- Source: Let There Be Love
- Source: Let There Be Love!
- The Best of Faith Hill
- Let Me Let Go
- The Beatles
- Oasis (grup musik)
- Spice Girls
- Gloria Gaynor
- Time Flies... 1994–2009
- Queen Forever
- Syd Crossley
- American Juniors: Kids in America
- Let There Be Love (Oasis song)
- Let There Be Love
- Let There Be Love!
- Let There Be Love (1940 song)
- Venom: Let There Be Carnage
- Let There Be Love (Christina Aguilera song)
- Let Love
- Let There Be Love (Simple Minds song)
- Let There Be Love (1953 Joni James album)
- Let There Be Love (TV series)
Let There Be Love may refer to:
Songs
"Let There Be Love" (1940 song), a 1940 song by composer Lionel Rand and lyricist Ian Grant
"Let There Be Love" (Bee Gees song)
"Let There Be Love" (Christina Aguilera song)
"Let There Be Love", a 1979 song by Dutch girl group Luv'
"Let There Be Love" (Melanie C song)
"Let There Be Love" (Oasis song)
"Let There Be Love" (Simple Minds song)
Albums
Let There Be Love (John Pizzarelli album)
Let There Be Love (1953 Joni James album)
Let There Be Love (1993 Joni James album)
Let There Be Love (Gary Williams album)
Let There Be Love, a 2005 album by Engelbert Humperdinck
Let There Be Love, a 2007 album by Joe Dolan
Television
Let There Be Love (TV series), a British sitcom from the early 1980s
Let There Be Love! is an album by the American R&B singer Shirley Murdock, released in 1991.
The album's first track, "In Your Eyes", was a top 10 R&B hit.
Production
The album was produced by Roger Troutman, with assistance from Murdock and Dale DeGroat. Murdock cowrote a few songs, including "Let There Be Love" and "In Your Eyes". Let There Be Love! was recorded at Troutman Sound Labs, in Dayton, Ohio.
Critical reception
Billboard called the album a "shimmering set of lush ballads and rousing dance/funk tunes." The Washington Post considered "We Should Be Together" to be the album's best song, deeming it "a funky, scat-filled jazz tune complete with plunger-mute horn riffs." The Boston Globe opined that Murdock "is one of those under-publicized and underrated singers, raised on gospel, whose power on more secular offerings is a bit too jolting for the average consumer."
The Dayton Daily News thought the album to be "solidly written and produced," praising the "heavy house-music influence" of the title track. USA Today described it as "an adult-oriented collection of lovely ballads and a few discreetly funky dance numbers that generally serve to emphasize her prowess with the slow songs."
AllMusic wrote that "while Let There Be Love! isn't the soul extravaganza Murdock is quite capable of delivering, R&B/pop ballads and slow jams like 'The Last Hurrah', 'Say It, Mean It' and the Anita Baker-ish 'Anywhere' aren't anything to be embarrassed by either." MusicHound R&B: The Essential Album Guide thought that Murdock "leaves the soap opera topics behind this time and crafts a work that fully meshes the best aspects of her gospel and secular influences."