All My Loving Lyrics — Across the Universe
All My Loving Lyrics
Tomorrow I'll miss you;
Remember I'll always be true.
And then while I'm away,
I'll write home ev'ry day,
And I'll send all my lovin'to you.
I'll pretend that I'm kissing
The lips I am missing
And hope that my dreams will come true.
And then while I'm away,
I'll write home ev'ry day,
And I'll send all my lovin'to you.
All my lovin' I will send to you.
All my lovin' darling I'll be true.
Close your eyes and I'll kiss you,
Tomorrow I'll miss you;
Remember I'll always be true.
And then while I'm away,
I'll write home ev'ry day,
And I'll send all my lovin'to you.
All my lovin' I will send to you.
All my lovin' darling I'll be true.
All my lovin'
All my lovin'
All my lovin' I will send to you.
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- What it is: A cast-performed cover used as an early narrative push, not a stand-alone concert moment.
- Who sings it in the film: Jude (performed by Jim Sturgess).
- Where it appears: A farewell sequence that tracks Jude leaving Liverpool, paired with Lucy parting from her boyfriend.
- How this version differs from the Beatles original: It leans into a waltz-like sway and a gentler vocal surface, more letter-home than stage-strut.
- Why it matters: It sells the film's central trick - private feeling carried by public music.
Across the Universe (2007) - film cue - not diegetic. Jude sings while packing, saying goodbye, and moving toward his ship, as the film cross-cuts to Lucy's own goodbye. The point is not realism. The point is parallel motion: two young lives leaving home in different keys, tied together by the same promise.
As a piece of musical theater craft, this number is a clean opener for Act One energy: travel, separation, and the small lie you tell yourself so you can get on the boat. The lyric is a vow, but it is also a script - the kind you recite so your hands stop shaking. The film lets the melody stay pretty while the images do the worrying.
What I like is the modesty. Sturgess does not play it as a pop star moment. He plays it as a character in transit, voice aimed forward, with the song acting as a bridge between what he is leaving and what he is about to risk.
Creation History
The underlying song was written by Paul McCartney (credited to Lennon-McCartney) and first released by the Beatles in 1963 on With the Beatles. In Julie Taymor's film, it is repurposed as a departure cue: a letter-song turned into travel music. According to Entertainment Weekly's recap of the film's numbers, the sequence frames Jude's farewell in tandem with Lucy's separation, turning a love vow into an editing device that carries two storylines at once.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
Early in the story, Jude decides to leave Liverpool and head for America. The film follows his farewell - mother, girlfriend, street corners, the physical business of going - while Lucy, across the ocean, faces her own goodbye as her boyfriend enters military life. The number stitches these exits together before the characters share a scene, which is classic musical storytelling: connect the souls first, then let the plot catch up.
Song Meaning
The lyric is a promise dressed as routine: write, remember, stay true. In the Beatles version, the briskness can feel almost cheerful. In the film, the promise sits on top of movement - suitcases, docks, uniforms - so the vow takes on a second role. It becomes a coping mechanism, the sentence you repeat because the alternative is silence.
Annotations
Close your eyes and I'll kiss you
In this context, the line lands like a last-second attempt to make time slow down. A kiss is faster than a decision, and the film knows it.
Remember I'll always be true
A vow can be sincere and still be fragile. The montage structure makes the line feel like a note pinned to a wall that may not survive the weather.
And then while I'm away
This is the hinge. The scene is built around "away" - the physical gap becoming the story's main stage.
I'll write home every day
The film turns the phrase into motion. Writing is supposed to keep love present, but travel keeps pulling the frame forward.
Rhythm and arrangement choices
The soundtrack cut is often tagged in 3-4, which gives it a gentle spin rather than a straight-ahead run. That matters for drama. A waltz feel can sound like a lullaby, and a lullaby can be a disguise for dread. Taymor uses that softness to make the later ruptures feel sharper.
Character framing
In a jukebox musical, early songs can sound like greatest-hits tourism. This one does not. It functions like a scene with melody - a character telling himself what kind of man he intends to be, right before the world tests him.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Artist: Jim Sturgess
- Featured: None
- Composer: John Lennon; Paul McCartney
- Producer: T Bone Burnett; Elliot Goldenthal; Matthias Gohl (soundtrack producers)
- Release Date: September 14, 2007 (soundtrack release)
- Genre: Film soundtrack; pop rock cover
- Instruments: Lead vocal; electric guitar; bass; drums
- Label: Interscope
- Mood: Tender; steady; anticipatory
- Length: 2:27 (Deluxe Edition listing; some releases vary by a few seconds)
- Track #: Standard edition: 1. Deluxe Edition Disc 1: 3
- Language: English
- Album (if any): Across the Universe (Music from the Motion Picture)
- Music style: Cast vocal cover with waltz-leaning pulse
- Poetic meter: Stress-led pop phrasing with repeated vow lines
Frequently Asked Questions
- Who sings the song in the film?
- Jude sings it, performed by Jim Sturgess, as the story sets his departure in motion.
- Is it staged as a live performance?
- No. It functions as a montage cue, carried by editing across locations and goodbyes.
- What is happening in the scene?
