All Your Love (I Miss Loving) is a blues standard written and recorded by Chicago guitarist Otis Rush in 1958. It was released as a Cobra Records single in 1959 with the B-side My Baby's a Good ’Un, Rush’s last Cobra release, and later appeared on the Blues Interaction – Live in Japan 1986 album. The tune is a moderate-tempo minor-key twelve-bar blues with Afro-Cuban influences, featuring Rush on guitar and vocal, Willie Dixon on bass, Ike Turner on second guitar, Little Brother Montgomery on piano, Harold Ashby and Jackie Brenston on saxophones, and Billy Gayles on drums. It borrows elements from Jody Williams’ 1957 Lucky Lou and is known as Rush’s best-known composition, influencing many artists and being inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 2010. Its impact includes inspiring Bob Dylan’s Beyond Here Lies Nothin’ and Peter Green’s Black Magic Woman, and it has been recorded by numerous artists under the title All Your Love.