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Turn on Your Radio - Marc Cohn



     
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Turn on Your Radio Lyrics


I don't know where I'm goin'
Now that I am gone
I hope the wind that's blowin'
Helps me carry onTurn on your radio, baby
Listen to my song
Turn on your night light baby, baby
I'm goneTurn on your radioI don't know how it happened
Now that I am gone
I hope I'll never hear it, baby,
Just in case I'm wrongTurn on your record player
Listen to my song
Turn on your nightlight baby, baby
I'm gone
Really long goneI don't know where life's goin'
But soon it will be gone
I hope the wind that's blowin'
Helps me carry onTurn on your radio, baby
Baby listen to my song

Turn on the night light, baby, baby
I'm gone
Long goneTurn on your record player(Turn on your record player...)And listen to my songEverybody had a hard year
And everybody had a good time
Everybody had a wet dream
And everybody saw the sunshineEverybody had a good year
And everybody let their hair down
Everybody put their socks up
And everybody put their foot downListen, listen
Songwriters
NILSSON, HARRY EDWARDPublished by
Lyrics © Warner/Chappell Music, Inc. Song Discussions is protected by U.S. Patent 9401941. Other patents pending.

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Marc Cohn (born July 5, 1959 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American singer-songwriter, best known for his song Walking In Memphis (often misattributed to Bruce Springsteen or Michael Bolton) from his self-titled 1991 album Marc Cohn.

According to the Walking In Memphis Songfacts, Cohn was discovered by Carly Simon in the mid-'80s when he was with a 14-piece band called The Supreme Court. Atlantic Records signed him in 1989, but the first attempts to record his debut album with Tracy Chapman 's producer David Kerschenbaum failed. Ten months later, he tried again, producing the set himself with help from the little-known Ben Wisch, who had helped him with his demos. Finally released in 1991 when Cohn was 31 years old, his self-titled debut album was a huge hit, thanks to the massive success of "Walking In Memphis." Cohn won the 1991 Grammy for Best New Artist award, beating out both Boyz II Men and Seal and Seal. Cohn never matched the chart success of this song, but like his musical heroes Van Morrison, Joni Mitchell and Jackson Browne , he remained a critical and artistic success as a songwriter and performer.

He has issued two other studio albums to date, The Rainy Season (1993) and Burning the Daze (1998), both on Atlantic Records. A self-released live compilation, Live 04-05 (2005), is being sold at concerts on his current tour.

He is the most famous graduate of Beachwood High School in Beachwood, Ohio, a Cleveland suburb. He attended Oberlin College.

The Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 1992 was awarded to Cohn.

Cohn is married to ABC News journalist Elizabeth Vargas whom he met at the 1999 US Open after being introduced by Andre Agassi. Cohn and Vargas have two sons: Zachary Raphael (born on January 31, 2003) and Samuel Wyatt (born on August 16, 2006). Cohn has two other children—Max and Emily—from a previous marriage.

On August 7, 2005, Cohn was shot in the head during an attempted carjacking, following a concert with Suzanne Vega in Denver, Colorado. He was hospitalized and released the next day. The remaining concerts on the tour were cancelled.

Cohn released "The Very Best of Marc Cohn" in June 2006, and his 4th studio album, "Join The Parade", was released on October 9, 2007.

For photographs and additional information visit Marc's official website, www.MarcCohn.net.


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Marc Cohn