- Jude is leaving Liverpool and heading toward America, while the film cross-cuts to Lucy parting from her boyfriend.
- Why choose this song for a departure?
- It is written as a promise to stay faithful while away, which makes it fit suitcase-and-dock storytelling without extra dialogue.
- Who wrote the original Beatles song?
- It is credited to Lennon-McCartney and is widely described as written by Paul McCartney.
- Is this track on the standard soundtrack album?
- Yes. It appears on the standard release and also on the deluxe edition in a different running order.
- Does the soundtrack cut use the same feel as the 1963 recording?
- It keeps the melodic outline, but the cast cover often reads softer and more story-driven, leaning into a swaying pulse rather than club-drive bite.
- What is the song trying to say inside the film?
- That vows are easiest to speak right before the world gets complicated, and that distance starts as romance before it becomes strain.
- Is there an official audio upload?
- Yes, the Universal Music Group "Provided to YouTube" upload is the cleanest reference for the soundtrack track.
Awards and Chart Positions
The track was not pushed as a single with its own chart run, but the soundtrack album played on the big board. According to Billboard's chart listings, the deluxe edition reached a peak of No. 24 on the Billboard 200. The broader soundtrack release is commonly reported as peaking at No. 36, and it also drew a Grammy nomination in the compilation soundtrack category, listed among the nominees for the 2008 cycle.
| Item | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Billboard 200 peak (Deluxe Edition) | No. 24 | Billboard chart listing |
| Billboard 200 peak (soundtrack release) | No. 36 | Commonly cited peak for the soundtrack package |
| Grammy recognition | Nominated | Best Compilation Soundtrack Album category |
How to Sing All My Loving
Tempo services that tag the soundtrack cut often land around 111 BPM in E major, with a 3-4 meter tag. If you lean into that sway, the piece becomes a story-song rather than a sprint.
- Tempo - Rehearse the groove as a slow waltz count first, then move to the tagged tempo once your consonants stay clean.
- Diction - Treat the lyric like a letter read out loud. Keep final consonants clear, especially on vow lines that end in "you" or "true".
- Breathing - Plan short breaths before long promise lines. Avoid dramatic inhalations that break the travel flow.
- Flow - In 3-4, keep the first beat grounded and let beats two and three carry you forward. That is how the song keeps moving without rushing.
- Style - Use a simple, direct tone. This is a goodbye, not a showcase. Save intensity for the final returns of the vow lines.
- Mic and dynamics - Stay close for intimate phrases, then give a little distance on louder vow peaks. The goal is clarity, not volume.
- Pitfalls - Do not iron out the sway. If you sing it like straight 4-4, the scene loses its rocking, shipbound feel.
Additional Info
According to Playbill, Julie Taymor has talked about the early numbers sounding like they are coming straight out of adolescent voices - a useful reminder that the film is not trying to mimic 1963 studio polish. It is trying to dramatize first love in motion. The cast cover fits that aim: it has the sweetness of a vow and the unease of a suitcase that will not stay shut.
According to Entertainment Weekly, the scene plays as a cheeky farewell to a girlfriend and to England, mirrored by Lucy's own parting. That parallel is the director's favorite tool: the song is not only what Jude feels, it is how the film cuts.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Jim Sturgess | Person | performs the film version as Jude |
| Julie Taymor | Person | directs the film that stages the departure montage cue |
| Paul McCartney | Person | writes the original composition (credited to Lennon-McCartney) |
| John Lennon | Person | shares songwriting credit as Lennon-McCartney |
| The Beatles | Organization | originate the 1963 recording on With the Beatles |
| T Bone Burnett | Person | produces and compiles the soundtrack album |
| Elliot Goldenthal | Person | produces and compiles the soundtrack album |
| Matthias Gohl | Person | produces and compiles the soundtrack album |
| Interscope Records | Organization | releases the soundtrack album in 2007 |
| Across the Universe (Music from the Motion Picture) | Work | includes the cast cover in its track listings |
| Across the Universe (film) | Work | uses the song as an early montage tied to Jude leaving home |
Sources
Sources: Universal Music Group YouTube audio upload, Wikipedia (Across the Universe film and soundtrack; All My Loving song), Billboard chart page (Billboard 200 week listing), SongBPM tempo and key listing, Entertainment Weekly feature on the film's songs, Playbill interview feature with Julie Taymor, Discogs release credits
Music video
Across the Universe Lyrics: Song List
- Girl
- Helter Skelter
- Hold MeTight
- All My Loving
- I Wanna Hold Your Hand
- With A Little Help From My Friends
- It Won't Be Long
- I've Just Seen A Face
- Let It Be
- Come Together
- Why Don't We Do It In The Road?
- If I Fell
- I Want You / She's So Heavy
- Dear Prudence
- Flying
- Blue Jay Way
- I Am The Walrus
- Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!
- Because
- Something
- Oh, Darling
- Strawberry Fields
- Revolution
- While My Guitar Gently Weeps
- Across the Universe
- Helter Skelter (Reprise)
- And I Love Her
- Happiness Is A Warm Gun
- A Day in the Life
- Blackbird
- Hey Jude
- Don't Let Me Down
- All You Need Is Love
- Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds