Paul de Senneville, a prolific French composer and music producer who often collaborated with Richard Clayderman.

Listeners often describe the piece as weaving together feelings of passion, romance, and a comforting sense of nostalgia. Cultural Impact and Performance

It first appeared on Clayderman's 1979 album Lettre À Ma Mère .

While instrumental, the piece is frequently associated with a "touching story" often cited in musical commentary:

Recognizing the social gap between them, he nevertheless chooses to confess his love, symbolizing the purity and bravery of affection—hence a "Marriage of Love" rather than one of convenience or duty.