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What Else Can I Do - Kat Edmonson



     
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What Else Can I Do Lyrics


What else can I do
but to sit and think of you
and how love walked through that door
and moved boldly 'cross the floor
but love's not here anymore
what else can I do?Oh what can I say
when you decide to go away
perhaps a fault was in the start
perhaps we're better off apart
try and tell that to my heart
what else can I do?Lonely waiting, tolerating
the minutes you're not with me
all I can do it seems
is keep my daily scheme
to dream you in my dreamWhere do I go
where there's no one that I know
to smile and ask me how we've been
so then I remember when

and start missing you again
what else can I do
I'm so in love with youLonely waiting, tolerating
the minutes you're not with me
all i can do it seems
is keep my daily scheme
to dream you in my dreamwhat treatment to try
when all I want to do is cry
would it really do much harm
to seek out another's arms
and start conjuring your charms
what else can I do
I'm so in love with youWhat else can I do?
What else can I do?
What else can I do?
For I am so in love with youI'm so in love
I'm so in love

Enjoy the lyrics !!!
"You see a show like the one Kat Edmonson put on Tuesday night at Scullers, and you wonder what the heck people are doing at Miley Cyrus and Katy Perry concerts. Really, the world is unjust... Edmonson, a petite singer from Austin, Texas, is at once a throwback and a pioneer. Her intimate vocal style and stage presence recall the heyday of jazz
- she has the expressiveness of Billie Holiday, the elegance of Ella Fitzgerald, and the voice of Blossom Dearie. Yet she doesn't merely retread standards. Sure, she likes her Cole Porter, but she and her pianist/arranger, Kevin Lovejoy, molded and modernized chestnuts like "Just One of Those Things," "Night and Day," and "It's All Right With Me" into entirely fresh tunes with new harmonies, inventive rhythm structures, and sometimes mysterious undertones.

Edmonson has grown quite comfortable inside these songs, taking even more liberties with them than she did on her recent CD, Take to the Sky, which stands among the best records of 2009. Like Holiday, Edmonson likes to sing just behind the beat, which infuses her demure voice with drama and heartbreak.

Kat Edmonson is our next great jazz singer. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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Kat Edmonson