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This song – which strongly resembles Bob Dylan's music in the mid-1960s – was released as the band's first single in 1966 under the name Mouse. [1] Jerry Howell (who was also in Jerry Vee and the Catalinas) [ 4 ] and Ken (Nardo) Murray joined the group shortly thereafter, and most of their remaining music was released under the name Mouse ...
By the early seventies, Jones was a much more nuanced singer than he had been a decade earlier, and "Sometimes You Just Can't Win," which rose to #10 on the charts, was a prime example of how his singing could be, at times, frightening in its intensity. The song, a suicidal lament about unrequited love, begins softly with gently picked mandolin:
Finishing the album in November, under the working title The Magic Hour, Jon flew home and recorded an EP to release before the album. The first single was released in February 2011, called "Santo Domingo" (previously known as " Ham On Rye , named after a Charles Bukowski book") While writing, Jon decided to add a new song to the album and flew ...
"You Just Can't Win (By Making the Same Mistake)" Gene Chandler and Jerry Butler: 94 32 — "You're a Lady" 116 14 — "Ten and Two (Take This Woman Off the Corner)" Gene Chandler and Jerry Butler: 126 44 — 1972 "Yes I'm Ready (If I Don't Get to Go)" — 47 — 1978 "Tomorrow I May Not Feel the Same" — 51 — "Get Down" 53 3 11 BPI: Silver ...
You Can't Win may refer to: "You Can't Win" (song), a song by Michael Jackson from the film The Wiz You Can't Win, an album by Dolorean, or the title song "You Can't Win", a song by Iron Butterfly from Heavy
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Sometimes You Win is a studio album by the American band Dr. Hook, released in 1979.It was produced by Ron Haffkine. [2]The album contains three of the band's most commercially successful singles: "When You're in Love with a Beautiful Woman" (also included on their previous album Pleasure and Pain), "Better Love Next Time" and "Sexy Eyes."
Anderson wrote the song while riding on a bus in England. Reading a review of Shampoo, he noticed a section detailing a scene where a character's response when asked if they are married is "sometimes". Anderson decided this would be an excellent setup for a duet, jotting down the first draft of the lyrics on the magazine the review was in. [1]