Rip Torn | Torn Curtain | The Conscious Lovers | Sons and Lovers | Sons and Lovers (1960 film) | Husbands, Wives & Lovers | Elegy for Young Lovers | Summer Lovers | Songs for Young Lovers | Only Lovers Left Alive | Lovers of the Arctic Circle | Lovers of Teruel | Lovers and Other Strangers | Lovers and Lollipops | Lovers | Holiday for Lovers | Butterfly Lovers | Birger Jarls Torn | Birger Jarls torn | Where Lovers Mourn (2003) | Where Lovers Mourn | We Should Be Lovers | Voice 2: Cover Lovers Rock | Underground Lovers | Torn Between Dimensions | Third/Sister Lovers | The Young Lovers | The Modern Lovers | the Modern Lovers | The Lovers |
The 1989 Connie Francis album Where the Hits Are, a Malaco release composed mostly of new versions of Francis' own hits, featured her version of "Misty Blue" as well as "Old Time Rock 'N' Roll" and "Torn Between Two Lovers" which like "Misty Blue" were hits recorded at Muscle Shoals, where Where the Hits Are was recorded.
Macgregor admitted in The Billboard Book of Number One Hits by Fred Bronson that she hated her own chart-topper, chiefly because she had little sympathy for the narrator of "Torn Between Two Lovers", a woman who confesses to her husband that she is having an affair, but pleads with her husband to stay with her and accept the situation.