While countless hits have come and gone, this beloved 1977 song has remained a fixture on romantic playlists for decades.
At a time when disco ruled the airwaves, Heatwave scored one of the decade’s most unforgettable slow dances with “Always and Forever.” The song’s sentimental message helped it outlast the musical era that first made it a hit.
Heatwave ruled the charts with three big singles during the late ’70s. The group peaked at No. 2 with the song “Boogie Nights,” followed by “The Groove Line” in 1978 (No. 7) and “Always and Forever,” which landed squarely at No. 18.
The song was included on their hit 1976 debut album, Too Hot to Handle. Heatwave consisted of band members Johnnie Wilder Jr., Keith Wilder, Rod Temperton, Roy Carter, Swiss Mario Mantese, Czechoslovak Ernest “Bilbo” Berger, and Jamaican Eric Johns.
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According to Songfacts, Temperton was the key songwriter behind “Always and Forever.” Throughout the ’70s and ’80s, he would go on to write hits for Michael Jackson, including “Thriller” and “Rock With You.”
The beloved song made TODAY’s 2023 list of “The 50 Best Wedding Songs to Celebrate Your Happily Ever After.” It ranked between Etta James‘ “At Last” and Elvis Presley‘s “Can’t Help Falling in Love.”
“Always and Forever” remains a wedding playlist standard almost 50 years after its initial release. Its enduring popularity has helped introduce the ballad to generations of listeners who weren’t even born when it first hit the airwaves.
In 1994, “Always and Forever” was reintroduced to music fans by soul superstar Luther Vandross. His cover of of the tune was featured on his ninth studio album, Songs (1994), and on his 1998 greatest-hits compilation, Always & Forever: The Classics.
Producer and musician Marcus Miller, who worked with Vandross for decades, shared his recollections of his friend’s recording the legendary love song.
Miller said Vandross was “courageous” because he “wasn’t afraid to take other people’s songs, perform them, and make them his own. ‘Always and Forever’ was an R&B staple in the ’70s. This was the slow song at the party.”
“He was so creative in the way he interpreted it. His voice was made for this song,” Miller concluded of the Heatwave track.
Heatwave may be remembered for its funk and disco-era energy, but it’s this tender ballad that has endured the longest and created the most impact. In a catalog full of hits, “Always and Forever” remains the one song that never really went away, a living reminder of an era that shaped a generation.
Related: 1983 Iconic Love Song Was Originally Intended for Two Other Superstar Singers Before Peabo Bryson and Roberta Flack Made It Famous

