

And thanks for anyone helping me.Sometimes, you can have a pretty long run of hits while still remaining under the radar. I can upload to anyone the partial song from the tape cassete. Hey dave, I undestand this site was not first intended for people to post their help request but i tried my best to search for missing song and I found many oldies with keyword searches but this one is getting on my nerves (especially that I found it once and lost it!!!) and I have nothing to lose. Problem with a web seach is that these words phrases are used in too many songs. You are setting me on fire by the time we kiss.

The song is a dance/house music from maybe late 80’s earky 90’s and here are some of the lyrics/words from the female artist which sings it The computer does not longer exist and I can’t recall the song’s name. The funny thing is that I once found it! Boomark the site with the information and totaly forgot that i had it. Using the lyrics from the song I’ve tried so many different type of web search with no luck at all (google, yahoo, etc.) I’ve tried for so long to search the name of a song I’ve recorded once a tape casette many years ago (early 90’s).

Too easy? Here’s a tougher one: who was the first woman to record a song with the lyrics “nice work if you can get it”, and which of the many recordings by female singers was the most successful by sales or based purely on the popularity of the singer? Now hold on, don’t scroll down to read the answers from other readers first: that’s cheating! Now, for practice, try to figure out which song the lyric “you put the lime in the coconut” comes from, the singer/band, when it was first recorded, how many people have recorded this particular song and, as a bonus, find a link to it as a video on YouTube (and double-bonus if it’s a muppet singing the song). More likely than not, the copy you’d get would be illegal, but then again, if I hadn’t done that Google search myself I wouldn’t have learned that Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) did a cover of the song too…
#Charly mcclain sleeping with the radio on mp3 download
We’ll let you slide on this one.įinally, if you really can’t live without the song, you can Google something like “blinded by the light” free mp3 download and try your luck with the various sites listed. In his short piece Cecil explains that Springsteen’s original lyrics were “cut loose like a deuce” and that Mann changed it to “wrapped up like a deuce”, then he bails and admits he has no idea what any of it means. The second match back at our original Google search is also quite interesting, it’s an article from Cecil Adams for his splendid The Straight Dope column on the lyrics to this very song. There’s an upload on YouTube of Manfred and his gang playing the song from back in 1976. Go back and look at those Google results, though. One great place to dig around for music and song information, by the way, is, where you can find that there are a surprising 350 matches in the database to “blinded by the light” and where I confirmed that indeed “Manfred Mann” was also known as “Manfred Mann’s Earth Band”. A bit more digging and you’ll find that it was originally written by a far more successful musician, Bruce Springsteen, in the early 70’s and Manfried Mann recorded their cover version in the mid 70’s. We’ve already found your match, though, the song is Blinded by the Light and it’s by Manfred Mann. Since a “deuce” is slang for a particular kind of hot rod (remember the Beach Boys “little deuce coupe”?) the latter makes a bit more sense to me… There’s also some confusion about whether it’s “wrapped up” or “revved up”. Unlike most people with tenuous memories of songs, you remembered the lyrics right, congratulations! The first match is from the site Am I Right?, where they state that this particular lyric from Manfred Mann’s song “Blinded by the Light” is commonly misheard (or misremembered) as “wrapped up like a douche”. Let’s just jump in and search for the phrase you list, but make sure that we surround it with quotes:

This is a splendid job for Google, actually, particularly its ability to search for phrases rather than just collections of words.
