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Dave Hollister covers the song on his album Ghetto Hymns, where it's titled "Keep Forgettin'" and is slowed down noticeably but keeps the same lyrics. The song's chorus is interpolated by Moloko in an acoustic mix of their 2003 hit single "Familiar Feeling".
If That's What It Takes is the debut studio album by American singer-songwriter Michael McDonald.The album was released in August 1982 and peaked at #6 on Billboard 200, while singles "I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near)" and "I Gotta Try" went to #4 and #44 on the Billboard Hot 100, respectively.
"I Keep Forgettin" is a song by Chuck Jackson, written by Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller, and Gilbert Garfield. [1] It appears on his second studio album Any Day Now . It peaked at No. 55 on the Billboard Top 100 and remained on the chart for 7 weeks.
The album was certified gold on March 6, 2000 (). [3] In addition to original songs, the album contains covers of the Michael McDonald song "I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near)" and the Twinkie Clark-Terrell song "In Him There is No Sorrow" (listed on the album as "Keep Forgettin'" and "Respect 2 Him", respectively).
Michael McDonald’s “I Keep Forgettin’,” Don Henley’s “The Boys of Summer,” Michael Jackson’s uber-blockbuster “Thriller” LP — all featured Lukather, Paich and/or the Porcaros ...
"I Keep Forgettin'" 1982 "I Gotta Try'" 1985 "Lost in the Parade'" "No Lookin Back" 1986 "Sweet Freedom" (with Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines) 1986 "On My Own" (with Patti LaBelle) 1987 "Love Has No Color" (with Winans) 1998 "One Heart at a Time" (with Olivia Newton-John, Bryan White, Neal McCoy, Faith Hill, Victoria Shaw, Billy Dean and Garth ...
The album shipped over two million copies and won the Soundtrack of the Year award at the 1995 Source Awards. ... I came across Michael McDonald and the Doobie Brothers and “I Keep Forgettin ...
Michael McDonald covered "I Keep Forgettin'" with much success. "I Keep Forgettin'" was also covered by David Bowie on his album Tonight, as well as on a version produced by Phil Spector for the Checkmates, Ltd. Jackson was close friends with political strategist Lee Atwater. He appears in the documentary Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story.