Pop song with lyrics "love makes a sound"
Executive summary
A direct search of the provided reporting finds no confirmed pop song that contains the exact lyric "love makes a sound"; the supplied sources include lyric pages and curated love‑song lists but do not identify that phrase in any tracked song [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]. Given the absence of a match in these materials, the most responsible conclusion from this reporting is that the query cannot be answered definitively with the documents at hand, and further targeted lyric searches (specialized lyric databases, audio apps, or a broader web search) are required.
1. What the sources actually cover — lyric pages and love‑song roundups, not that phrase
The documents provided are predominantly lyric-hosting pages and editorial roundups: for example, Genius hosts full lyrics and background notes for Sara Bareilles’ “Love Song” (useful to confirm exact phrasing in a hit pop track) and for Kaash Paige’s “Love Songs,” while Genius also archives classic entries like Nat “King” Cole’s “L-O-V-E” [1] [2] [3]. Editorial lists and features — from Elevate’s selection of powerful love‑song lyrics to Good Housekeeping’s and TimeOut’s curated best‑of lists — assemble lines from many popular tracks but do not claim exhaustive lyric indexing across all pop music [4] [5] [6]. None of these supplied pages quote or highlight the exact string "love makes a sound," so the supplied reporting does not identify a match [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6].
2. Why that absence matters — limitations of curated lists and partial lyric pages
Curated lists and individual lyric pages are excellent starting points for common or famous lines but are not comprehensive lyric search engines; editorial pieces purposely sample memorable lines rather than index every lyric [4] [5] [6]. The Genius pages in the bundle are song‑specific and therefore confirm exact wording only for the songs they cover (for instance, the full printed chorus of Sara Bareilles’ “Love Song” shows that its refrain does not contain the queried phrase) [1]. Because the supplied reporting is fragmentary by design, a negative finding here — no mention of "love makes a sound" — is informative but not conclusive for the entire universe of pop music.
3. Practical next steps grounded in the reporting that will give a definitive answer
To move from inconclusive to definitive, the most practical tactics are lyric‑search engines (Genius for song pages, as shown in the dataset), full web search of the phrase in quotes, and audio identification tools like Shazam or lyric‑lookup features in streaming services; the reporting underscores Genius as a primary lyrics repository and editorial lists as secondary verification tools [1] [2] [3] [4]. If a listener suspects they misheard the phrase, searching for likely variants ("love makes a sound," "love makes no sound," "love makes the sound," etc.) across those platforms is recommended, because curated lists will often surface only the most quoted lines and can miss less repeated refrains [4] [6].
4. Alternate explanations and caveats — mishearing, obscure tracks, or new releases
There are three plausible alternative explanations consistent with the supplied material: the lyric may be from a less prominent or very recent pop release not captured in these curated lists or lyric posts (the editorial pieces emphasize popular canonical songs and hits) [4] [5] [6]; the listener may be misremembering a similar line from an indexed song (song‑specific lyric pages on Genius can be used to check exact wording) [1] [2]; or the phrase could belong to an indie or non‑English track outside the scope of the provided reporting. The current dataset cannot adjudicate among these possibilities.
5. Final assessment and transparent limitation of reporting
Based solely on the supplied sources, there is no confirmed pop song identified that contains the lyric "love makes a sound"; the referenced lyric pages and love‑song compilations do not present that exact phrase, and the materials do not claim exhaustive lyric coverage [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]. To resolve the question conclusively, a targeted search using lyric engines, quoting the exact phrase with variations, or an audio ID from a recording is necessary — steps that are supported by the types of resources cited here but are beyond what the provided reporting itself has done.