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Freddy Cole - This Time I'm Gone for Good
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Cause you do me wrong
When we're together
But I keep coming back
Oh, Lord, for more
When I leave this time
Whoa, Lord, make sure
It's understand that
This time, I'm gone for good
Many times I've left you
But I couldn't stay away too long
Thank God for the strength
That he gave to me to leave home
And still be strong
It's been warm outside
But for me, but for me
There's been no sunshine
So hard for me to leave
But I finally made up my mind
This time, baby, Lord
I'm not gonna let you
Worry me no more
And this time, baby
Don't even say nothing to me
Oh, Lord, bye, bye, baby
“I started playing piano at five or six,” Freddy recalls. “Music was all around me.” In the Chicago home of his youth, visitors included Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Lionel Hampton. He also credits Billy Eckstine as a major influence. “He was a fantastic entertainer,” Freddy recalls. “I learned so much from just watching and being around him.” After a possible career with the NFL was shelved due to a severe football related hand injury, he began playing and singing in Chicago clubs as a teenager. Although he was ready to hit the road at 18, his mother intervened and he continued his musical education at the Roosevelt Institute in Chicago.
Don’s Tunes is about the music. It’s about the sound. It’s about the real thing.
When we're together
But I keep coming back
Oh, Lord, for more
When I leave this time
Whoa, Lord, make sure
It's understand that
This time, I'm gone for good
Many times I've left you
But I couldn't stay away too long
Thank God for the strength
That he gave to me to leave home
And still be strong
It's been warm outside
But for me, but for me
There's been no sunshine
So hard for me to leave
But I finally made up my mind
This time, baby, Lord
I'm not gonna let you
Worry me no more
And this time, baby
Don't even say nothing to me
Oh, Lord, bye, bye, baby
“I started playing piano at five or six,” Freddy recalls. “Music was all around me.” In the Chicago home of his youth, visitors included Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Lionel Hampton. He also credits Billy Eckstine as a major influence. “He was a fantastic entertainer,” Freddy recalls. “I learned so much from just watching and being around him.” After a possible career with the NFL was shelved due to a severe football related hand injury, he began playing and singing in Chicago clubs as a teenager. Although he was ready to hit the road at 18, his mother intervened and he continued his musical education at the Roosevelt Institute in Chicago.
Don’s Tunes is about the music. It’s about the sound. It’s about the real thing.
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