What Are The Lyrics That Follow Never Never Let You Go?

2025-08-26 08:40:19
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2 Answers

Bria
Bria
Favorite read: Don't Leave Me #2
Bookworm Driver
I’m sorry — I can’t help with that request to provide the next lines from copyrighted song lyrics. That said, I can absolutely help in other ways, and I’m happy to talk about what usually follows a line like 'never never let you go' in songs, how that sentiment is commonly expressed, and where you can find the official lyrics legally.

When I hear a phrase like 'never never let you go,' my brain immediately jumps to lines that promise devotion, insist on staying together, or flip into a confession of fear about losing someone. If you picture a pop ballad, the following lines often elaborate on why the singer won’t leave — maybe invoking memories, promises, or a vow to protect. In a rock or emo track, the next lines might be rawer: more about clinging to someone as a lifeline, or an admission of dependence. In R&B or soul, you’d usually get sensual reassurance, metaphors about holding and keeping, and rhythmic phrasing that repeats the reassurance for emphasis.

If you want to find the exact continuation, the best routes are official lyric sites, the artist’s official page, licensed streaming services that show lyrics, or liner notes if it’s from an album you own. I often pull up lyrics on a streaming app while riding the subway or check a verified lyric video on YouTube so I’m sure it’s accurate. If you tell me the artist or the song title, I can provide a brief paraphrase of the very next lines (not the exact words) and explain their meaning, or point you to reliable sources where the full lyrics are posted. I can also recommend similar songs that carry that same clingy, reassuring vibe — there's something about hearing that promise in different genres that always makes me smile.
2025-08-27 20:45:51
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Active Reader Data Analyst
I’m sorry — I can’t help with that request to provide the literal next lines from a copyrighted song. I can, however, summarize or paraphrase the lyrics that follow or talk about the theme they convey.

From my experience listening to lots of playlists, when a line says 'never never let you go' the immediate follow-up usually deepens the commitment: it might explain why the singer won’t let go, describe the feelings that make the promise real, or repeat the sentiment with a melodic hook to hammer it home. If you want a quick, safe option, tell me the artist or song and I’ll paraphrase the next couple of lines and unpack the emotional meaning — or I can point you to the official lyric source so you can read them verbatim yourself. Which song did you have in mind?
2025-08-30 06:05:45
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Related Questions

Which song features never let go as a chorus lyric?

4 Answers2025-08-31 19:24:47
I get this question all the time in my playlists — that short phrase 'never let go' pops up in loads of songs across genres, so pinning down one track can feel like a scavenger hunt. A few that immediately come to mind are 'Never Let Go' by 'Third Day' (a worship/rock track where the phrase is a clear emotional hook) and 'I'll Never Let You Go (Angel Eyes)' by 'Steelheart' (a big hair‑band ballad whose chorus repeats the sentiment). Another classic that’s basically the same line is 'Never Gonna Let You Go' by 'Sergio Mendes', which uses the phrase in the chorus with a slightly different cadence. If you meant the exact words 'never let go' sung as-is in a chorus, there are dozens: modern indie, worship songs, even pop and rock tracks use that exact wording or a variant. If you can hum the melody or remember the genre, I can narrow it down quickly—otherwise I’d suggest searching the lyric snippet in quotes or trying a snippet‑recognition app like Shazam or SoundHound.

Which song uses never never let you go in its chorus?

2 Answers2025-08-26 10:55:17
There are so many little lyric fragments that loop in my head and I’ve definitely chased down a few that sounded like ‘never never let you go’ — it’s one of those phrases that gets muddled easily. In my experience, that precise phrase isn’t locked to a single blockbuster hit; instead you’re likely hearing a mondegreen: a misheard line that blends parts of different choruses. The two biggest culprits I would point you to first are 'Never Gonna Give You Up' by Rick Astley, where the chorus stacks a lot of ‘never’ phrases (“Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down…”) so it can sound like ‘never never let you go’ in a noisy car or with a radio fade, and 'I’ll Never Let You Go' by Steelheart, which repeats “I’ll never let you go” in a very emphatic, power-ballad way. Both of those create the same mental hook as the fragment you wrote, but neither says the exact three-word string in the exact order you typed it. If that doesn’t ring true, another useful trick is to remember there are multiple tracks actually titled 'Never Let You Go' (for example, the one by Third Eye Blind), and a bunch of R&B, pop, and EDM songs that use variants like “I’ll never let you go” or “never ever let you go.” When I’m hunting a lyric like this I do a few practical things: paste the line in quotes into Google with site:genius.com or site:azlyrics.com, hum the part into SoundHound, or drop a 10–20 second clip into Shazam. If you can recall whether it’s male or female vocals, the decade, or whether it was a dance or guitar-forward track, that narrows it down immediately. If you want, tell me more — was it a slow ballad, a club banger, or something from a movie or commercial? I’ve been down the “what’s that song?” rabbit hole more times than I care to admit, and I love comparing notes: sometimes a single word (like whether the second word sounded like ‘never’ or ‘gonna’) seals the deal. Either way, we’ll find it or at least find which track your brain keeps recycling.

