Seattle-based singer and songwriter Prience (Prince) Moore steps into focus with “Give Me Your Love,” a sleek, heartfelt R&B cut released on May 28, 2025. Written in the afterglow of a fleeting real-life encounter, the track folds classic romantic storytelling into contemporary production—anchored by clean, conversational lyrics and an unfussy hook that lands on first listen.
The song’s origin is as unguarded as its chorus. After a long shift, Prience ducked into a bar, locked eyes with a woman across the room, and let the moment pass—only to find it trailing him home. That lingering what-if became the lyric’s spine: an appeal that’s equal parts invitation and confession. “This song came about just as the lyrics suggest,” he says. “I saw a young lady I thought was beautiful. When our eyes met she turned away… the thoughts of her persisted.” He wrote quickly, then brought the sketch to longtime collaborator Michael Miller, who produced the single in Seattle.
Miller responded in kind—“Once I got the lyrics to the studio, my producer quickly felt it and came up with a beautiful beat”—and the arrangement grew around Prience’s lead: warm keys, unfussy drums, and a melody designed to sit close to the ear. The result is streamlined on purpose; rather than overstate the feeling, “Give Me Your Love” lets space and phrasing carry the weight, a choice that mirrors Prience’s touchstones. He cites Babyface and George Michael as ever-present influences—artists who prized song craft, clarity, and emotional directness—and you can hear that lineage in the track’s balance of polish and pulse.
What distinguishes the single, though, is its commitment to plain-spoken intimacy. Prience aims for “lyrically flawless” writing—clean lines that read as naturally as they sing—and early reactions inside his circle suggest he’s close. “I played it for my brother, my biggest critic, and he couldn’t stop singing the chorus,” he says with a laugh. “I played it for my 24-year-old son and he said, ‘Song is fire… the whole song is good, but the end takes it to another level.’” Those off-the-cuff reviews point to the record’s quiet ambition: make something instantly relatable, built to last.
“Give Me Your Love” also extends a personal thread. Miller’s studio—where Prience recorded his first song, “No You And Me Without The Kids”—remains a creative home base, the place he returns to when an idea won’t leave him alone. That continuity shows up in the single’s tone: confident but unforced, romantic without excess, the kind of track that can live on a late-night playlist and still hold its shape in daylight.
For an artist who refuses to ornament what doesn’t need ornamenting, “Give Me Your Love” feels like a clear statement of intent. Inspired by a moment, refined in the studio, and delivered with a classic R&B sensibility, it’s a reminder that the simplest stories—told well—still cut the deepest.