Close Enough to Perfect
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Close_Enough_to_Perfect an entity of type: Thing
"Close Enough to Perfect" is a song written by Carl Chambers, and recorded by American country music band Alabama. It was released in August 1982, as the third single from Alabama's album Mountain Music. A pop-styled ballad, "Close Enough to Perfect" was Alabama's eighth No. 1 song in the fall of 1982. Song Backstory The rest of the song. During this time, he was on the road with the Bellamy Brothers. One afternoon in Indiana, he was in his hotel room where he would pick up his guitar and wind up writing the song out of frustration over the way his new wife (Nancy) was being treated back home.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Close Enough to Perfect
rdf:langString
Close Enough to Perfect
rdf:langString
Close Enough to Perfect
xsd:integer
12696728
xsd:integer
1116082117
rdf:langString
Fantasy
rdf:langString
RCA Nashville (13294)
<second>
213.0
xsd:integer
1982
xsd:integer
1982
rdf:langString
Harold Shedd and Alabama
xsd:integer
1981
xsd:gMonthDay
--08-20
rdf:langString
single
rdf:langString
Carl Chambers
rdf:langString
"Close Enough to Perfect" is a song written by Carl Chambers, and recorded by American country music band Alabama. It was released in August 1982, as the third single from Alabama's album Mountain Music. A pop-styled ballad, "Close Enough to Perfect" was Alabama's eighth No. 1 song in the fall of 1982. Song Backstory According to Chambers, the title came about during a day of installing strips of wood on the Bellamy Brothers bus. “I’d pick one and she (his then-wife Nancy) would find something wrong with it.” This would happen several times until he, exhausted with frustration, would look at her and say “It’s close enough to perfect for me!” He then stopped what he was doing to go write that down because he “thought it would make a good title for a song someday”. The rest of the song. During this time, he was on the road with the Bellamy Brothers. One afternoon in Indiana, he was in his hotel room where he would pick up his guitar and wind up writing the song out of frustration over the way his new wife (Nancy) was being treated back home.
<minute>
3.55
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
3131
xsd:date
1982-08-20
xsd:double
213.0