Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"I'll Go Crazy" is a rhythm and blues song recorded by James Brown and The Famous Flames. Released as a single in 1960, it was Brown's fourth R&B hit, charting at #15. [ 1 ] Brown and the Flames also performed it as the first song on their 1963 album Live at the Apollo .
"I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight", by U2 This page was last edited on 2 September 2010, at 04:48 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The band then signed their first record contract with local label USA Records and recorded 12 songs that year. Several were released as singles, including "I'll Go Crazy", a song originally recorded by James Brown & the Famous Flames and the Beatles' "I Call Your Name".
"I'll Go Crazy" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Andy Griggs. It was released in July 1999 as the second single from the album You Won't Ever Be Lonely. The song reached number 10 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. [1] Griggs wrote this song with Zack Turner and Lonnie Wilson.
The album was recorded on the night of October 24, 1962, at Brown's own expense. [note 1] Although not credited on the album cover or label, Brown's vocal group, The Famous Flames (Bobby Byrd, Bobby Bennett, and Lloyd Stallworth), played an important co-starring role in Live at the Apollo, and are included with Brown by MC Fats Gonder in the album's intro.
Q called "I'll Go Crazy If I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" the band's "most unabashed pop song since 'Sweetest Thing'". while Mojo labelled it a "superficial pop anthem formed around a dainty kernel of pure melodic gold", calling the performance "[s]o cumulatively devastating is the band's delivery that it ennobles the succession of cute self ...
"I'll Go Crazy" 10 65 2 2000 "She's More" 2 37 2 "Waitin' on Sundown" 50 — 57 "You Made Me That Way" 19 116 * "—" denotes releases that did not chart
"I Go Crazy" is a song written, composed, and recorded by American singer-songwriter Paul Davis.It was the first single released from his 1977 album Singer of Songs: Teller of Tales, and his second-highest peaking pop hit, peaking at #7 on the Billboard chart in 1978.