The song was recorded as a duet by Roberts and singer Donna Summer. It was produced by Roberts and David Foster. It was released on November 12, 1996, by Universal Music as a single from the film's soundtrack album. The dance remixes were done by Junior Vasquez. The song peaked outside the Billboard Hot 100 chart (#109).
The song was credited to writer "Sam Roman" on its release, but it was soon revealed that "Roman" was actually a pseudonym for Edgar Bronfman Jr., chairman of Seagram, which owned MCA Inc., parent company of Universal Pictures, who produced and released the film.[1]
Single track listings
All tracks written by Bruce Roberts and Edgar Bronfman Jr. (as Sam Roman)
US CD single
(Album Version) - 4:30
(Instrumental) - 4:30
US remix 12" & Maxi-Promo CD Single
(Club Mix) - 9:47
(Club Dub) - 7:49
(Riff Dub) - 4:56
(Tribal Beats) - 4:01
(Instrumental) - 5:08
(7" Edit) - 4:06
German CD single
(Album Version) - 4:30
(Instrumental) - 4:30
(Junior Vasquez Club Mix) - 9:47
Spanish CD single
(Album Version) - 4:30
El Verdadero Amor (Spanish Version) - 4:30
French Version :
Tant qu'il y aura l'amour ( French Lyrics by Lara Fabian )