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Lulu would later opine of Atlantic Record honchos Jerry Wexler, Tom Dowd and Arif Mardin, the producers of her album New Routes: "I don't think they knew what to do with me, and the only big hit I got [off the album] was a song that I [brought in] with me" [1] - referring to "Oh Me Oh My ...", which had been written by Jim Doris who – as Jimmy Doris – had been vocalist-guitarist for the ...
"I'm a Fool" is a song written by Tommy Smith and originally recorded by Slim Whitman. [1] Track listing. 7-inch single (Imperial X8305, 1956, United States) [3] [4] No.
I'm a Fool" is a short story by American writer Sherwood Anderson. It was first published in the February 1922 issue of The Dial [ 1 ] (followed the next month by the London Mercury ), and later, in 1923 as the first story in Anderson's short-story collection Horses and Men .
Its enduring lament, "I'm a fool to care, when you don't care for me", was recorded by numerous artists over the ensuing 75 years. The Les Paul and Mary Ford version went to No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1954, [ 1 ] and was featured in a popular Southern Comfort commercial in 2013. [ 5 ]
The song finds lead singer Levi Stubbs, assisted by the other three Tops and the Andantes, pleadingly professing his love to a woman: "Sugar pie, honey bunch/I'm weaker than a man should be!/Can't help myself/I'm a fool in love, you see."
Ivory seal of Godwin, an unknown thegn – first half of eleventh century, British Museum In later Anglo-Saxon England, a thegn or thane [1] (Latin minister [2]) was an aristocrat who ranked at the third level in lay society, below the king and ealdormen. [3]
"Maybe I'm a Fool" is a song by American rock singer, Eddie Money, from his album Life for the Taking in 1978. It was the first of two single releases from the LP, and was the bigger hit. The song reached #22 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #28 in Canada in early 1979. [1] It was also a modest hit in Australia (#51).
A thanage was an area of land held by a thegn in Anglo-Saxon England. [1]Thanage can also denote the rank held by such a thegn. [1]In medieval Scotland David I, an Anglophile, introduced "thanes" to replace the Gaelic "tòiseach".