I Go Crazy (Paul Davis song)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/I_Go_Crazy_(Paul_Davis_song) an entity of type: Thing

"I Go Crazy" is a song written, composed, and recorded by American singer-songwriter Paul Davis. It was the first single he released from his 1977 album Singer of Songs: Teller of Tales, and his second-highest peaking pop hit, peaking at #7 on the Billboard chart in 1978. The song entered the Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart on 27 August 1977 and began slowly climbing, peaking in March and April 1978, before dropping off the chart the week after 27 May 1978. Overall, it spent 40 weeks (nine months and one week) on the Billboard Hot 100 charts, setting what was then the record for the longest run on that chart, of consecutive weeks or not. rdf:langString
rdf:langString I Go Crazy (Paul Davis song)
rdf:langString I Go Crazy
rdf:langString I Go Crazy
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rdf:langString Singer of Songs: Teller of Tales
rdf:langString Reggae Kinda Way
rdf:langString German single picture sleeve
rdf:langString I_Go_Crazy_-_Paul_Davis.jpg
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xsd:integer 1978
rdf:langString Superstar
xsd:integer 1976
rdf:langString Paul Davis
rdf:langString Phil Benton
rdf:langString June 1977
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Paul Davis
rdf:langString "I Go Crazy" is a song written, composed, and recorded by American singer-songwriter Paul Davis. It was the first single he released from his 1977 album Singer of Songs: Teller of Tales, and his second-highest peaking pop hit, peaking at #7 on the Billboard chart in 1978. The song entered the Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart on 27 August 1977 and began slowly climbing, peaking in March and April 1978, before dropping off the chart the week after 27 May 1978. Overall, it spent 40 weeks (nine months and one week) on the Billboard Hot 100 charts, setting what was then the record for the longest run on that chart, of consecutive weeks or not. During the March 4, 1978 American Top 40 show, Casey Kasem said that Davis begged his studio to have the song presented to Lou Rawls, who he thought would make it a huge success. But when the studio saw how much faith he had in the chances of the song's success, it instead decided to release a lightly edited version of Davis's own studio demo version. (Rawls did release his cover version of the song two years later.)
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xsd:double 217.0 232.0

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