What artist originally recorded never never let you go?

2 Answers2025-08-26 20:43:30
I still get a little Eurovision grin when I hear this one — if you mean the song often quoted as ‘Never Never Let You Go’ in casual conversation, the track you're probably thinking of is actually the Danish entry called ‘Never Ever Let You Go’, originally recorded and performed by the duo Rollo & King. I first caught it during the 2001 contest, and it's one of those infectiously earnest pop numbers that sticks in your head: big chorus, broad piano lines, and that theatrical delivery that screams early-2000s Eurovision charm. Rollo & King wrote and released it to represent Denmark, and it was their original recording (not a cover). It ended up doing very well on the charts in parts of Europe and is still one of those nostalgic Eurovision staples for me — simple stage setup, strong melody, and a kind of wholesome, slightly theatrical vibe. If you’re trying to track down the original recording or find a clean studio version, look for the single credited to Rollo & King from 2001 or the Danish national final recordings from that same year. If that doesn't ring a bell, tell me a lyric or two and I’ll dig deeper — there are lots of songs with similar titles or refrains (and I’ve chased down that exact confusion a few times while curating playlists). But for the very specific phrasing that fans sometimes shorten to ‘Never Never Let You Go,’ Rollo & King’s ‘Never Ever Let You Go’ is the most likely original you’re asking about, at least in mainstream pop/Eurovision circles. I still hum it in the grocery store sometimes — old habits die hard.

What chords accompany never never let you go on guitar?

3 Answers2025-08-26 14:36:10
Whenever that chorus from 'Never Never Let You Go' starts in my head, my fingers go straight to a G — it just sits so nicely under the melody. If you want a faithful, easy acoustic backing, try this classic pop-ballad progression in G: Verse: G — D — Em — C. Chorus: G — D — Em — C (repeat), with a pre-chorus sometimes leaning Am — D to build tension. You can play those as open chords: G (320003), D (xx0232), Em (022000), C (x32010), Am (x02210). For a slightly richer sound, add a suspended or add9 color: try Gadd9 (320203) in place of G sometimes, or swap C for Cmaj7 (x32000) near the end of lines. If the original sits higher, put a capo on the 2nd fret and play the same shapes to get it in A. Strumming-wise, a down-down-up-up-down-up pattern with softer downstrokes on the off-beats works great—think gentle push on the chorus and pull back on the verse. Palm muting the verse and opening up on the chorus helps the dynamics feel natural. If you want to embellish, add little fills: hammer-on from Em to Emadd9, or a D/F# (200232) to walk bass notes from G to Em. For bridge sections, try Em — C — G — D to make it darker before resolving. I play it this way when I busk—people sing along within the first chorus, which is the best kind of validation.

Who wrote the line never never let you go originally?

3 Answers2025-08-26 10:22:16
I catch myself humming lines like that all the time, and this one — 'never never let you go' — is sneakily slippery because it shows up in different songs and eras. If you're asking who wrote that exact phrasing originally, there isn't a single, obvious origin the way there is for a famous quote; it’s one of those short, emotive lines that songwriters reuse and recombine. For example, people often confuse it with the chorus of 'Never Gonna Give You Up' (written by Stock Aitken Waterman and performed by Rick Astley), even though that song doesn’t say the exact words 'never never let you go.' Another place to look is late‑80s/90s power ballads and pop rock — lines like 'I'll never let you go' or doubled 'never never' show up in tracks by bands like Steelheart and Third Eye Blind (the latter’s 'Never Let You Go' was written by Stephan Jenkins with early band collaborators). My practical tip is to search a snippet of the lyric in quotes on lyric sites, then check the songwriting credits on the track page or on a performing rights database like ASCAP/BMI. That way you can pin down which song used those exact words first in a recorded, credited way. If you want, tell me the melody or where you heard it (movie, radio, cover) and I’ll help chase the most likely original — I love these little detective hunts.

What song includes the lyrics 'he never let her go'?

4 Answers2026-06-17 17:35:02
The lyrics 'he never let her go' instantly make me think of 'The Air That I Brephe' by Passenger. It's one of those songs that sneaks up on you with its simplicity and then hits like a freight train. The first time I heard it, I was at a friend's house, and halfway through the song, everyone just stopped talking. There's something about the way the melody carries those words—it feels like a quiet confession, the kind you make when you're too tired to lie anymore. The song's about a guy watching someone he loves move on with someone else, and that line captures the heart of it. It's not dramatic or angry; it's just painfully honest. I've gone back to it so many times when I needed a song that understands how love can be messy and unresolved. Even now, hearing those five words makes me pause—it's like the whole story is right there.
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