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Take This Hurt Off Me - Don Covay



     
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Take This Hurt Off Me Lyrics


Come back and take this hurt off me
Baby, come back and take this hurt off me
'Cause, I'm too young to be in misery
Now baby, come back and take this hurt off meI'll be waiting at the bus station
'Cause that's where you left me standin'
I got my clothes in a twenty-five cent locker
(Fool!) I be here (fool!)
'Till the Greyhound (fool!)
Bring you back again, girl
(Fool! fool! fool! fool!)Come back and take this hurt off me
Baby, come back and take this hurt off me
'Cause I'm too young to be in misery, now
Baby, come back and take this hurt off meI knocked on my mother's door
She said, a 'Don, walk on in'
'Son, you don't have to say a mumblin' word
I know your woman done and left ya, again'
(She left me! she left me! she left me! yes, she did)I say, now
Come back and take this hurt off me

Baby, come back and take this hurt off meBaby, baby, baby, baby, baby, now
What kind of love could this be now?
Baby, baby, baby, I don't know what you've got
'Sho' that's it's got me'
(It's got 'em! it's got 'em! it's got 'em!
Mercy!But now, I've been to see my doctor, yeah
(I been to see the doctor, now)
He did all he could
(He did all he could)
But there was nothin'
He could do for me, girl
You're the only one who could
(Come-come, come, come, come, come)
Come on baby, nowCome back and take this hurt off me
Baby, come back and take this hurt off meIt's hurtin' me
(Hurtin' me)
Heartbreak, now
(Hurtin' me)It's hurtin' me, now
(It''s hurtin' me)
Heartache
(It's hurtin' me)Too much pain
(It's hurtin' me)
Come back, again
(It's hurtin' me)I need your lovin'
(It's hurtin' me)
Mercy, baby
(It's hurtin' me)Heartbreak, now
(It's hurtin' me).
Songwriters
COVAY, DONALD/MILLER, RONALDPublished by
Lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc. Song Discussions is protected by U.S. Patent 9401941. Other patents pending.

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Don Covay (Donald Randolph, March 24, 1938, Orangeburg, SC, USA) is an American rhythm & blues singer and songwriter, most active in the 1950s and 1960s, who received a Pioneer Award from the Rhythm and Blues Foundation in 1994. His father a Baptist preacher died when Don was eight. Covay resettled in Washington D.C. during the early 1950s and initially sang in the Cherry Keys, his family's gospel quartet.

Read more about Don Covay on Last.fm.


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Don Covay