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This Heart - Natalie Cole



     
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This Heart Lyrics


This heart is your heart
And can't nobody take it away
Ooh no, this heart is your heart
And can't nobody take it away from meOoh no, no, no, no, just can't take my love away
I give my heart to you to have and keep
May it pleasure your desires
And keep our love from getting weakWe'll keep the fire burning and our love wheel turning
You can surely have my all, all you have to do is call because
(This heart)
This heart
(Is your heart)
Is your heart
(And can't nobody)Always baby
(Take it away from me)
Yeah, yeah
(This heart)
This heart
(Is your heart)

Is your heart
(And can't nobody)
Yeah, baby
(Take it away from me)No, no, never, never, never, never take it away from me
Oh, ho, our love will always be so safe and sound
Always lifting you up, never letting you down
The guys will come and go, making scenes rather sadBut I let them all know just how it is
(Just how it is)
Oh, just how it is
(Just how it is)Yeah, I knew the day that I first met you boy, ooh, hoo
That it would be hard to leave you, a rah, na, na, dah
Now that I know that I have you boy, you know
I thank God that I'll never, never, never, never have toYes, I do
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)
Every day
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)I say thank you
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)
Thank you God
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)Thank God, thank God, thank you
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)
Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)I thank God
(Thank God I'll never, never, never, never have to)
Oh, baby
(This heart)
Listen to me
(Is your heart)
Is yours baby
(And can't nobody)Nobody, nobody
(Take it away)
Take it away
(This heart)
This heart
(Is your heart)
Is yours baby
(And can't nobody)Nobody, nobody
(Take it away)
Can't take it away
(Yeah, yeah)
Yeah
(Yeah, yeah)Yeah, yeah
(Yeah, yeah)
Yeah, yeah
(Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah)Yeah, yeah
(Yeah, yeah)
Yeah,
(Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah)
Yeah(Yeah, yeah, yeah)
Yeah, thank God
(Yeah, yeah)

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
Born February 6, 1950, Natalie Cole is the daughter of celebrated crooner Nat King Cole, she was exposed to the greats of jazz, soul and blues at an early age and began performing at the age of 11. Her debut album in 1975, Inseparable, won her immediate praise, with the smash single This Will Be (An Everlasting Love) (#1 R&B, #6 Pop) winning her a Grammy for Best R&B Vocal Performance, Female, a category that had been monopolized by Aretha Franklin, since its inception in 1967. She also was named the Grammys' Best New Artist of 1975. She attended the Northfield Mount Hermon School in Northfield, MA.

More hits followed through 1980, including her biggest pop hit, 1977's I've Got Love On My Mind, as well as Sophisticated Lady (She's A Different Lady) (1976), Our Love (1978), and Someone That I Used To Love (1980). "I've Got Love On My Mind" and "Our Love" both earned certifications as Gold singles. But then her career hit a snag in the early 1980s due to a severe drug problem. By 1985, Natalie was clean, sober, and in fine voice, and ready to begin her comeback in earnest with the album Dangerous, released on the Modern label.

In 1987, she released Everlasting (on EMI Manhattan) which sold over 2 million copies in the U.S., and won Cole a Soul Train Award for Female Single of the Year for the #1 R&B ballad I Live for Your Love. This album was the one that put Natalie Cole firmly back in the spotlight, yielding three major hit singles: Jump Start, "I Live For Your Love" (#2 AC and #13 Pop as well as #1 R&B), and a successful remake of Bruce Springsteen's Pink Cadillac (#5 Pop, #16 AC, and #1 Dance). The album also included a taste of things to come in her career with a remake of one of her father's signature hits, "When I Fall In Love," which did moderately well on the AC chart. In 1989, the aptly-titled Good To Be Back gave her another across-the-board smash with "Miss You Like Crazy" (#1 both R&B and AC, and #7 Pop).

However, it was her 1991 album, Unforgettable... with Love, featuring her own arrangements of her father's greatest hits, that gave her the most success. Ironically, when Natalie began her career, she was determined not to capitalize on her father's name and wanted to forge her own identity by going after the soul market in earnest. For many years, she also found the prospect of recording her late father's songs too painful on a personal level. But Unforgettable... With Love certainly paid off. The set sold over 5 million copies in the United States alone, and won Cole several Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance. The album featured a duet, the title track, with her father, created by splicing a recording of his vocals into the track. As a single, it reached #14 on Billboard Magazine's Hot 100 chart, and went gold. The one sour spot in the album's success was that it strained Natalie's already-tumultuous relationship with her mother, Maria, who said in interviews at the time that she couldn't listen to the album or attend any of her daughter's concerts because she felt that the music really belonged to her late husband.

Natalie has released several more albums of pop standards in the years since; as a result of appealing to the "adult standards" audience, she has made only occasional forays onto the pop singles charts in that time (for example, "A Smile Like Yours," #8 AC and #84 Pop in 1997), although her albums still sell well. Her 1999 album Snowfall on the Sahara marked a return to the easy adult-contemporary soul that categorized her late-1980s hits, but for 2002's critically-praised Ask A Woman Who Knows, she turned more to the jazz side of the spectrum, covering songs made famous by Dinah Washington, Nina Simone, and Sarah Vaughan. Cole is currently working on another jazz recording set for release later this year.


Battle With Drugs

In 2000, Cole released an autobiography, Angel on my Shoulder, which described her battle with drugs during much of her life. In the book, Cole admitted to using LSD, heroin and crack cocaine. Cole said she began experimenting with drugs while attending the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and was arrested in Toronto, Canada for possession of heroin in 1975. Cole continued to spiral out of control - including an incident in which her young son Robert nearly drowned in the family swimming pool while she and her first husband, the late Reverend Marvin Yancy were on a drug binge - until she entered rehab in 1983.

In concert with the release of the book, her autobiography was turned into a made-for-TV movie, The Natalie Cole Story, which aired December 10, 2000 on NBC.

Natalie has been married three times and has a son Robert Yancy (by Marvin Yancy), born in 1977. She later married former Rufus drummer Andre Fischer, who co-produced the Grammy Award-winning Unforgettable... With Love, Natalie's love offering featuring songs made famous by her father, including a faux-duet between her and her father.

The marriage to Fischer ended in divorce a few years later, amidst rumors of domestic verbal and physical abuse.

It has also been reported that Natalie has recovered from a life-threatening hepatitis illness (most likely the cause of her years of drug abuse) by having a liver transplant.

Miss Cole went on to release more albums after Unforgettable...With Love, with most of them featuring jazz-oriented standard songs or pop-song remakes. None of the albums were nearly as successful as Unforgettable...With Love.

As of 2013, Natalie Cole, like so many other aging artists, spends most of her professional time covering the concert circuit entertaining audiences around the world with her hits.

[from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natalie_Cole]





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