your eyes
Will see me through
There'll be brighter skies
When I come back to you

A-a-ah sweetheart
The love you're giving
Thrills my hungry heart
You make my life worth the living
Although we are apart
I will be home again
We'll start anew
Darling until then
Our dreams will have to do

A-a-ah sweetheart
The love you're giving
Thrills my hungry heart
You make my life worth the living
Although we are apart
I will be home again
We'll start anew
Darling until then
Our dreams will have to do
First album:

RCA LSP-2231, 1960, Elvis Is Back

First recorded:

Studio Session for RCA RCA Studio B, Nashville, April 4, 1960

More info: Elvis recorded I Will Be Home Again on April 4, 1960, at RCA's Nashville studios. It was the first recording on which Charlie Hodge sang duet with Elvis. Bennie Benjamin, Raymond Leveen, and Lou Singer composed the song in 1944.