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Hey Girl - Ingram Hill



     
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Hey Girl Lyrics


Miss popularity keeps turning her head around
but I ain't looking at her, I'm looking at her best friend
and wondering how to get in.
Miss social butterfly keeps batting her eyes at me
but i don't even know she's alive
she simply fades away, and i can only see your face.
But staring in the mirror don't make you see
look into my eyes and baby take it from me
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way I believe you are
Then they'll believe it
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
Then they'll believe it too, yeah yeah.
Miss Congeniality keeps working the room again
but I'm not even paying attention
I'm looking at the front door

and I'm wondering where you are.
I'm dreaming of ways to make you see [make you see]
That you're the only one that really does it for me.
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way I believe you are
Then they'll believe it
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way i believe you are
then they'll believe it .
You're thee only, face that, I see, out there, in the crowd.
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way I believe you are
Hey Girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way I believe you are
Then they'll believe it
Hey girl, don't you know you're beautiful
if you could just believe you are
the way I believe you are
then they'll believe it too.
Yeah, then they'll believe it too.

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Contrary to what some might assume, Ingram Hill is not of the name of a solo artist but rather, a band; no one in Ingram Hill is actually named Ingram Hill (just like there was never a musician named Lynyrd Skynyrd or Jethro Tull -- at least not in either of those well-known '70s bands). Like Cracker, Train, and Tonic, Ingram Hill has an earthy, unpretentious approach that is relevant to both alternative pop/rock and roots rock. The Memphis-based foursome aren't an exact replica of classic rockers from the '60s and '70s -- their work is more modern -- but they do have a certain down-home rootsiness that has gone over well in Southern rock circles. That isn't to say that their sound is stereotypically southern in the way that the Marshall Tucker Band and Black Oak Arkansas were stereotypically southern back in the '70s; Ingram Hill doesn't get into hell-raisin' good ol' boy stereotypes, and their lyrics tend to be reflective, introspective, and thoughtful. Their first release came in 2002, when they put out their debut EP, Until Now, on their own label, Traveler Records, and sold around 10,000 copies. Then, in 2003, the Memphis residents released their first full-length album, June's Picture Show, produced by Rick Beato, on Traveler. June's Picture Show had only been out a few weeks when Ingram Hill signed with Hollywood Records, which re-released the album in February 2004. Cold In California, produced by Oliver Leiber, followed from Hollywood in 2007. The band released a self-entitled country record in August 2012.

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Ingram Hill