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"Black Coffee" is a song with music by Sonny Burke and words by Paul Francis Webster. The song was published in 1948. Sarah Vaughan charted with this song in 1949 on Columbia; arranged by Joe Lipman, it is considered one of the most notable versions. [1] Peggy Lee recorded the song on May 4, 1953, [2] and it was included on her first LP record ...
Humble Pie covered "Black Coffee" for their 1973 album Eat It on A&M Records. Their version features the Blackberries singing backing vocals. Steve Marriott adjusted some of the lyrics. In the original version, Tina Turner sings, "My skin is brown but my mind is black." Marriott sings, "My skin is white but my soul is black."
Black Coffee is the third cover album recorded by American singer Beth Hart and blues rock guitarist Joe Bonamassa, released on January 26, 2018 [6] on J&R Adventures [2] and Mascot Label Group. [7] It follows their 2013 cover album together titled Seesaw .
The album was a commercial flop in the United States compared to the first three albums, making it the first Firehouse album not to enter the Billboard charts. However, it did chart in Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines, where the album was certified gold thanks to hit songs "You Are My Religion", "Love Don't Care" and "In Your Perfect World".
Black Coffee is the first album by Peggy Lee. It was released in the 10-inch format in 1953 by Decca . In 1956, at the request of the record label, Lee recorded four more songs for a reissue of the album in the 12-inch LP format.
Taylor and Jake! Kanye and Kim! Song Lyrics Inspired by Celeb Breakups. Read article. While Ballerini has since “healed” from their breakup, she’s already moved on with actor Chase Stokes ...
"Black Coffee" (All Saints song), 2000 "Black Coffee" (Heavy D & the Boyz song), 1994 "Black Coffee" (Lacy J. Dalton song), 1990 "Black Coffee" (Ike & Tina Turner song), a 1972 song covered by Humble Pie and Rival Sons "Black Coffee", a 1984 song by Black Flag from the album Slip It In "Black Coffee", a 1995 song by Less Than Jake from their ...
Chris Difford stated, "[t]he lyric was inspired by my picking up my notebook one day and seeing a coffee stain on it, which inspired the first line. It was a very vivid image for me and inspired this song of loss and regret." [3] Difford also said that "lyrically it was attractive to [a country] kind of metre. The fact that Glenn put a soul ...