这一首《Te Amare(Album Version)》lyric歌曲是由歌手Gloria Estefan演唱,发布于个人Unwrapped专辑里,H吉他网整理分享最新的完整版歌词如下:
Te Amare – Gloria Estefan
Noche de encuentro a tu lado
Los dias tranquilos se van
Nuestro futuro dormido
Cantan y vueltas se dan
Que algunos pasan otros quedan atras
Hoy lo que quiero junto a ti
Mi verdad.. mi paz
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Se que aqui estare
Mirando por mi ventana
La luna se viste de gris
Una tormenta dorada
Se rinde al vernos reir
Todo se cambia
Pasa el tiempo
Siguen viviendo mi pasion
Mi ilusion por ti
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Se que aqui estare
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare
Se que aqui estare te amare
Te amare te amare
Te amare
Te amare te amare
Te amare te amare te amare te amare te amare te amare
Se que aqui estare
by David Jeffries\nLike Jewel and Liz Phair, Gloria Estefan chose a total change of direction for her 2003 release, writing all of the earnest and reflective lyrics for the soul-searching and devoid-of-dance-pop Unwrapped. With the most detailed production to ever grace the singer’s albums (swirling Mellotrons, Andean flutes, and a McCartney-esque muted-megaphone vocal trick that shows up too often) Unwrapped stumbles over itself trying to put Estefan’s emotional lyrics up front. Longtime collaborator Jon Secada and a revolving door of writers contribute the hookless accompaniment to Estefan’s rhetorical flourishes and excessive use of clichés. Her authentic delivery shows she’s really behind the new direction, which makes the urgent metaphors a little easier to take in small bites. Without even a hint of levity, sitting through the whole album feels like an exhausting open-mic night at the coffee shop. "Te Amaré" and "Wrapped" right some of the wrongs with light Latin touches offering relief, and the four Spanish-language reprises at the end of the album find the singer sounding twice as confident. The guest spots are left to the less ambitious numbers, with Stevie Wonder adding some exuberance to "Into You," and Chrissie Hynde trading lines with Estefan on "One Name" isn’t as awkward as expected. Had Unwrapped snuck in some of the new Gloria among some of the old, it could have been more successful. Covering up the underdeveloped writing with sonic overkill, it is as least interesting and a good setup for the expected "return-to-form" album.