Strangest Feeling - Dan Penn



     
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Strangest Feeling Lyrics


And your star was there
You light up for me
You didn't want me to see
You left quietly (silently)
Now just a million miles
they won't hide tonight
And the stars align
Like the way to love tonight.
Chorus:
I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
A single tear just dropped into the ocean of your hands

You left me open now i'm hoping that you try to understand
Water's calling for me, there's no way i can pretend
That you were coming back to get me
now the moon would lead me in
so destined, over in an instant
you're the echo uou were here only yesterday
Where you going? Always thought you'd stay
make that fire let it burn the sky away
Chorus:
I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
I have ... I emphasize
Face that I turned to hide
closer i get your .. you were here only yesterday
And i know i try to forget those nights, all those nights
You know I've tried.
[Chorus:]I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
I've been having these strangest feeling
That you walked out on me one evening
Walk the plank and meet the sharks
Let them cut and eat my heart
Let them cut and eat my heart

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Wallace Daniel Pennington (16 November 1941 -) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer and sometime guitar player who co-wrote many soul hits of the 1960s including "Dark End of the Street" & "Do Right Woman" (with Chips Moman) and "Out of Left Field" & "Cry Like A Baby" (with Spooner Oldham). Penn has also produced hits such as "The Letter" by The Box Tops, amongst others. Though he is considered to be one of the great white soul singers, Penn has a meagre recorded output, preferring the relative anonymity of songwriting & producing.
Penn grew up in Vernon, Alabama and spent much his teens and early twenties in the Quad Cities/Muscle Shoals area. He was a regular at Rick Hall's FAME Studios as a performer, songwriter and producer. It was during his time with FAME that Penn cut his first record, "Crazy Over You" in 1960, and wrote his first hit, "Is a Bluebird Blue?" which was recorded by Conway Twitty in the same year. The success of "I'm Your Puppet," a #6 pop hit for James & Bobby Purify, convinced him that songwriting was a worthwhile (and lucrative) career choice.
In early 1966, Penn moved to Memphis, began writing for Press Publishing Company, and worked with Chips Moman at his American Studios. Their intense and short-lived partnership produced some of the best known and most enduring songs of the genre. Their first collaboration, the enduring classic "Dark End of the Street", was first a hit for James Carr and has been recorded by many others since, notably by Gram Parsons and Emmylou Harris and by Linda Ronstandt. A few months later, during the legendary recording sessions that saw Jerry Wexler introduce Aretha Franklin to FAME Studios and her first major success, the pair wrote "Do Right Woman" in the studio for her. In early 1967 Penn produced "The Letter" for The Box Tops. He and long-time friend and collaborator Spooner Oldham also wrote a number of hits for the band, including "Cry Like a Baby"
Penn continued writing & producing hits for numerous artists during the 60s and finally released a record of his own, Nobody's Fool, in 1972. He was coaxed into the studio again in 1993 to record the acclaimed "Do Right Man" which saw him reunited with many of his friends and colleagues from Memphis & Muscle Shoals.
He now lives in Nashville and continues to write with Oldham and other contemporaries such as Donnie Fritts, Gary Nicholson & Norbert Putnam. He and Carson Whitsett have had their collaborations recorded by Irma Thomas and Johnny Adams and often teamed with writers Jonnie Barmett and later, Hoy Lindsey. The Penn/Whitsett/Lindsey team are responsible for Solomon Burke's "Don't Give Up On Me", and Penn produced 2005's Better to Have It by Bobby Purify that featured twelve songs from the team.


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Dan Penn