Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me) Lyrics
Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)
Each day through my window I watch her as she passes byI say to myself you're such a lucky guy,
To have a girl like her is truly a dream come true
out of all the fellows in the world she belongs to me.
But it was Just my imagination,
once again runnin' away with me.
It was just my imagination runnin' away with me. Oo
Soon we'll be married and raise a family (Oh yeah)
A cozy little home out in the country with two children maybe three.
I tell you I can visualize it all
this couldn't be a dream for too real it all seems;
But it was Just my imagination once again runnin' way with me.
Tell you it was just my imagination runnin' away with me.
Ev'ry night on my knees I pray Dear Lord, Hear my plea;
Don't ever let another take her love from me or I would surely die.
Her love is heavenly, when her arms enfold me,
I hear a tender rhapsody; but in reality she doesn't even know me.
Just my imagination once again runnin' way with me.
Tell you it was just my imagination runnin' away with me.
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, can't forget her
Just my imagination once again runnin' way with me.
Tell you it was just my imagination runnin' away with me.
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Work: Ain't Too Proud: The Life and Times of The Temptations - jukebox musical biography.
- Songwriters: Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong.
- Where it appears: Act II, after the harder-edged run of late-1960s material, as the show lets fantasy interrupt fallout.
- What this stage cut emphasizes: A cleaner, scene-ready throughline - less radio drift, more narrative clarity.
- Key takeaway: The sweetest sound in the score can still be a warning light.
Ain't Too Proud (2019) - stage musical number - non-diegetic ballad that plays like a private thought spoken out loud. In Act II, it lands as a soft-focus pause: the world outside is contracts, pressure, and fraying loyalty, while the lyric builds a house the singer can live in for three minutes.
Every jukebox show needs a moment where the air changes. This is that moment - not because the tempo drops, but because the point of view narrows. The number is built on a simple trick: it invites you to relax, then slips in the hard pivot at the end, when the dream admits it was never shared. As stated in Rolling Stone magazine's 2004 list, the song has long been treated as one of the great pop standards of its era, and the musical uses that reputation like a spotlight: you expect comfort, so the confession hits sharper.
Creation History
Motown released the Temptations single on January 14, 1971 on the Gordy label, produced by Norman Whitfield and written with Barrett Strong. It features Eddie Kendricks on lead and is remembered as the final Temptations single to include founding members Eddie Kendricks and Paul Williams. For Broadway, the production recorded the cast album at Sound on Sound Studios in Montclair, New Jersey (January 19-22, 2019), with the digital release dated March 22, 2019.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
In the show, the ballad arrives when the story is no longer about getting discovered - it is about what success costs. The staging typically clears space, letting a single inner monologue take over. The group that has been selling unity suddenly sells isolation, and the audience is asked to listen as if overhearing a thought the singer would normally swallow.
Song Meaning
The narrator builds an entire life in the conditional tense: engagement, home, family, permanence. It sounds tender because it is specific. But the real meaning is in the restraint - nothing is demanded of the other person, because she is not part of the conversation. The final turn admits the romance is unilateral, and that is the sting: fantasy as shelter, fantasy as trap.
Annotations
Each night I go to bed, I pray we never part.
The line sounds like devotion, but it is also a tell: prayer replaces dialogue. In a theatre context, it reads as someone trying to will love into existence without risking the embarrassment of asking.
But in reality, she does not even know me.
That last sentence is the entire show in miniature: public success, private distance. The musical loves this kind of turn because it lets a familiar melody reveal character - not just nostalgia.
A cozy little home out in the country, with two children, maybe three.
The detail is almost mundane, which makes it persuasive. The lyric is not painting a myth - it is drafting a floor plan. The specificity is the seduction.
Style fusion and rhythm
This is Motown craftsmanship aimed at softness: a steady pulse, a vocal line that floats, and an arrangement that never crowds the singer. It also functions as a reset after the show leans into late-1960s urgency. The contrast is the point: the same people who can hit political intensity can also whisper a daydream.
Emotional arc
The arc is gentle until it is not. Verse by verse, the fantasy grows more confident, then the last turn punctures it. The number does not collapse into melodrama - it simply tells the truth and leaves the room quiet enough for the audience to feel it.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Song: Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)
- Artist: Original Broadway Cast of Ain't Too Proud
- Featured: Principal cast with ensemble support (cast recording format)
- Composer: Norman Whitfield; Barrett Strong
- Producer: Cast recording production credited on the album release
- Release Date: March 22, 2019
- Genre: Stage; soul; R and B
- Instruments: Lead and group vocals; rhythm section; theatre band orchestration
- Label: Universal Music Enterprises
- Mood: Dreamlike, then sobering
- Length: 3:12 (cast album track)
- Track #: 22
- Language: English
- Album: Ain't Too Proud: The Life and Times of The Temptations (Original Broadway Cast Recording)
- Music style: Ballad arrangement tightened for theatre pacing
- Poetic meter: Conversational stress with refrain-led phrasing
Frequently Asked Questions
- Where does the number appear in the musical?
