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I'm Gonna Sit On The Porch And Pick On My Old Guitar; I'm Gonna Try To Be That Way; I'm Here To Get My Baby Out Of Jail (I'm Just An Old) Chunk Of Coal (But I'll Be A Diamond Someday) I'm Leavin' Now; I'm Movin' On; I'm Never Gonna Roam Again; I'm On Fire (I'm Proud) The Baby Is Mine; I'm Ragged but I'm Right "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry"
Over a bossa nova-inspired instrumental with minimal percussion composed of snaps and muffled kick drums, [1] [2] Jack Harlow addresses his lover and her mother, [2] [3] [4] delivering a message to the latter in the chorus: "Hello, Miss Johnson, you know why I'm callin' / You know I've been fallin', fallin' for your daughter / I think about her often, correct mе if I'm wrong, but / Was it you ...
On the week ending September 12, 2009, "(If You're Wondering If I Want You To) I Want You To" debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at number 82. It fell off the following week, but on the week ending November 21, 2009 (the same week that their album Raditude debuted at number 7 on the Billboard 200), it re-entered at number 81.
"I Want You, I Need You, I Love You" was backed with "My Baby Left Me" and was released on May 4, 1956. [5] Pre-orders of over 300,000 were the biggest ever in the history of the company. At the time of its release, Presley had three songs in the Top 20: "Heartbreak Hotel/I Was the One," "My Baby Left Me", and "I Want You, I Need You, I Love You".
Soon after Foreigner's single topped the charts, the New Jersey Mass Choir released its own similar-sounding version of the song on an album also titled I Want to Know What Love Is. The choir's single peaked at number 37 on the then- Hot Black Singles chart and number 12 on the Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales chart.
I guess so,” Carpenter sings throughout the song. “Say you can’t sleep, baby, I know / That’s that me, espresso.” However, the good times can’t last forever.
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"Even Though I'm Leaving" is described as a "soft, mandolin-infused country song" and "stone-cold tear-jerker" by the blog Taste of Country.Co-written by Combs along with Wyatt Durrette and Ray Fulcher, the song features a dramatic interaction between a father and son. [1]