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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 ]
on YouTube: Professional ratings; Review scores ... Rating; Billboard: positive ("Spotlight" pick) [2] "I'm a Fool" is a song written by Tommy Smith and originally ...
Barry was born in Cut Off, Louisiana.He started recording locally in 1958, and released two singles on Jin Records around 1960. In 1961, the second single he released for Jin, "I'm a Fool to Care" (originally a hit for Les Paul and Mary Ford), was picked up for national distribution by Mercury Records subsidiary Smash Records.
"The Fool" is a song written by Naomi Ford and Lee Hazlewood and performed by Sanford Clark. It reached #5 on the U.S. R&B chart, #7 on the U.S. pop chart, and #14 on the U.S. country chart in 1956. [1] Al Casey played guitar on the record [2] and it was ranked #42 on Billboard magazine's Top 50 singles of 1956. [3]
The song's inspiration was the experience Rea's younger sister Paula had encountered some years previously of being devastated at losing her first boyfriend. [4] Rea wrote "Fool" intending that it be recorded by Al Green. [5] He intended it to be a Memphis blues song, [4] but according to Rea, "It ended up being this huge California thing. It ...
1951 sheet music cover, Barton Music, New York. Frank Sinatra first recorded the song with the Ray Charles Singers on March 27, 1951, in an arrangement by Axel Stordahl in New York . It was the second song recorded at the sessions that began with " I Whistle a Happy Tune " and ended with "Love Me".
Germany's navy says there was "no deeper message” in the choice to blast the famed Imperial March — Darth Vader's theme song in the “Star Wars” films — from one of its warships as it ...
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 .