Do You Believe In Love

David Hasselhoff · Other Songs - David Hasselhoff

After we have listened to everything

There is left to say

Watching the intented realities

Slowly fade away

Why is all we desire taken from our hands

Every dream is drifting away



There is understanding for everyone

Who has ears to hear

No more looking over your shoulder

For someone to appear

Maybe you should be looking right

Into these eyes

So say goodbye to someone else's lies



I've got to know

Do you believe in love

All the things you search the world to find

But know nothing of

Through the sun

Through the fire and rain

Know there's one who won't

Desert you again

If you believe in love



Some days I get up in the morning and i

Wish I wasn't there

Life seems so incredibly lonely when

No one seems to care

But I've found somewhere within this

Heart a friend for life

To hold me close

Till all my fears subside



I've got to know

Do you believe in love and

All the things you search the world to find

But know nothing of

Through the sun

Through the fire and rain

Know there's one who'll never hurt you

There is one who won't desert you again

If you believe in love



Don't you go asking those questions anymore

Don't you go

Don't you go asking those questions anymore

The answer is waiting for you



I've got to know

Do you believe in love

And all the things you search

The world to find

But know nothing of

Through the sun

Through the fire and rain

There is one who'll never hurt you

There is one who won't desert you again

If you believe... if you believe...

In love

Do You Believe In Love

David Hasselhoff's "Do You Believe In Love" stands as a defining anthem of 1980s pop rock, capturing the era's blend of theatrical flair and romantic idealism. Released alongside his signature hits like "I'll Be The One" and "The Young & The Restless," the track exemplifies the high-energy production style that characterized his career during the mid-1980s. The song features the distinctive vocal delivery and guitar-driven arrangements typical of the genre, reinforcing Hasselhoff's status as a cultural icon of the decade. It remains a staple of his discography, often associated with his television work and the broader landscape of pop music from that period.