- It is listed in Act II of the Broadway song sequence for Ain't Too Proud.
- Who wrote the song?
- Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong.
- When was the original single released?
- Motown issued it on January 14, 1971 on the Gordy label.
- Why does it feel so different from the protest-era material around it?
- Because it is inward. Instead of confronting the world, it shows someone retreating into a story he can control.
- What is the dramatic point of the final lyric turn?
- It converts romance into self-revelation: the narrator admits the relationship exists only in his head.
- Is the Broadway cut the same length as the 1971 recording?
- No. The cast album track runs 3:12, while the classic single version is typically longer.
- What should I listen for in the vocal approach?
- Light pressure, clear diction, and a long-breath line. The song works when the voice sounds like thought, not proclamation.
- Did the song have major chart success?
- Yes. It reached number 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and also topped the R and B chart in 1971.
- How well did it do in the UK?
- It peaked at number 8 on the Official Singles Chart and stayed on the chart for 16 weeks.
- Why is it often called a signature Temptations ballad?
- It returns to a smoother vocal identity after the group spent time in heavier late-1960s textures, and it showcases Eddie Kendricks in a late-era spotlight.
Awards and Chart Positions
The original Temptations single was a major hit: Billboard credits it as a Hot 100 number 1 in 1971, and the Official Charts archive shows a UK peak of number 8 with a 16-week run. Rolling Stone magazine also included the song on its 2004 list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (at number 399), which helps explain why a Broadway biography leans on it as more than a pleasant callback - it is a reputation the show can play against.
| Category | Result | Date |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard Hot 100 (Temptations single) | Peak: 1 (two weeks at number 1 reported in reference summaries) | 1971 |
| US R and B chart (Temptations single) | Peak: 1 | 1971 |
| UK Official Singles Chart (Temptations single) | Peak: 8; 16 weeks on chart | May 22, 1971 to September 4, 1971 |
| Rolling Stone magazine list | 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (2004): ranked 399 | December 2003 to 2004 publication window |
How to Sing Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)
Reliable tempo and key listings for the classic recording commonly place it around 92 BPM and in C major with a straight 4/4 feel. Treat those as a starting grid, not a cage: the performance lives in breath control and blend, not in metronome athletics. (If you are singing the Broadway cut, you may find the groove sits a touch differently, shaped by scene pacing.)
- Tempo and pocket: Practice at 92 BPM first, then slightly slower. The goal is unforced legato with a steady pulse underneath.
- Diction: Keep consonants clean but quiet. Hard endings can puncture the song's floating line.
- Breath mapping: Mark breaths before long fantasy images. You want the last line of each thought to land supported, not clipped.
- Vowel tuning: If you are in a group, match vowels on words like "night" and "imagination" so chords lock without wobble.
- Dynamic plan: Start intimate and let the sound widen only in the bridge. Save the strongest color for the truth-telling at the end.
- Story choice: Decide what the narrator believes in each verse. Is he convincing himself, or admitting he already knows it is a daydream?
- Style markers: Avoid big pop-belt gestures. A lighter, speech-adjacent line reads closer to Eddie Kendricks' approach.
- Pitfalls: Do not rush the final pivot. Give the last sentence room to land like a realization, not a punchline.
Additional Info
The song's backstory is not just trivia - it is dramaturgy. Reference histories note that producer Norman Whitfield had pushed the Temptations toward tougher psychedelic textures, and this ballad reads like a deliberate return to smoothness. That context helps the musical: when the show drops this number into Act II, it is not simply playing a hit, it is showing a stylistic retreat that doubles as a personal retreat. According to Billboard's artist chart summary, the single is part of a small cluster of Temptations Hot 100 leaders that define the group's mainstream peak, and Ain't Too Proud treats that peak as both triumph and pressure.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Norman Whitfield | Person | Whitfield co-wrote and produced the 1971 Temptations single. |
| Barrett Strong | Person | Strong co-wrote the song with Whitfield. |
| Eddie Kendricks | Person | Kendricks sang lead on the classic recording and is central to the song's identity. |
| Original Broadway Cast of Ain't Too Proud | MusicGroup | The cast recorded the theatre arrangement for the 2019 cast album. |
| Universal Music Enterprises | Organization | UMe released the Original Broadway Cast Recording in 2019. |
| Gordy (Motown) | Organization | The Gordy label released the original single in 1971. |
Sources
Sources: Rolling Stone magazine (500 Greatest Songs list, 2004), Billboard artist chart summary, Official Charts Company song page, uDiscover Music track list and timings, Ain't Too Proud reference listings, AllMusic song page, Tunebat key and tempo listing, YouTube (Universal Music Group Topic upload)